An SK Hynix memory chip on a smartphone.

An SK Hynix memory chip on a smartphone.

Photographer: James Park/Bloomberg

The $9 Billion Chip Plant Stuck in Limbo of US-China Rivalry

Recent concessions still leave murky future for SK Hynix and Samsung plants in China

A memory chip plant located halfway between Seoul and Beijing illustrates the tough choices South Korean business leaders and policymakers face as they try to limit the damage from the US technology war with China.

South Korean chipmaker SK Hynix Inc. bought its Dalian plant in northeast China from Intel Corp. in a $9 billion deal in 2020 that was supposed to help the world's No. 2 memory maker shore up capacity and expand into cutting-edge chips in the world's largest chip market. Instead, the factory has ensnared SK Hynix in a complex web of US restrictions aimed at limiting China’s access to materials and equipment considered key to dominating the battlegrounds and industries of the future.