News

[Insights] Taiwanese Manufacturers Minimally Affected by New US GPU Restrictions, while Chinese Focused on In-House Chip Advancement



The US Department of Commerce issued new restrictions on AI chips on October 17, 2023, with a focus on controlling the export of chips to China, including NIVIDA’s A800, H800, L40S, and RTX4090, among others. Taiwanese manufacturers primarily serve cloud service providers and brand owners in North America, with relatively fewer shipments to Chinese servers. However, Chinese manufacturers, having already faced two chip restrictions imposed by the US, recognize the significance of AI chips in server applications and are expected to accelerate their in-house chip development processes.

TrendForce’s Insights:

1. Limited Impact on Taiwanese Manufacturers in Shipping AI Servers with H100 GPUs

Major Taiwanese server manufacturering companies, including Foxconn, Quanta, Inventec, GIGABYTE, and Wiwynn, provide AI servers equipped with H100 GPUs to cloud data centers and brand owners in Europe and the United States. These Taiwanese companies have established some AI server factories outside China, in countries such as the US, the Czech Republic, Mexico, Malaysia, and Thailand, focusing on producing L10 server units and L11 cabinets in proximity to end-users. This strategy aligns with the strategic needs of US cloud providers and brand owners for global server product deployment.

On the other hand, including MiTAC, Wistron, and Inventec, also provide server assembly services for Chinese brands such as Inspur and Lenovo. Although MiTAC has a significant share in assembling Inspur’s servers, it acquired Intel DSG (Data Center Solutions Group) business in July 2023. Therefore, the focus of AI servers remains on brand manufacturers using H100 GPUs, including Twitter, Dell, AWS, and European cloud service provider OVH. It is speculated that the production ratio of brand servers will be adjusted before the new restrictions are enforced.

Wistron is a major supplier for NVIDIA’s AI server modules, DGX A100, and HGX H100. Its primary shipments are to end-users in Europe and the United States. It is expected that there will be adjustments in the proportion of shipments to Chinese servers following the implementation of the restrictions.

Compal has fewer AI server orders compared to other Taiwanese manufacturers. It has not yet manifested any noticeable changes in Lenovo server assembly proportions. The full extent of the impact will only become more apparent after the enforcement of the ban.

During the transitional period before the implementation of the chip ban in the United States, the server supply chain can still adapt shipments based on local chip demand in China to address market impacts resulting from subsequent chip controls.

2. Chinese Manufacturers Focusing on Accelerating In-House Chip Development

Chinese cloud companies had already started developing their AI chips before the first U.S. chip restrictions in 2022. This included self-developed AI chips like Alibaba Cloud’s T-HEAD, a data center AI chip, and they expanded investments in areas such as DRAM, AI chips, and semiconductors with the aim of establishing a comprehensive IoT system from chips to the cloud.

Baidu Cloud, on the other hand, accelerated the development of its third-generation self-developed Kunlun chip, designed for cloud and edge computing, with plans for an early 2024 release.

Tencent introduced three self-developed chips in 2021, including an AI inference chip called Zixiao, used for Tencent’s meeting business; a video transcoding chip called Canghai, used in cloud gaming and live streaming applications; and a smart network card chip named Xuanling, applied in network storage and computing.

ByteDance made investments in cloud AI chips through its MooreThread initiative in 2022 for applications in AI servers. Huawei released the Ascend 900 chip in 2019 and is expected to introduce the Ascend 930B AI chip in the latter half of 2024. While this chip has the same computational power as the NVIDIA A100 chip, its performance still requires product validation, and it is speculated that it may not replace the current use of NVIDIA GPUs in Chinese AI servers.

Despite the acceleration of self-developed chip development among Chinese cloud server manufacturers, the high technological threshold, lengthy development cycles, and high costs associated with GPU development often delay the introduction of new server products. Therefore, Chinese cloud companies and brand manufacturers continue to purchase NVIDIA GPUs for the production of mid to high-end servers to align with their economic scale and production efficiency.

In response to the new U.S. restrictions, Chinese cloud companies have adopted short-term measures such as increasing imports of existing NVIDIA chips and building up stockpiles before the enforcement of the new restrictions. They are also focusing on medium to long-term strategies, including accelerating resource integration and shortening development timelines to expedite GPU chip manufacturing processes, thus reducing dependency on U.S. restrictions.

Get in touch with us