US Commerce Secretary warns some Korean, Taiwanese firms may face 100% chip tariffs unless they invest in US

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Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said South Korean memory chipmakers and Taiwanese companies that aren’t investing in the US may face up to 100% tariffs unless they commit to increased production on American soil, as the Trump administration ramps up calls for additional foreign investment.

Following a ground breaking ceremony for a new Micron Technology plant outside Syracuse, New York, Lutnick said that potential levies spelled out under a trade accord with Taiwan could also affect chipmakers from South Korea.

“Everyone who wants to build memory has two choices: They can pay a 100% tariff, or they can build in America,” Lutnick said Friday in response to a reporter’s question, without naming any particular companies. “That’s industrial policy.”

Lutnick’s comments echoed a warning Thursday following the signing of the Taiwan trade deal, which grants quota-based tariff relief to companies committing to investing in US-based manufacturing. “If they don’t build in America,” Lutnick told CNBC, “the tariff is likely to be 100%.”

For now, President Donald Trump is holding off on tariffs on most foreign-made semiconductors, instead asking Lutnick and US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer to negotiate with trading partners on reducing American reliance on chip imports. Trump may announce new tariffs and an accompanying offset program to incentivize domestic manufacturing “in the near future,” the White House said earlier this week.

Micron competes with South Korea-based Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix in the market for high-bandwidth memory chips — a crucial component in the data centre processors powering the artificial intelligence boom. Demand for the components has skyrocketed due to AI data centre needs, and the three companies have warned in recent months of limited supply.