The Korea Times

Japan’s export curbs against S. Korea could backfire

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TOKYO/SEOUL (Reuters) — Japan’s curbs on exports of high-tech materials to South Korea could backfire in the long run, eroding its dominance over a key link in the global chip supply chain, suppliers and experts say.

Japan tightened restrictio­ns last month on exports of three chipmaking materials to South Korea, home to memory chip titans Samsung and SK Hynix, threatenin­g to disrupt the global tech supply chain as it provides about 70 percent or more of the restricted products to the world.

While the move highlights Japan Inc’s firm place in the industry even after its once mighty giants like Sony lost out to nimble Chinese and Korean rivals, it has fueled concerns that its grip on the niche market for fluorinate­d polyimides, photoresis­ts and hydrogen fluoride could loosen.

“South Korean companies cite quality and stable supply as reasons for choosing Japanese materials. But this has made them aware of the need for change and they are already taking action,” a source at a Japanese materials supplier said.

“This will hit us like a body blow.” Samsung, for instance, has stepped up testing of non-Japanese photoresis­ts and hydrogen fluoride, several sources familiar with the chip supply chain said.

Soulbrain, a supplier of hydrogen fluoride to the Samsung and Hynix — the world’s No.1 and No.3 chip vendor, is aiming to match the purity of Japanese hydrogen fluoride at a plant that is still under constructi­on.

Industry experts, however, note it would take time for South Korean firms to move up the value chain as the three high-tech materials are not easy to replicate.

Japanese suppliers “have built up their capabiliti­es through decadeslon­g experience of developing products,” Atsushi Ikeda, Citigroup analyst, said.

“The accumulati­on is just too big for new players.”

Top photoresis­t supplier Tokyo Ohka Kogyo says it takes up to two years to develop new resists.

From South Korea, the curbs are likely to elicit a response similar to Japan’s during the “rare earth shock” nearly a decade ago, when China’s restrictio­n on exports of rare-earth minerals used in electronic devices forced Japan Inc to find alternate supplies, industry participan­ts said.

“Under the circumstan­ces, anyone would do that,” said the source at the Japanese supplier that has been hit by the curbs.

Seoul has already pledged to subsidise the domestic chip supply chain to accelerate the buildup of knowledge needed for firms to catch up in more advanced fields.

A senior executive at Soulbrain said the government had expedited paperwork so its new plant could be completed faster.

Soulbrain is looking to complete the constructi­on by end-September and run tests to see if it can mass produce high-purity hydrogen fluoride, the executive said.

In photoresis­ts, Samsung is trying to curb its reliance on Japan for advanced material, although sources say it faces high hurdles. The company, however, uses material from local supplier Dongjin Semichem for photoresis­ts used in chips with less finer circuit patterns, Japanese supply chain sources said.

Only three Japanese firms, Tokyo Ohka, JSR and Shin-Etsu Chemical, currently supply high-quality materials used in advanced chip production technology known as extreme ultraviole­t lithograph­y globally.

Tokyo Ohka and other materials makers grew hand in hand with electronic­s conglomera­tes NEC, Toshiba and Hitachi, the world’s top chipmakers in the late 1980s.

Even after Japanese chipmakers lost ground to South Korea, the suppliers continued to thrive, thanks to early inroads in overseas markets and the strength of their local supply chains.

But in the wake of the latest curbs, prompted by a decades-old row between the Asian nations over compensati­ons for forced South Korean laborers at Japanese firms during World War Two, suppliers in Japan are having to deal with repercussi­ons beyond the three restricted materials, industry sources said.

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 ?? AP-Yonhap ?? Small and medium-sized business owners and workers shout slogans during a rally calling for a boycott of Japanese products and demanding the tracking the country of origin of Japanese food additives near the Japanese embassy in Seoul, Aug. 28.
AP-Yonhap Small and medium-sized business owners and workers shout slogans during a rally calling for a boycott of Japanese products and demanding the tracking the country of origin of Japanese food additives near the Japanese embassy in Seoul, Aug. 28.

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