Chinese fabs import record volumes of US chipmaking equipment via Singapore and Malaysia — homegrown tool makers booked record 2025 revenues as price competition squeezes margins

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Thursday, April 16, 2026
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Chinese fabs import record volumes of US chipmaking equipment via Singapore and Malaysia — homegrown tool makers booked record 2025 revenues as price competition squeezes margins

2025 was a bumper year for Chinese chipmaking equipment firms Naura, AMEC, ACM Research, and Piotech, with each posting record revenues according to a recent Nikkei Asia analysis that also found Chinese fabs are importing record volumes of U.S.-branded tools routed through Singapore and Malaysia, drastically reducing direct imports from the U.S..

The record revenues cap a five-year buildout driven by Beijing’s desire to reduce dependence on imported wafer fab equipment, though a Needham & Co. analyst cited in the same report said pricing pressure among Chinese vendors is now beginning to bite into their profit margins.

This growth naturally aligns with the multi-year capacity expansions we’ve been seeing among the top Chinese logic and memory producers, including YMTC, CXMT, and SMIC.

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These figures understate the actual U.S. vendor exposure, with Applied Materials, Lam, and KLA together booking close to $19 billion in China sales across their fiscal year 2025 reporting windows, with each company’s China share sitting above 30% of total revenue. ASML’s 2025 China revenue share landed at 29.1%, a step down from 36% in 2024. China's cumulative imports from Japan across 2020 through 2025 exceeded $42 billion, with Netherlands-origin shipments adding roughly $35 billion.

Meanwhile, the MATCH Act, introduced by Washington lawmakers earlie r this month, is the latest in a series of legislative efforts aimed at closing off that Southeast Asian routing to China. Its provisions target chokepoint components alongside finished tools, and name CXMT, YMTC, SMIC, and Hua Hong specifically, but allied governments in Europe and Tokyo haven’t publicly committed to matching its scope.

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