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Transcript | Finbarr Bermingham of the SCMP on Nexperia, Export Controls, and Europe's Impossible Position

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  • Nexperia 15 min read

    The company at the center of this dispute has a complex corporate history - spun off from NXP Semiconductors, which itself came from Philips - understanding its origins helps explain why this Dutch company became such a flashpoint

Note: Just so you have all the links and the timestamps, I’m including the no-transcript podcast page below, and will do so going forward. Transcript courtesy of CadreScripts follows that! Image by Keya Zhou.

This week on Sinica, I welcome back Finbarr Bermingham, the Brussels-based Europe correspondent for the South China Morning Post, about the Nexperia dispute — one of the most revealing episodes in the global contest over semiconductor supply chains. Nexperia, a Dutch-headquartered chipmaker owned by Shanghai-listed Wingtech, became the subject of extraordinary government intervention when the Netherlands invoked a Cold War-era emergency law to seize temporary control of the company and suspend its Chinese CEO. Finbarr’s reporting, drawing on Dutch court documents and expert sources, has illuminated the tangled threads of this story: preexisting concerns about governance and technology transfer, mounting U.S. pressure on The Hague to remove Chinese management, and the timing of the Dutch action on the very day the U.S. rolled out its affiliate rule. We discuss China’s retaliatory export controls on chips packaged at Nexperia’s Dongguan facilities, the role of the Trump-Xi meeting in Busan in unlocking a temporary thaw, and what this case reveals about Europe’s agonizing position between American pressure and Chinese integration in global production networks.

4:34 – Why the “Europe cracks down on Chinese acquisition” framing was too simple

6:17 – The Dutch court’s extraordinary tick-tock of events and U.S. lobbying

9:04 – The June pressure from Washington: divestment or the affiliate list

10:13 – Dutch fears of production know-how relocating to China

12:35 – The impossible position: damned if they did, damned if they didn’t

14:46 – The obscure Cold War-era Goods Availability Act

17:11 – CEO Zhang Xuezheng and the question of who stopped cooperating first

19:26 – Was China’s export control a state policy or a corporate move?

22:16 – Europe’s de-risking framework and the lessons from Nexperia

25:39 – The fragmented European response: Germany, France, Hungary, and the Baltics

30:31 – Did Germany shape the response behind the scenes?

33:06 – The Trump-Xi meeting in Busan and the resolution of the crisis

37:01 – Will the Nexperia case deter future European interventions?

40:28 – Is Europe still an attractive market for Chinese investment?

41:59 – The Europe China Forum: unusually polite in a time of tenterhooks

Paying it forward: Dewey Sim (SCMP diplomacy desk, Beijing); Coco Feng (SCMP technology, Guangdong); Khushboo Razdan (SCMP North America);

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