One person familiar with the matter said US officials are creating a new formal policy of denial for shipping items to Huawei that would include items below the 5G level, including 4G items, Wifi 6 and 7, artificial intelligence, and high-performance computing and cloud items.
Another person said the move was expected to reflect the Biden administration’s tightening of policy on Huawei over the past year. Licences for 4G chips that could not be used for 5G, which might have been approved earlier, were being denied, the person said.
Toward the end of the Trump administration and early in the Biden administration, officials had still granted licences for items specific to 4G applications.
American officials placed Huawei on a trade blacklist in 2019 restricting most US suppliers from shipping goods and technology to the company unless they were granted licenses. Officials continued to tighten the controls to cut off Huawei’s ability to buy or design the semiconductor chips that power most of its products.
But US officials granted licenses that allowed Huawei to receive some products. For example, suppliers to Huawei got licenses worth US$61 billion to sell to the telecoms equipment giant from April through November 2021.
In December, Huawei said its overall revenue was about US$91.53 billion, down only slightly from 2021 when US sanctions caused its sales to fall by nearly a third.