NG Solution Team
Technology

Is the capacity crunch in mature node chips pushing orders to Chinese foundries?

The global surge in artificial intelligence is redirecting semiconductor orders to Chinese foundries as international competitors focus on producing high-margin AI chips and high-bandwidth memory, leading to a shortage in mature-node semiconductors. This shift is creating a demand crunch for power-management and other mature chip capacities, according to Zhao Haijun, co-CEO of a leading Chinese contract chipmaker. Consumer electronics and IoT companies are increasingly turning to mainland China for capacity, driven by the rise of electric vehicles, robotics, domestic supply-chain localization, and stockpiling efforts. Market data indicates that the utilization rate for older generation 8-inch wafers at the world’s top foundries is projected to reach nearly 90% by 2026, up from 80% in 2025, due to the growing need for power management integrated circuits in AI servers. As a major Taiwanese semiconductor manufacturer plans to reduce its mature-node capacity, Chinese suppliers and second-tier foundries are stepping in to meet the demand. The Chinese chipmaker’s utilization rate rose to 93.1% in the first quarter, with revenue from China accounting for nearly 89% of its total.

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