Dutch chipmaker Nexperia is facing mounting challenges as its Chinese operations refuse to cooperate, leaving European production largely stalled.
The company, owned by China’s Wingtech and headquartered in the Netherlands, urged its Chinese units in an open letter to restore supply chain operations, but multiple attempts at communication have reportedly gone unanswered.
The disruption follows a Dutch government intervention on September 30, which prevented Nexperia’s former CEO from relocating European operations to China. Shortly after, China halted exports of Nexperia’s finished products on October 4, though some restrictions were later eased. The Chinese arm has since declared it is no longer under European management, and wafer shipments from Europe stopped on October 26 due to non-payment.
Nexperia’s operational model has left it vulnerable. The company fabricates wafers in Europe, primarily in Hamburg and Manchester, before sending them to Dongguan, China, for assembly and testing.
Dongguan alone handles over 50 billion pieces annually, operating more than 100 assembly lines with more than 1,500 workstations.
This one-way dependency creates a critical bottleneck as European lines cannot easily reroute wafers to other facilities. While Nexperia also has assembly plants in Malaysia (Seremban) and the Philippines (Cabuyao), these locations collectively cannot match Dongguan’s output. Analysts warn replicating Dongguan’s scale elsewhere would require years of investment and workforce development.
Nexperia’s supply chain disruption opens doors for regional Outsourced Semiconductor Assembly and Test (OSAT) players.
Facilities in Malaysia and the Philippines could gain new business from automakers needing discrete chip components. Malaysia, for instance, is targeting over $100 billion in semiconductor investments, boosting backend capacity to accommodate demand.
ASE Technology Holding (ASE), which acquired Infineon’s Philippines backend facility in 2024, is among companies positioned to benefit from the transfer of production work. Analysts note that equipment suppliers and automation vendors may also see increased opportunities as manufacturers prioritize uptime and distributed production networks.
The stalled operations at Nexperia underscore the fragility of semiconductor supply chains. Chips produced by Nexperia are crucial for automotive and electronics manufacturing, meaning any extended disruption could ripple through global markets.
The ongoing standoff between European management and the Chinese arm also highlights the complex geopolitical risks facing the semiconductor industry.
Following discussions between China’s commerce minister Wang Wentao and EU trade commissioner Maros Sefcovic, China urged the company to find an internally led resolution. However, until cooperation resumes, Nexperia’s European operations will remain constrained, leaving industry watchers closely monitoring developments.
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