Huawei chips are one generation behind U.S. but firm finding workarounds, CEO says

Huawei chips are one generation behind U.S. but firm finding workarounds, CEO says


Logo of Huawei at the Mobile World Congress 2024.

Ramon Costa | SOPA Images | Lightrocket | Getty Images

Huawei Technologies’ chips are one generation behind those of U.S. peers but the firm is finding ways to improve performance through methods such as cluster computing, Chinese state media quoted CEO Ren Zhengfei as saying on Tuesday.

The chipmaker invests 180 billion yuan ($25.07 billion) in research annually and sees promise in compound chips — chips made from multiple elements — Ren said in an interview with the People’s Daily newspaper of the governing Communist Party.

There is “no need to worry about the chip problem”, Ren said, addressing concerns stemming from U.S. export controls.

The article, published on the front page of the newspaper, comes as top U.S. and Chinese officials are set to resume trade talks for a second day in London, where topics such as U.S. tech restrictions on China are expected to be discussed.

Since 2019, a slew of U.S. export curbs, aimed at curbing China’s technological and military advancements, have restricted Huawei and other Chinese firms from accessing high-end chips and the equipment needed to produce them from abroad.

Ren’s comments are the first ever from him or Huawei about the company’s advanced chipmaking efforts, which have become a flashpoint in U.S.-China tensions.

Huawei is just one of many Chinese chipmakers, Ren said in the interview, adding: “The United States has exaggerated Huawei’s achievements. Huawei is not that great. We have to work hard to reach their evaluation.”

“Our single chip is still behind the U.S. by a generation. We use mathematics to supplement physics, non-Moore’s law to supplement Moore’s law and cluster computing to supplement single chips and the results can also achieve practical conditions. Software is not a bottleneck for us,” he said.

Cluster computing is when multiple computers work together. Moore’s law refers to the speed of chip advancement.

Huawei’s Launches

Huawei’s Ascend series of AI chips competes in China with offerings from Nvidia, the global leader in AI chips.

The U.S. Commerce Department last month said the use of Ascend chips would be a violation of export controls.

Nvidia’s AI chips are more powerful than Huawei’s, but the company has been barred by Washington from selling its most sophisticated chips to China, causing it to lose significant market share to Huawei.

Bernstein's Stacy Rasgon: If Nvidia can't play in China we'll hand the Chinese AI market to Huawei

In April, Huawei launched “AI CloudMatrix 384”, a system that links 384 Ascend 910C chips in a cluster that companies can use to train AI models, which has been described by analysts as able to outperform Nvidia’s GB200 NVL72 system on some metrics.

Dylan Patel, founder of semiconductor research group SemiAnalysis, said in an article that month that it meant that Huawei and China now had AI system capabilities that could beat Nvidia.

Nvidia and the U.S. Commerce Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Ren’s remarks.

Ren also said about a third of Huawei’s annual research spending went to theoretical research, while the rest was spent on product research and development.

“Without theory, there will be no breakthroughs, and we will not catch up with the United States.”



Source

China’s June factory activity unexpectedly expands, private survey shows
World

China’s June factory activity unexpectedly expands, private survey shows

HANGZHOU, CHINA – JUNE 30, 2025 – A worker is working in the production workshop of a steel structure factory in Hangzhou City, Zhejiang Province, China on June 30, 2025. CFOTO | Future Publishing | Getty Images China’s factory activity unexpectedly returned to growth among export-oriented manufacturers in June, a private survey showed Tuesday, as […]

Read More
Apple weighs using Anthropic or OpenAI to power Siri in major reversal, Bloomberg News reports
World

Apple weighs using Anthropic or OpenAI to power Siri in major reversal, Bloomberg News reports

An Apple logo is displayed on a smartphone with stock market values in the background. SOPA Images | LightRocket | Getty Images Apple is weighing using artificial intelligence technology from Anthropic or OpenAI to power a new version of Siri, instead of its own in-house models, Bloomberg News reported on Monday. Shares of the iPhone maker, which had traded down earlier in the session, closed […]

Read More
CNBC Daily Open: Keep calm and carry on, investors
World

CNBC Daily Open: Keep calm and carry on, investors

What a first half of the year it has been. In the first six months, the world saw a (not so) new U.S. president in the Oval Office, said president upend the global trade landscape, and a president in South Korea removed from office.  Conflicts also broke out between India and Pakistan, as well as […]

Read More