🔬Semicon Briefing
14. Mai 2026 · 03:50 Uhr
1SMIC acquires Beijing wafer fab for $5.97 billion
@Lamwumkt / @HeddaMacDonald5 (X) SMIC received green light at the Shanghai Stock Exchange (STAR Market) to acquire a Beijing wafer fab valued at 40.6 billion yuan (~$5.97 billion) – the largest M&A deal in China's foundry sector of all time. The move significantly strengthens China's self-sufficiency in mature process technology, particularly as US export controls cut off access to Western equipment.
2Tower Semi signs $1.3 billion silicon photonics contract
@Cheeyeen2 / @haurafn (X) Tower Semiconductor (TSEM) signed a long-term silicon photonics contract worth $1.3 billion on May 13, 2026 and received an advance payment of $290 million; the company is targeting SiPho revenue of $2.8 billion by 2028. The deal signals that optical interconnects for AI data centers are becoming the next major semiconductor growth field.
3Lattice Semiconductor acquires AMI for $1.65 billion
Wilson Sonsini / TradingView Lattice Semiconductor signed a merger agreement to acquire AMI in a cash-and-stock transaction of approximately $1.65 billion; closing is expected in Q3 2026. The acquisition expands Lattice's portfolio in embedded firmware and security solutions and strengthens its position in the embedded systems market.
4Indie Semiconductor buys CMOS image sensor division from ams OSRAM
pulse2.com / evertiq.com Indie Semiconductor acquires the fabless CMOS image sensor group from ams OSRAM for €40 million – a direct result of ams OSRAM's strategic pivot to pure optics initiated in February 2026. For Indie, this significantly strengthens its automotive sensing pipeline, while ams OSRAM accelerates its debt reduction.
5EU Chips Act II: Commission allowed to invest directly in fabs
Bloomberg / Bits&Chips The revised EU Chips Act (Chips Act II), whose formal draft is expected by end of May, will allow the European Commission to invest directly in cross-border fab projects – rather than funding only nationally as before. The move is intended to accelerate stalled projects and narrow Europe's gap versus the US CHIPS Act ($280 billion).
6Quantum Computing: QUBT acquires Luminar Semi & NuCrypt – Revenue +9,367% YoY
@traderonthestrm (X) Quantum Computing Inc. (QUBT) reported Q1 2026 revenue of $3.7 million versus $39,000 in the prior year – a gain of 9,367% – driven entirely by the acquisitions of Luminar Semiconductor ($110 million, closed Feb. 2026) and NuCrypt ($5 million, closed March 2026). The jump illustrates how quantum computing firms are rapidly building semiconductor manufacturing capabilities through M&A to move beyond the pure research phase.
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The semiconductor industry is experiencing a remarkable concentration of strategic deals in the week of May 9–14, 2026: on one hand, Western players are pooling resources through partnerships (Applied Materials/TSMC EPIC Center), acquisitions (Lattice/AMI, IonQ/SkyWater, Indie/ams OSRAM), and political subsidy frameworks (EU Chips Act II) to diversify supply chains and secure AI infrastructure. On the other hand, SMIC's record $5.97 billion M&A signals that China is massively accelerating its foundry expansion despite – or precisely because of – Western export controls. The Trump-Xi summit in Beijing has put the AI chip export question at center stage without a breakthrough: rare earth volumes remain around 50% below pre-crisis levels, and Polymarket sees a Taiwan invasion by year-end at only 7% probability – the situation is tense but manageable. Strategically dangerous remains that US export restrictions are accelerating China's indigenous development, while Silicon Photonics (Tower Semi) is emerging as a new battleground segment for AI data center connectivity.
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