British chip giant Arm Holdings PLC yesterday signed an agreement with Malaysia to bolster the Southeast Asian country’s efforts to produce high-end semiconductors amid the US-China tech trade war.
Malaysia is a key player in the vital chips sector, but has been largely focused on packaging, assembly and testing services.
The agreement will see Softbank Group Corp-owned Arm provide chip designs and other technology, helping Malaysia to move into more value-added production, such as chip fabrication and design.
Photo: AFP
The Southeast Asian nation is paying US$250 million over a decade to receive support from the British company, journalists were told at a briefing by Malaysia’s Ministry of Economy.
“Through a comprehensive partnership with Arm, we have conceived one of the most ambitious technological plans Malaysia has ever seen — to pioneer Made-by-Malaysia AI [artificial intelligence] chips,” Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim said in remarks before witnessing the signing.
“These chips will be designed, manufactured, tested and assembled here, and sold to the rest of the world,” he said.
In addition, Arm will also establish its first office in Southeast Asia in Kuala Lumpur, aiming to expand the company’s reach in the region, as well as Australia and New Zealand, Anwar said.
“We won’t let you down. This is going to be an extremely exciting 10 years and more,” Arm chief executive Rene Haas said.
Malaysian Minister of Economy Rafizi Ramli said the collaboration would enable Malaysia and Arm “to build a complete supply chain in advanced industries such as AI, data servers, autonomous vehicles, IoT [Internet of things], robotics and others.”
He said that about 10,000 local semiconductor engineers would be trained under the deal.
Dedi Iskandar, Asia-Pacific regional director at datacenterHawk LLC, said the agreement would make Malaysia “one of the elite countries in Asia Pacific that possess advanced AI chip design capabilities other than Taiwan and Singapore.”
“Malaysia is laying the red carpet and showing the world that they are serious in this tech war,” he said.
Tensions between Washington and Beijing over advanced tech, especially semiconductors, in recent years have forced many firms to look into relocating their manufacturing from China to other countries, including Malaysia, Vietnam and India.
“This deal creates equilibrium to the region as Taiwan is always a sore thumb between China and US tech war, and Malaysia are friends to both of them,” Dedi said.
A prominent player in the industry for decades, Malaysia accounts for an estimated 13 percent of global back-end manufacturing, according to German tech firm Robert Bosch GmbH.
Malaysia’s northern island of Penang, home to a number of facilities, is often dubbed the country’s Silicon Valley.
In April last year, Anwar announced plans to build a massive semiconductor design park, an effort to move Malaysia beyond chip production.
Anna Bhobho, a 31-year-old housewife from rural Zimbabwe, was once a silent observer in her home, excluded from financial and family decisionmaking in the deeply patriarchal society. Today, she is a driver of change in her village, thanks to an electric tricycle she owns. In many parts of rural sub-Saharan Africa, women have long been excluded from mainstream economic activities such as operating public transportation. However, three-wheelers powered by green energy are reversing that trend, offering financial opportunities and a newfound sense of importance. “My husband now looks up to me to take care of a large chunk of expenses,
State-run CPC Corp, Taiwan (CPC, 台灣中油) yesterday signed a letter of intent with Alaska Gasline Development Corp (AGDC), expressing an interest to buy liquefied natural gas (LNG) and invest in the latter’s Alaska LNG project, the Ministry of Economic Affairs said in a statement. Under the agreement, CPC is to participate in the project’s upstream gas investment to secure stable energy resources for Taiwan, the ministry said. The Alaska LNG project is jointly promoted by AGDC and major developer Glenfarne Group LLC, as Alaska plans to export up to 20 million tonnes of LNG annually from 2031. It involves constructing an 1,290km
NEXT GENERATION: The company also showcased automated machines, including a nursing robot called Nurabot, which is to enter service at a Taichung hospital this year Hon Hai Precision Industry Co (鴻海精密) expects server revenue to exceed its iPhone revenue within two years, with the possibility of achieving this goal as early as this year, chairman Young Liu (劉揚偉) said on Tuesday at Nvidia Corp’s annual technology conference in San Jose, California. AI would be the primary focus this year for the company, also known as Foxconn Technology Group (富士康科技集團), as rapidly advancing AI applications are driving up demand for AI servers, Liu said. The production and shipment of Nvidia’s GB200 chips and the anticipated launch of GB300 chips in the second half of the year would propel
‘MAKE OR BREAK’: Nvidia shares remain down more than 9 percent, but investors are hoping CEO Jensen Huang’s speech can stave off fears that the sales boom is peaking Shares in Nvidia Corp’s Taiwanese suppliers mostly closed higher yesterday on hopes that the US artificial intelligence (AI) chip designer would showcase next-generation technologies at its annual AI conference slated to open later in the day. The GPU Technology Conference (GTC) in California is to feature developers, engineers, researchers, inventors and information technology professionals, and would focus on AI, computer graphics, data science, machine learning and autonomous machines. The event comes at a make-or-break moment for the firm, as it heads into the next few quarters, with Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang’s (黃仁勳) keynote speech today seen as having the ability to