Huawei seeks chip money in China as fights off US pressure
Chinese telecoms equipment giant Huawei Technologies Co Ltd
has obtained a licence in China that allows it to seek external capital, as it
works to shore up its supply of silicon chips in the face of U.S. pressure.
The United States, which alleges that Huawei’s equipment
could be used by Beijing for spying, has imposed sanctions on the company that
have cut off its supplies of many overseas chips and effectively barred it from
building its own. Huawei has repeatedly denied these allegations.
It did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for
comment on Wednesday.
Habo Investments, set up by Huawei in April 2019, registered
with the Asset Management Association of China as a private fund manager on
Jan. 14, according to an official record, enabling it to seek investors from
outside the company.
The newly-registered fund platform has yet to roll out any
products.
But with three billion yuan ($472.29 million) in registered
capital, Habo has closed at least 20 deals for stakes in Chinese tech companies
since its establishment, public records showed.
Its latest investment target is Shenzhen-based Kaihong,
which specialises in offering operating systems for the Internet of Things.
Last week, Habo invested 100 million yuan in Kaihong for a 20% stake.
Habo was established in response to what Huawei’s rotating
chairman, Guo Ping, in 2020 described as “suppression” by the United States.
Most of Habo Investment’s deals have been in chip-related
Chinese start-ups, a few of which have become part of Huawei’s supply chain.
In December, Huawei’s rotating chairman Guo Ping told
employees that the company expects 2021 revenue to decline nearly 30% to 634
billion yuan ($99.48 billion).
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