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Nexperia halts chip supplies to China in threat to global car production

about 11 hours ago
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Nexperia, the EU-based automotive chipmaker at the centre of a geopolitical dispute, has suspended supplies to its Chinese factory, stepping up a trade war that threatens to halt production at carmakers around the world.The company wrote to customers this week informing them all supplies to a Chinese plant had been suspended.In September, the Netherlands used national security laws to take control of the chipmaker, citing concerns that its Chinese owner, Wingtech Technologies, was planning to shift intellectual property to another company it owned.The Dutch government said that threatened the future of European chip capacity, and removed the Wingtech chairman, Zhang Xuezheng, as chief executive.China responded by halting exports from all Nexperia’s factories in China, prompting warnings this week that the embargo would force production lines at EU car factories to close within days.

An extended blockade threatens the supply chain, because many Nexperia products manufactured in Europe – including the wafers from which chips are cut – were previously shipped to the Chinese factory for packaging and distribution.Nexperia’s interim chief executive, Stefan Tilger, wrote that he had suspended shipments to the Dongguan factory, in the southern Guangdong province, on Sunday, saying it was “a direct consequence of the local management’s recent failure to comply with the agreed contractual payment terms”, according to extracts first published by Reuters.Nexperia said it still hoped to resume shipments, and wanted to de-escalate the situation.A person with knowledge of the situation said shipments could resume if the contractual payments were made.The company will also continue to ship products to a factory in Malaysia, which is smaller than its Chinese plant.

A succession of carmakers have warned of the risk of disruption from shortages of the key components, which are crucial throughout modern cars.The automotive industry suffered from severe semiconductor shortages in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic, but these affected more advanced chips, rather than the cheaper power control ones made by Nexperia.The company generally ships more than 100bn products a year, to be used in parts ranging from airbags and adjustable seats to wing mirrors and central locking.Nissan said this week it had enough chips to last until the first week of November, while rival Honda said it had suspended production at a plant in Mexico.Mercedes-Benz said it was “covered” in the short term, but it was looking for alternatives.

Volkswagen signalled on Thursday that its annual profit targets were at risk without sufficient chips.However, Toyota, the world’s largest carmaker, told reporters at a car show in Tokyo on Friday that it was not facing a major supply problem, even if it could eventually face a hit to production.The EU’s trade commissioner, Maroš Šefčovič, is to seek further discussions with Chinese counterparts after Chinese and EU officials met in Brussels on Friday to address China’s ban on Nexperia exports and its restrictions on supplies of rare earth minerals.Also on Friday, the bloc’s tech commissioner, Henna Virkkunen, met Nexperia’s interim boss after seeing the European chip makers Infineon, ST and NXP the day before.After the meeting, she said the dialogue with Nexperia had served to underline the EU’s needs for a new Chips Act with three lessons from the current crisis, including: better visibility of chip stocks in the pipeline, the need to invest in chip supply despite the cost, and the need for reserve stocks.

Sign up to Business TodayGet set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morningafter newsletter promotion“Stockpiling and diversification of supply are critical for our collective resilience,” she said.The German Association of the Automotive Industry (VDA) said on Thursday it feared “significant production restrictions in the near future, and possibly even production stoppages” if the Nexperia situation could not be resolved soon.British operations may also be affected.Nexperia produces some chip wafers in Manchester, in a factory set up originally by the Dutch manufacturer Philips.Nexperia previously owned another UK factory, in south Wales, but was blocked from completing a takeover of Newport Wafer Fab by the UK government on national security grounds, because of its ultimate Chinese owners.

The US semiconductor company Vishay Intertechnology eventually agreed to buy the factory in November 2023,Wingtech was approached for comment,
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The Next wave: how the clothing retailer spread its wings and made sales surge

Whatever Next? One of the UK’s largest clothing retailers is shrugging off its rather dull image and spreading its wings internationally, even as many high street rivals suffer.You may think of Next as a place to buy reliable work clothes, a nice cushion or to kit out the kids – it is the UK’s biggest children’s clothing seller. However, it has quietly been morphing into something much bigger.Its shop on London’s Oxford Street tells some of the story – it houses not only a giant kids clothing department, but a big men’s suiting section and womenswear. Many of the parents shopping there appear to be waiting for teenage daughters who are thronging the Victoria’s Secret section upstairs and the neighbouring Bath & Body Works and Gap stores

about 14 hours ago
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Champagne body attempts to buck Delevingne sisters’ marketing fizz

A champagne industry body has written to the celebrity Delevingne sisters demanding they stop making references to the drink in the marketing of their vegan prosecco brand.Della Vite, founded by Cara, Poppy and Chloe Delevingne, has been accused of exploiting the reputation of champagne, by Comité Champagne, the Times reported.Della Vite marketing materials feature the slogan: “Cheat on champagne” and: “Warning: This is not champagne”.It has emerged Della Vite received a letter from the industry body, which describes itself as “defending the joint interests of champagne houses and growers”, demanding they stop making reference to champagne in their marketing.The sisters refused and the brand has continued with its campaign

about 15 hours ago
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‘The money machine is misfiring’: City blames Brexit for UK’s £20bn productivity headache

For Rob Rooney, the impact of Brexit for the City of London is clear. “Frankfurt, Madrid, Milan and Paris are all doing better than they were. It has been at London’s expense. There is no question about that.”In his time as Morgan Stanley’s top executive in London, Rooney led the US investment bank’s relocation of hundreds of bankers and billions of pounds of assets to Frankfurt to sidestep Britain’s shock EU departure

about 16 hours ago
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Tinned tuna maker Princes floats at nearly £1.2bn in boost for London

The tinned tuna maker Princes Group has kicked off a float with a valuation of nearly £1.2bn in a boost for the London stock market.The debut of the shares in the almost 150-year-old company, which is best known for its Princes tinned tuna and Napolina tinned tomatoes, olive oil and pasta, marks a rare bright spot in the UK’s lacklustre market for flotations.However, the stock launched at the bottom end of a £1.16bn to £1

about 18 hours ago
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Starbucks workers hold strike vote amid anger over pay and conditions

Unionized Starbucks workers across the US are casting their votes on whether to hold a strike amid anger over pay and conditions at the world’s largest coffee chain, and allegations it breached labor laws by engaging in bad faith bargaining.Starbucks has faced a rapid wave of mobilization since 2021. Starbucks Workers United, a union representing baristas at the chain, has won elections at more than 650 of its locations in 45 states and the District of Columbia, representing more than 12,000 workers.Butit has yet to obtain a contract. Starbucks Workers United claims company management started to “majorly stonewall” the union; Starbucks claims the union walked away from the bargaining table

about 19 hours ago
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UK house price growth slows as buyers ‘sit on sidelines’ before budget

British house price growth slowed in October, according to lending data, with analysts suggesting that buyers are “sitting on the sidelines” before a budget that may bring new property taxes.The average house price rose by 0.3% month on month in October, Nationwide said, down from 0.5% in September. The average price of a home was £272,226, up from £271,995 in September

about 21 hours ago
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Ministers’ claims to have helped JLR in doubt as £1.5bn support left untouched

about 13 hours ago
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Amazon shares surge as AI boom fuels cloud growth; Nvidia boss says selling chips in China is Trump’s call – as it happened

about 14 hours ago
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OpenAI thought to be preparing for $1tn stock market float

1 day ago
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Google Pixel 10 Pro Fold review: dust-resistant and more durable foldable phone

2 days ago
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No mountain too high for Itoje and England with Australia first up in autumn series

about 9 hours ago
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Liam Lawson cleared of blame by FIA for marshals scare at Mexico Grand Prix

about 11 hours ago