Export Controls, DeepSeek Silicon & SK Hynix's $28B Nasdaq IPO
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(00:00:52) DeepSeek Enters Chip Design Race
(00:01:51) Huawei's Guaranteed Demand Windfall
(00:02:30) SK Hynix Nasdaq IPO Signals HBM Conviction
(00:03:08) Power Grid Bottleneck Crystallizes
(00:03:50) Intel Retreats, Valuation Test Ahead
(00:04:35) Key Watchpoints Going Forward
The US Bureau of Industry and Security has tightened export control guidance, shifting compliance burden directly onto TSMC and other foundries — and the consequences are cascading across the entire AI hardware supply chain. Today's briefing covers six interconnected stories that define where the industry is heading.
DeepSeek, the Chinese AI startup known for inference efficiency, is now actively developing custom inference ASICs and recruiting chip engineers — a move that signals structural, not just tactical, independence from Nvidia and Huawei's Ascend line. Meanwhile, those same export controls are handing Huawei a guaranteed demand windfall, as Alibaba, ByteDance, and Tencent are pushed into Ascend and Zhenwu 810E orders with no US alternative available.
On the memory side, SK Hynix has moved to active Nasdaq IPO marketing, targeting around $28 billion in American Depositary Receipts with roughly $7 billion in pre-commitments from Baillie Gifford, Coatue, and Situational Awareness Partners. Proceeds are earmarked for ASML EUV equipment — a clear bet on sustained HBM demand for AI accelerators. Pricing finalizes around July 10th.
Intel's stock pulled back sharply from a record $142 despite 22% data center revenue growth, as valuation rotation hits the semiconductor sector ahead of its July 23rd earnings. And NTT Data's analysis confirms that power grid constraints — not capital or chip availability — are now the binding limit on data centre expansion in key regions.
The through-line: export controls intended to slow China's AI hardware build-out are instead locking in Huawei's position, accelerating domestic chip programs, and offloading compliance risk onto foundries. The gap between policy intent and real-world outcome is widening fast.
This episode includes AI-generated content.
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