🔬Semicon Briefing
May 10, 2026 · 03:50 Uhr
1Lattice Semiconductor acquires AMI for $1.65 billion
TradingView / Wilson Sonsini Lattice Semiconductor has signed a merger agreement to acquire AMI in a cash-and-stock transaction (~$1.65 billion); closing is planned for Q3 2026. The deal strengthens Lattice's position in firmware and platform management chips, which are critical for data centers and AI servers.
2US orders delivery halt for chip equipment to Hua Hong
Reuters The US Department of Commerce has instructed several chip equipment manufacturers to immediately stop certain tool supplies to Hua Hong, China's second-largest chipmaker. The measure escalates the chip war and directly impacts Applied Materials, Lam Research, and other US equipment suppliers with China exposure.
3EU Chips Act 2.0: Direct investments in fabs – new details
Bloomberg / Bits&Chips The EU draft for Chips Act 2.0 allows the Commission direct equity stakes in fab projects for the first time and aims to accelerate cross-border consortia through simplified funding structures – the draft is expected at the end of May. Previous projects like ESMC (TSMC/Bosch/Infineon/NXP) in Dresden could directly benefit. NEW DEVELOPMENT: SEMI Europe is calling for six concrete measures to optimize the law in a fresh position paper.
4Trump's China visit looms – markets price in 96%
Polymarket Prediction markets value a Trump trip to China by end of May at 96% probability, while the exact date bet on May 13 stands at 60% – a strong signal of imminent geopolitical movement. For the semiconductor industry, a visit would be a catalyst for potential relaxation or new agreements on chip export controls.
5ASML: Quasi-monopoly on EUV as AI bottleneck – viral
@nataliefratto (TikTok) A TikTok video with 21,000 views and 1,592 likes explains ASML's factual 100% monopoly on EUV lithography machines as a critical bottleneck for both AI chips and iPhones – reaching mainstream awareness beyond financial press. The viral spread signals growing public awareness of semiconductor geopolitics and could increase regulatory pressure on ASML's export policy.
6Applied Materials: Markets expect 88% chance of record Q2
Polymarket Prediction markets give Applied Materials an 88% chance of achieving over $5.7 billion in Semiconductor Systems revenue in Q2 2026 – despite the simultaneous delivery halt to Hua Hong in China. The combination of strong AI capex demand and export restriction risk makes AMAT a key indicator for the overall health of the chip equipment industry.
Situation Report
The semiconductor industry is in a phase of simultaneous consolidation and geopolitical escalation: While Lattice/AMI and IonQ/SkyWater demonstrate M&A activity across the board, US export stops against Hua Hong intensify the chip war and force equipment suppliers like Applied Materials into a difficult dilemma between AI boom demand and compliance risks. The Trump-China trip priced in at 96% is the most important near-term wildcard: it could either initiate a relaxation of export controls or – if it fails – trigger a new escalation level that directly affects supply chains from ASML to TSMC. Europe's Chips Act 2.0 reform and the viral ASML monopoly debate show that public and political awareness of strategic semiconductor dependencies has reached a new peak.
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