China’s top chip foundry, Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp (SMIC), on Thursday posted record quarterly revenue on the back of strong domestic demand for “legacy chips”.
The Shanghai-based chipmaker said its third-quarter revenue rose 34 per cent from a year earlier to US$2.17 billion.
Net profit for the quarter reached US$148.8 million, up 58.3 per cent from a year earlier.
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“The company achieved for the first time more than US$2 billion in quarterly revenue during the third quarter, representing a record high,” SMIC said in a statement on Thursday.
The strong results show how SMIC continues to lead the domestic market in advanced processes for semiconductor production, while also remaining the only fab operator on the mainland that can process 7-nanometre chips.
People walk past the front gate of Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp’s fabrication facility in Shanghai. Photo: EPA-EFE alt=People walk past the front gate of Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp’s fabrication facility in Shanghai. Photo: EPA-EFE>
The chipmaker shipped a total of 2,122,266 eight-inch equivalent wafers last quarter, as its capacity utilisation rate – a measure of semiconductor fabrication activity – rose to 90.4 per cent, the company’s highest reading over the past six quarters. Its monthly capacity increased to 844,250 eight-inch equivalent wafers in the third quarter.
Revenue from Chinese customers also increased steadily over the past few quarters, with 86.6 per cent of revenue generated from mainland-based clients in the past quarter.
SMIC’s Hong Kong-listed shares closed up 4.83 per cent to HK$28.2 on Thursday.
The firm applied so-called multiple-patterning technology to make Huawei Technologies‘ Kirin 9000s chipset with its second-generation 7nm process, using existing chipmaking equipment from ASML.
These chipsets inside Huawei’s Mate 60-series smartphones marked a breakthrough for China’s advanced chipmaking efforts, angering the US government and igniting speculation about the effectiveness of Washington’s curbs on the country’s vast technology sector.
Workers seen at a cleanroom inside one of the chip-fabrication plants operated by Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp. Photo: SMIC alt=Workers seen at a cleanroom inside one of the chip-fabrication plants operated by Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp. Photo: SMIC>