Biden is meeting with CEOs to address the global chip shortage. But this meeting is part of a strategy to help the US regain leadership in #semiconductor manufacturing, an area dominated by two companies in Asia. A primer to the state of the chip market https://t.co/ZWsgaK8isN
— Arjun Kharpal (@ArjunKharpal) April 12, 2021
How Asia came to dominate chipmaking and what the U.S. wants to do about it https://t.co/H5yP7Hknt7
— CNBC (@CNBC) April 12, 2021
Well, I have been saying this for quite sometimehttps://t.co/bmt3CHB5LF pic.twitter.com/HagarNCyT9
— Deepak Singh (@smarket) April 12, 2021
Taiwan’s TSMC and South Korea’s Samsung Electronics control more than 70% of the semiconductor manufacturing market. Under President Biden, the U.S. seeks to regain leadership in manufacturing and secure supply chains. CNBC’s @ArjunKharpal with more. https://t.co/A0oAPtQVf0 pic.twitter.com/XC4shykGZe
— CNBC International (@CNBCi) April 12, 2021
"TSMC has 55% foundry market share and Samsung has 18%. Taiwan and South Korea collectively have 81% of the global market in foundries, highlighting the dominance and reliance on these two countries as well as on TSMC and Samsung." https://t.co/mTTSKB5rdW
— Tren Griffin (@trengriffin) April 12, 2021
? How Asia came to dominate chipmaking and what the U.S. wants to do about it#asia #us #geopolitics #economy https://t.co/p67jJhMChR
— Dr. ir Johannes Drooghaag (JD) ?? (@DrJDrooghaag) April 12, 2021
How Asia came to dominate chipmaking and what the U.S. wants to do about it https://t.co/PjWHgeHb5h
— CNBC Tech (@CNBCtech) April 12, 2021
How Asia came to dominate chipmaking and what the U.S. wants to do about it https://t.co/mmILEI1wSE
— CNBC International (@CNBCi) April 12, 2021