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China delays approval of $35bn US chip merger amid Donald Trump’s trade war

Daniel Nenni

Admin
Staff member
Synopsys headquarters in Mountain View, California, US

Silicon Valley-based Synopsys is a leading supplier of electronic design automation tools for designing chips © David Paul Morris/Bloomberg

A $35bn US semiconductor industry merger is being delayed by Beijing’s antitrust regulator, after Donald Trump tightened chip export controls against China in a move that exacerbated trade tensions between the world’s two largest economies

China’s State Administration for Market Regulation has postponed its approval of the proposed deal between Synopsys, a maker of chip design tools, and engineering software developer Ansys, according to two people with knowledge of the matter.

The transaction between the American groups, which has received the blessing of authorities in the US and Europe, had already entered the last stage of SAMR’s approval process and was expected to be completed by the end of this month, said the people.

The delay comes as Washington moved to ban chip design software sales by US companies, including Synopsys, to China in late May. That decision has contributed to the complexity of China’s approval process for this deal, according to a person with knowledge of the situation.

The person added that approval, while taking longer than expected, could still come through if Synopsys were able to submit solutions that addressed the Chinese regulator’s concerns.However, another person with knowledge of the matter said SAMR’s approval process had recently been prolonged from its original 180-day schedule due to the complexity of the deal itself, rather than being directly linked with the ongoing trade war.

On the company’s latest earnings call on May 28, Synopsys chief executive Sassine Ghazi said the company was “working cooperatively and actively negotiating with SAMR to secure China regulatory clearance”, and that it expected to close the deal “in the first half of this year”.

The deal agreement includes a January 15 2026 “drop dead clause”, according to company filings.

Synopsys declined to comment. Ansys did not respond to a request for comment. A call made to SAMR outside regular working hours was not answered.

The move comes amid US-China trade talks. This week, Trump said the two sides had reached an agreement in London to reinstate the trade war truce reached in Geneva in May, when the US and China significantly cut the high level of tariffs they had imposed on each other.

A senior White House official said this week that Trump could ease controls on technology exports to China if Beijing agreed to speed up shipments of rare earths.

There have also been signs of a potential loosening of the US ban on selling chip design tools. Synopsys, which earlier stopped all sales to Chinese clients, has restarted selling intellectual property and hardware, while so-called electronic design automation-related software tools are still restricted, according to a person with direct knowledge of the matter.

Silicon Valley-based Synopsys’s tools and intellectual property are used by chipmakers including Nvidia and Intel to help design and test their processors.

The semiconductor designer has grown in recent years as Big Tech companies including Microsoft, Google, Meta and Amazon strive to create more of their own chips, in particular to handle artificial intelligence systems in the cloud.

Ansys, which is based in Pennsylvania and has its origins in structural analysis tools, makes engineering simulation software used in industries from cars and construction to healthcare and defence.

 
I ended up in Synopsys via a merger with Avant! and I can tell you that it is one of the worst company to work for. Synopsys was basically saved by that merger since in the first quarter revenue reports showed all the Synopsys depts in red while all the Avant! depts were in green by tens of percentage above their target. Synopsys is a "buy and recycle company", meaning that they would buy a company and get rid of many parts of the company they acquired, reduce their activity and lay off even the most smart engineers if they don't obey by their policy. Also, Synopsys is a company which doesn't give salary raises to their employees except to some "selective employees" so one can work there for many years without a single salary raise. In 6 years that I have been with Synopsys I got one salary raise of 1.8% and been told to be happy because my colleagues got nothing. Their 401K is very poor. The management at Synopsys is very rude and brainless (ex: have two teams working on the same project competing to each other), the software "developed" by China's team had to be redone in the USA because was not done properly and couldn't be included in the software build, they moved all the customer support to India and China, etc. Although I don't understand how China could impede the merger, I pity the employees from Ansys being screwed by Synopsys management which tell lies at the merger time and do a 180 degrees after the merger is completed.
 
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