According to a report from Reuters, it’s rumored that ByteDance, the parent company of TikTok, is collaborating with American chip designer Broadcom to develop an advanced AI processor, which could provide ByteDance with a steady supply of high-end chips.
On June 24th, Reuters’ report cited sources, stating that the 5nm Application-Specific Integrated Circuit (ASIC) being developed by the two companies will comply with U.S. export control regulations and will be manufactured by TSMC.
Since the introduction of advanced chip export controls by Washington in 2022, no public announcements have been made regarding the development of 5nm or more advanced chips in collaboration between Chinese and American companies.
The sources cited by the same report indicate that ByteDance’s collaboration with existing partner Broadcom can help reduce procurement costs and ensure a stable supply of high-end chips. However, TSMC will not start manufacturing this new chip this year. According to Reuters citing other sources, although the two companies have already begun the design process, they have yet reached the tape-out stage, which signifies the completion of the design phase and readiness for manufacturing.
Securing a reliable source of AI chips is crucial for ByteDance’s algorithms. In addition to TikTok, the company operates numerous popular apps, including “Doubao,” an AI chatbot service similar to ChatGPT. The report further suggests that ByteDance stockpiled a significant number of NVIDIA chips, including A100, H100, A800, and H800, ahead of the initial round of U.S. sanctions. In 2023, ByteDance allocated USD 2 billion for purchasing NVIDIA chips.
Per another previous report from Reuters, it indicated that in response to U.S. sanctions, some Chinese AI chip manufacturers decided to downgrade their self-designed processors to avoid being cut off from TSMC’s foundry services. Reportedly, MetaX and Enflame entrusted downgraded chip design schematics to TSMC late last year to comply with U.S. regulations. These two leading Chinese AI chipmakers had previously claimed that their chips could rival NVIDIA’s GPUs in performance.
The downgraded AI chips designed by NVIDIA specifically for the Chinese market, including the most advanced model “H20,” reportedly received a lackluster initial market response. Due to abundant supply and forced price reductions, currently, the H20 is reportedly cheaper than competing chips from Huawei. The chip is reportedly to be sold at approximately 100,000 yuan per unit, while Huawei 910B sold at over 120,000 yuan per unit.
A previous report by The Information also indicated that major tech companies such as Alibaba, Baidu, ByteDance, and Tencent have been instructed to reduce their spending on foreign-made chips like NVIDIA’s.
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(Photo credit: Broadcom)