The U.S.’s chipmaking sector is ringing the alarm about Washington’s chip war with China
At a semiconductor manufacturer in Binzhou, China, on Jan. 20, 2025. · Fortune · Costfoto/NurPhoto/Getty Images

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For years, the U.S. chip sector complained that Washington’s chip controls would hurt their business and spur the creation of a Chinese competitor—yet these warnings rang hollow as revenue kept hitting records thanks to the AI boom.

But recent earnings reports from equipment manufacturers like Applied Materials and Lam Research show the U.S.’s broadside against China’s chip sector may be starting to bite.

Applied Materials, the largest U.S. chip equipment manufacturer, issued a lukewarm revenue forecast last week, citing the risk of new export controls from Washington. Revenue from China, the company’s largest market, dropped 25% in the most recent quarter to reach $2.2 billion, out of a total $7.2 billion.

China’s contribution to Applied Materials’ revenue has dropped from 45% a year ago to 31% today.

And the company thinks it’ll drop even further. “For Q2, we expect that China as a percentage of total revenue will be about five percentage points lower than in Q1,” CFO Brice Hill told analysts last week.

Equipment manufacturers, for now, are still reporting an increase in overall revenue, as the tech industry piles into the AI boom. But analysts warn these companies will sorely miss what China has: a lot of semiconductor manufacturing, and a consumer market eager to snap up the products that use those chips.

“China is not just a semiconductor manufacturing hub,” says Moonsup Shin, head of hardware, semiconductor, and data centers for Asia-Pacific at Bain & Company. “Around or more than 50% of the semiconductors manufactured by Chinese manufacturers are consumed in China.”

And worse, there’s no ready-made alternative waiting. Regions like Southeast Asia are investing in local manufacturing to position themselves as neutral territory in a chip war. Yet in practice, these up-and-comers lack both China’s manufacturing and consumer demand.

Downward slide

Applied Materials isn’t the only manufacturer of chipmaking equipment worried about China controls. Lam Research’s China revenue over the last three months of 2024 dropped 10% year on year to reach $1.4 billion. China’s revenue contribution also dropped, from 40% a year ago to 31% now.

“Our sales to customers in China, a significant region for us, have been impacted and are likely to be materially and adversely affected by export license requirements and other regulatory changes, or other governmental actions in the course of the trade relationship between the U.S. and China,” Lam Research warned in its earnings report.

The dips and warnings come after the mainland Chinese market grew to form a significant part of these companies’ revenues.