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China’s control of indium phosphide exports threatens AI data center outsourcing

By Laurie Chen and Liam Mo

BEIJING, June 11 (Reuters) – About a week after Nvidia-backed chipmaker Coherent warned of indium phosphide shortages in a lead call in early May, its chief executive Jim Anderson was on a plane with a U.S. business delegation accompanying President Donald Trump on his trip to China.

Anderson’s visit was in part to raise the issue of delays in licensing exports to China involving critical components, critical to the production of high-speed chips for AI data centers, three sources familiar with the matter said.

The issue was also discussed during talks in Seoul between the two countries’ top trade negotiators ahead of Trump’s May 14-15 summit with Chinese President Xi Jinping, according to two US government officials and a person briefed on the talks.

The US rush to resolve China’s export controls on the compound reveals how indium phosphide (InP) has emerged as a powerful trade weapon for Beijing that experts and executives say could disrupt the global rollout of AI data centers.

“InP is one of the bottlenecks in the collaborative supply chain in integrating AI data center architecture,” said Konrad Wang, research analyst at SemiAnalysis.

As AI workloads grow in intensity, InP is in high demand as it is a key workaround for the new technology that data center developers are turning to – using light through optical fibers, or photonics, instead of electrical signals through copper wire.

Nvidia announced investments of $2 billion each in US graphics makers Coherent and Lumentum in March, while custom chip maker Marvell Technology announced the acquisition of semiconductor startup Celestial AI last year to enter its graphics business.

China’s InP export restrictions that began in February 2025, however, have become a major obstacle in its race to design the fastest, most energy-efficient components for AI data centers.

China’s commerce ministry did not respond to a faxed request for comment.

Its control over ⁠InP highlights Beijing’s readiness to expand its well-proven export restrictions on the exotic world, which have disrupted global auto, semiconductor and aerospace supply chains since last year amid its tariff disputes with Washington.

“Beijing is building a sophisticated ‘utilitarian’ tool set,” said Paul Triolo, a partner at consulting firm Albright Stonebridge Group.

“Instead of banning finished photonics products directly, it can reduce or condition the export of upstream compounds, substrates, metals … that determine whether the optical-module ecosystem can grow fast enough to meet hyperscaler demand.”

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