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Netherlands May Drop Control of Nexperia If China Resumes Chip Exports

The Dutch government is reportedly prepared to end its control over Nexperia if China resumes exports of the company’s chips, potentially easing tensions that have rattled global supply chains, Bloomberg News reported on Friday.

Citing people familiar with the matter, Bloomberg said authorities in the Netherlands could suspend the ministerial order as soon as next week, provided shipments from China resume and are verified. The order, imposed on September 30, gave The Hague temporary veto powers over Nexperia’s corporate decisions amid concerns about Chinese influence over the semiconductor maker.

Dutch Economy Minister Vincent Karremans said on Thursday he expected Nexperia chips to reach European and global customers “in the coming days.” He added that the government would “support these developments, and take appropriate steps where necessary.”

A spokesperson for Karremans declined to clarify whether those steps could include lifting the intervention, which was initially designed to safeguard Dutch strategic interests in the semiconductor sector.

The dispute erupted after the Chinese government blocked exports of Nexperia’s products from the country in early October, following the Dutch seizure of control. The move sparked a global shortage of Nexperia chips, which are widely used in automotive, industrial, computing, and consumer electronics.

The disruption forced several European carmakers to scale back production and furlough workers. Industry analysts say restoring chip flows is critical to stabilizing supply chains and preventing further economic fallout.

Nexperia, which was acquired by China’s Wingtech Technology, has yet to comment on the Dutch government’s latest position.

Netherlands Struggles to Resolve Nexperia Standoff With China as Carmakers Warn of Shortages

The Netherlands is locked in a tense dispute with China over chipmaker Nexperia BV, as high-level talks between Dutch Economy Minister Vincent Karremans and China’s Commerce Minister Wang Wentao failed to produce a breakthrough on Tuesday. The impasse is deepening concerns among European carmakers, who rely heavily on Nexperia’s chips for production.

The standoff began after the Dutch government seized control of Nexperia last month, citing national security risks tied to its Chinese parent company, Wingtech Technology, which is listed in Shanghai. In retaliation, Beijing blocked exports of Nexperia’s finished chips from China, effectively freezing the company’s supply chain and alarming automakers already facing global component shortages.

Karremans said both sides discussed “further steps toward reaching a solution acceptable to all parties,” but China’s response was sharply critical. The Chinese commerce ministry accused the Netherlands of “overstretching the concept of national security,” warning that the seizure “has seriously affected the stability of global supply chains.”

The fallout is hitting the automotive sector hardest. Germany’s VDA auto industry association warned that production could soon face “considerable restrictions or even stoppages” if the chip flow is not restored quickly. Nexperia’s components, while not high-end, are vital for mass-market electronics and car manufacturing, and both sides of its operations — European production and Chinese packaging — are struggling to find alternatives.

The dispute comes amid escalating global trade frictions, including U.S. import tariffs and Chinese export curbs on rare earth materials, compounding pressures on Europe’s already fragile industrial supply lines.