Trump orders Chinese-controlled firm to unwind chip asset deal, citing national security risks

Trump orders Chinese-controlled firm to unwind chip asset deal, citing national security risks


File: President Donald Trump looks on after signing an executive order in the Oval Office of the White House on April 9, 2025.

Saul Loeb | Afp | Getty Images

A company controlled by a Chinese national was ordered by U.S. President Donald Trump on Friday to unwind a $2.9 million acquisition of chip assets from a U.S. manufacturer, citing national security concerns.

The White House said in an executive order that HieFo Corporation, incorporated in Delaware, was “controlled by a citizen of the People’s Republic of China.”

HieFo acquired the digital chips and related wafer design, fabrication, and processing businesses of New Jersey-based Emcore on April 30, 2024, which could “impair the national security of the United States,” the White House said.

The Treasury Department said in a separate statement that the assets also included a semiconductor manufacturing facility.

The potential diversion of the supply of indium phosphide chips manufactured by Emcore’s digital chips business away from the U.S. was also identified as a national security risk, the Treasury Department added.

HieFo and Emcore did not immediately respond to a CNBC request for comment.

The Global Times, a Chinese government mouthpiece, citing an expert, said the divestment order “reflects Washington’s anxiety over technology competition with China” as it was made without a convincing rationale.

The Treasury Department said the deal was not notified to the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, known as CFIUS, prompting a review by its non-notified transactions team.

“CFIUS identified a national security risk arising from the transaction relating to potential access to EMCORE’s intellectual property, proprietary know-how, and expertise,” the Treasury Department said.

HieFo was ordered to divest all acquired assets within 180 days and to immediately restrict access to Emcore’s technical information.

In a statement dated Sept. 2, 2024, HieFo said the deal would allow operations to continue at Emcore’s facility in Alhambra, California, and that it had “successfully engaged” nearly all key scientists, engineers and operational staff.

HieFo was founded by Genzao Zhang and Harry Moore through a management buyout of wafer fabrication and chip-related assets from Emcore. Both founders list their start dates at HieFo as May 2024 on LinkedIn, when the acquisition closed.

The company claimed it had inherited more than 40 years of optoelectronic innovation in indium phosphide chip manufacturing.

Emcore manufactures navigation equipment such as gyroscopes and sensors used in commercial, industrial and defense applications, including autonomous navigation and weapons systems, according to its website.

The company was delisted from Nasdaq in early 2025 following its merger with aerospace manufacturing holding company Velocity One LP in November 2024.



Source

Google says it likely thwarted effort by hacker group to use AI for ‘mass exploitation event’
World

Google says it likely thwarted effort by hacker group to use AI for ‘mass exploitation event’

Boonchai Wedmakawand | Moment | Getty Images Google’s Threat Intelligence Group said in a report on Monday that it thwarted an effort by hackers to use artificial intelligence models to “plan a mass vulnerability exploitation operation.” The group, known by the acronym GTIG, said it has “high confidence” that it recorded hackers using an AI model […]

Read More
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella takes stand in Musk v. Altman trial
World

Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella takes stand in Musk v. Altman trial

Chairman and CEO of Microsoft Satya Nadella delivers a speech during the World Economic Forum (WEF) Annual Meeting in Davos, Switzerland on January 20, 2026. Harun Ozalp | Anadolu | Getty Images Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella took the stand to testify in the Musk v. Altman trial in federal court in Oakland, California, on Monday.  […]

Read More
Former Tesla CFO Deepak Ahuja joins EV battery recycler Redwood Materials
World

Former Tesla CFO Deepak Ahuja joins EV battery recycler Redwood Materials

Deepak Ahuja Source: Verily Redwood Materials, the electric vehicle battery recycling business started by Tesla board member and former CTO JB Straubel, is bringing on another former Tesla executive, Deepak Ahuja, as CFO, the company announced Monday. Ahuja served as finance chief at Tesla from March 2017 to March 2019, his second term at Elon Musk’s […]

Read More