ASML to Expand China Staff 14% as Covid Disruptions Ease

(Bloomberg) — ASML Holding NV is hiring more than 200 staff in China this year to keep up with growth in the country, where its chipmaking tools are seen as crucial in a long-term contest with Washington for tech supremacy.

The Dutch firm, whose machines are indispensable to making advanced semiconductors, is expanding its workforce 14% from about 1,400 currently.

It recorded sales of 2.7 billion euros ($2.9 billion) in the 2021 financial year, accounting for 14.5% of global sales, the firm said in a statement Tuesday.

ASML is enlarging its presence in China just as the world’s biggest semiconductor market starts to emerge from a series of Covid-19 lockdowns that have hampered production, disrupted shipments of components and dampened electronics demand.

The company is the world’s No. 1 supplier of Extreme Ultraviolet Lithography (EUV) machines, which are used by leading chipmakers Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. and Samsung Electronics Co. to produce the most advanced chips for clients such as Apple Inc.

US trade sanctions imposed on leading Chinese tech firms such as Huawei Technologies Co.

could limit ASML’s potential trading partners in the country. Still, ASML does business with major Chinese chipmakers like Shanghai-based Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp. and has many more customers operating plants within Chinese borders.

Its engineers have made a practice of visiting and working with clients on-site to accelerate production and catch up on time lost to pandemic-related shutdowns.

Among the jobs listed by ASML is a post looking for a Head of Export Control & Sanctions Compliance China, whose job it will be to figure out how the business should balance its legal responsibilities to local and international authorities.

The company has also accused Chinese firms of stealing its intellectual property.

Read more: Engineer Charged With Stealing Chip Technology Thriving in China

ASML occupies a pivotal role in the global chip supply chain, which is grappling with a systemic shortage of semiconductors that arose during the pandemic.

Beside its EUV systems, it also supplies more mature technologies to help fabricate the ubiquitous chips enabling things like wireless connectivity, driving automation and smart homes.

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