Exclusive-SiCarrier - Huawei partner in chips - seeks $2.8 billion in funds, sources say
FILE PHOTO: Sicarrier at SEMICON China in Shanghai · Reuters

By Che Pan, Julie Zhu, Fanny Potkin and Eduardo Baptista

BEIJING/HONG KONG (Reuters) -SiCarrier, a Chinese chip equipment maker with close links to Huawei, is seeking $2.8 billion in its maiden fundraising round, two people familiar with the plans said, as the startup chases more clients and clout.

SiCarrier was until recently little known, but it has become the most talked-about company in Chinese semiconductor circles this year as the breadth of its planned product range and ambitions emerges.

Founded in 2021 and owned by the Shenzhen city government, SiCarrier is largely seen as a Huawei supplier. But it wants to become the leading domestic provider of chipmaking equipment in China, surpassing Naura and Advanced Micro-Fabrication Equipment China (AMEC), according to four people with knowledge of its goals.

It is a prime example of how U.S. restrictions on exports of chipmaking gear and advanced semiconductors to China, while curbing tech progress in the world's second-largest economy in some ways, have spurred Chinese firms to take up President Xi Jinping's call to evolve into a self-sufficient domestic chip industry.

The government of Shenzhen, a tech metropolis in southern China, is looking to sell roughly 25% of a SiCarrier unit and is after an 80 billion yuan ($11 billion) valuation, said one of the sources, adding the fundraising could conclude in the coming weeks.

The source also said the unit does not include SiCarrier's lithography assets. Reuters was not able to learn the name of the unit.

The proceeds will mostly go towards research, and Chinese state-owned firms, state funds, as well as domestic venture capital and private equity funds have expressed interest in investing, said two sources. It will likely be one of the largest yuan-denominated fundraisings by a Chinese company this year.

Reuters spoke to 10 people with knowledge of SiCarrier's business for this article. All declined to be identified as the company has not publicly disclosed its plans.

SiCarrier, which was slapped with U.S. export controls late last year due to its close ties to Huawei, did not respond to requests for comment.

Huawei said it was not affiliated with SiCarrier. The Shenzhen government also did not respond to requests for comment.

BIG SPLASH

SiCarrier spent its initial years largely silent about its plans but made a splash at this year's Semicon China trade fair in March, drawing large crowds with a catalogue of 30 machines ranging from etching tools to inspection equipment named after Chinese mountains. Its lithography systems were, however, not on display.