ARM Order’s Staff to Stop Working with Huawei
UK-based
chip designer ARM has told staff it must suspend business with Huawei,
according to internal documents obtained by the BBC.
ARM
instructed employees to halt "all active contracts, support entitlements,
and any pending engagements” with Huawei and its subsidiaries to comply with a
recent US trade clampdown.
ARM's
designs form the basis of most mobile device processors worldwide.
In a company
memo, it said its designs contained “US origin technology”.
As a
consequence, it believes it is affected by the Trump administration's ban.
One analyst
described the move, if it became long-term, as an “insurmountable” blow to
Huawei’s business.
He said it
would greatly affect the firm's ability to develop its own chips, many of which
are currently built with ARM’s underlying technology, for which it pays a
licence.
Cambridge-headquartered
ARM had been described as the UK's largest tech firm until its takeover by a
Japanese fund. It employs 6,000 workers and lists eight offices in the US.
In a
statement it said it was "complying with all of the latest regulations set
forth by the US government”, but declined to comment further.
Huawei has
issued a brief statement of its own.
"We
value our close relationships with our partners, but recognise the pressure
some of them are under, as a result of politically motivated decisions,"
it said.
"We are
confident this regrettable situation can be resolved and our priority remains
to continue to deliver world-class technology and products to our customers
around the world."
ARM is a
chip designer founded in 1990. In September 2016 it was acquired by Japanese
telecoms giant Softbank, but remains based in Cambridge, UK.
ARM does not
manufacture computer processors itself, but rather licenses its semiconductor
technologies to others.
In some
cases, manufacturers only license ARM's architecture, or "instruction
sets", which determine how processors handle commands. This option gives
chip-makers greater freedom to customise their own designs.
In other
cases, manufacturers license ARM's processor core designs - which describes how
the chips' transistors should be arranged. These blueprints still need to be
combined with other elements - such as memory and radios - to create what is
referred to as a system-on-chip.
As a result,
when you hear talk of a device being powered by a Samsung Exynos, Qualcomm
Snapdragon or Apple A11 chip - or one in a Huawei smartphone - it is still
ARM's technology that is involved.
ARM's US
headquarters are in San Jose, California, and the firm has offices in
Washington, Arizona, Texas and Massachusetts.
ARM’s staff
were informed of the decision on 16 May, following the US Commerce Department’s
move to add Huawei to its “entity list” of companies with which American firms
could no longer do business.
The BBC has
also seen a company memo dated 18 May detailing the implications of the export
ban.
On Tuesday
21 May, US government officials issued a 90-day reprieve on the restrictions in
order to minimise immediate disruption. But a source at ARM said staff had not
been told they could start working again with Huawei or its subsidiaries, even
temporarily.
A spokesman
for ARM declined to offer any additional clarity about the current status of its
Huawei contracts.
According to
one memo, ARM staff were instructed to suspend all interactions with Huawei and
its subsidiaries.
It advised
staff to send a note informing Huawei (or related) employees that due to an
“unfortunate situation”, they were not allowed to “provide support, delivery
technology (whether software, code, or other updates), engage in technical
discussions, or otherwise discuss technical matters with Huawei, HiSilicon or
any of the other named entities”.
ARM staff
that come into contact with employees at industry events must “politely decline
and stop” any conversations about the business, the guidance said - stressing
that individuals could be held personally liable for breaking the trade rules.
The ban also
appeared to apply to ARM China, the China-based company in which ARM Holdings
owns a 49% stake. It was set up as a joint venture with a Chinese investment
consortium last year in order to enable ARM to develop, sell and offer support
for its products in the region.
Huawei told
reporters on Tuesday that its “plan B” for software would be to develop its own
operating system, something it has already been working on for some time.
However, it will be significantly more difficult for the firm to source
home-grown components of sufficient quality.
Huawei
currently sources some of its chips from HiSilicon, which it owns. However,
while produced in China, HiSilicon’s chips are built using underlying
technology created by ARM.
While
HiSilicon and Huawei are free to carry on using and manufacturing existing
chips, the ban would mean the company could no longer turn to ARM for
assistance in developing components for devices in future.
HiSilicon's
upcoming processor, Kirin 985, is due be used in Huawei devices later this
year. According to a source at ARM, it is not expected to be affected by the
ban. However, the next iteration of the chip has not yet been completed - and
is likely to need to be rebuilt from scratch, the source said.
Huawei also
uses ARM's designs for its recently unveiled Kunpeng chips. These are used to
power its TaiShan-series computer servers, which are designed to provide
cloud computing and storage to clients.
The
relationship between ARM and Huawei engineers is tight - earlier this month
Huawei announced its intention to build a research centre only 15 minutes from
ARM’s headquarters in Cambridge, UK.
"ARM is
the foundation of Huawei’s smartphone chip designs, so this is an
insurmountable obstacle for Huawei,” said Geoff Blaber, from CCS Insight.
"That
said, with an abundance of companies in Huawei’s supply chain already having
taken action to comply with the US order, Huawei’s ability to operate was
already severely affected.”
What is not
yet clear is whether ARM is acting on its own interpretation of the US rules,
or whether it has been advised by the Commerce Department.
"If
that interpretation is correct, that’s going to affect every semiconductor
company in the world,” remarked analyst Lee Ratliff, from IHS Markit.
"They’re
not going to be able to easily replace these parts with new, in-house designs -
the semiconductor industry in China is nascent.”
FROM .bbc.com/news/technology
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