A sweeping 2022 law, touted by President Joe Biden as a way to revive U.S. semiconductor manufacturing and reduce reliance on foreign-made computer chips, will “sharply increase production’’ of semico
A sweeping 2022 law, touted by President Joe Biden as a way to revive U.S. manufacturing of semiconductors and reduce the country's reliance on foreign-made computer chips, will "sharply increase production'' of semiconductors in the United States.
A new issue of Back & Forth explores the risks and opportunities of Intel’s centrality in U.S. semiconductor strategy. Christina Alfonso caveats the argument presented by CSIS’s Sujai Shivakumar and Charles Wessner for sustained federal funding for Intel Corporation.
Jake Sullivan, the national security adviser, said in an interview that “we’ve just stuck with our theory, which is managed competition.” Trump and Xi Jinping might have other plans.
U.S. adds 25 Chinese traders to semiconductor export control list U.S. set to tighten semiconductor export regulations affecting Chinese firms and AI companies
Semiconductor companies offer an endless variety of trading and investment opportunities in the technology space.
The United States unveiled further export controls Wednesday on advanced computing semiconductors, boosting due diligence requirements for businesses as it seeks to prevent diversion of the tech to China despite existing restrictions.
Find out about the Commerce Department's $143 million investment in three companies to boost the domestic production of critical semiconductors.
In this article, we are going to take a look at where KLA Corporation (NASDAQ:KLAC) stands against the other AI stocks. With only a few days in, President Donald Trump's administration has been making significant strides in advancing artificial intelligence technology.
President-elect Donald Trump had argued that tariffs on foreign chips – not subsidies to encourage U.S. production – would have done more to bring semiconductor plants to the United States.
will “sharply increase production” of semiconductors in the United States. But it will do so at a high cost and might not deliver the best bang for the buck, concludes a report out on ...
Elizabeth Economy is Co-Director of the US, China, and the World Project and Hargrove Senior Fellow at Stanford University’s Hoover Institution. From 2021 to 2023, she was Senior Adviser for China at the U.S. Department of Commerce. She is the author of The World According to China.