The United States has granted an annual licence allowing Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix to import US chipmaking equipment to their China facilities for 2026.
The development provides temporary relief from tightening export controls that threatened to disrupt the global memory supply chain.
The approval, which replaces a broader exemption system expiring this week, offers essential breathing room for two of the world’s largest memory chipmakers.
By preserving their ability to maintain operations in China, Washington is signaling a calibrated approach that balances strict technology containment with the economic reality.
What the licence means
The decision, reported exclusively by Reuters, marks a significant shift in how Washington regulates foreign chipmakers operating in China.
For years, Samsung and SK Hynix operated under “validated end-user” (VEU) status, a designation that allowed them to import US tools without seeking individual permissions.
That status is set to expire on December 31, 2025.
Under this new framework, the indefinite waivers are replaced by an annual review process.
While the 2026 licence allows shipments to proceed without immediate disruption, it effectively places the Korean giants on a shorter leash.
Industry observers describe the move as “temporary relief” rather than a permanent solution, forcing these companies to navigate Washington’s regulatory landscape year by year.
The practical effect is immediate operational continuity.
Without this licence, the flow of spare parts and new tools needed to maintain yields at Samsung’s NAND plant in Xi’an and SK Hynix’s DRAM facility in Wuxi would have faced bureaucratic gridlock starting January 1.
Both Samsung and SK Hynix declined to comment on the specific terms of the approval, and the US Commerce Department was not immediately available for a statement.
Why it matters for supply, prices and policy
This regulatory reprieve comes at a critical moment for the global semiconductor market.
Memory prices have been surging throughout late 2025, driven by insatiable demand for high-bandwidth memory (HBM) in AI data centers and recovering consumer electronics sales.
China remains a manufacturing backbone for both companies, accounting for roughly 30–40% of their total NAND and DRAM output.
Any disruption to this capacity would have likely sent memory prices spiraling further, creating a headache for US tech giants that rely on affordable storage and memory for their devices and servers.
By granting the licence, the Trump administration appears to be acting to prevent a supply shock that could exacerbate inflation.
From a geopolitical standpoint, the move illustrates Washington’s “small yard, high fence” strategy in action.
While the US is aggressively restricting China’s access to cutting-edge logic chips (like those used for AI training), it is showing flexibility on commodity memory chips, where immediate decoupling is economically hazardous.
However, the shift to annual licences signals that this flexibility is conditional and could be revoked if the geopolitical winds shift.
The key indicator for investors will be whether this annual renewal becomes a routine administrative rubber-stamp or a leverage point in future US-China trade negotiations.
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