|           | October 14, 2025
 China Reacts After U.S. Pushed Netherlands To Seize Chinese Owned Company
 This is a a story about a fight between titans in which Europe, due to its leaders stupidity, is the most significant casualty.
 
 Dutch government seizes control of Chinese-owned chipmaker Nexperia – Politico.eu, Oct 13 2025
 The move could inflame wider trade tensions between Beijing and the European Union.
 
 
 The Dutch government has granted itself the power to  intervene in company decisions at Dutch-based Chinese-owned chipmaker  Nexperia.The Dutch have effectively stolen a big Chinese owned company.
 The highly unusual step, announced late Sunday, grants the country  the power to “halt and reverse” company decisions — meaning Nexperia  cannot transfer assets or hire executives without Dutch government  approval, according to national media.
 
 The move is a significant escalation in relations between the  Netherlands and China and could inflame wider trade tensions between  Beijing and the European Union, with Europe caught in the middle of a  tit-for-tat chips war between the U.S. and China.
 
 
 
 The  background via Pekingology:
 
 
 Wingtech Technology is a privately-run, Shanghai-listed  Chinese electronics and semiconductor conglomerate headquartered in  Jiaxing, Zhejiang Province. It began as an original design manufacturer  (ODM) for smartphones and consumer devices and has since grown into one  of China’s most prominent integrated technology companies, combining  electronics assembly, chip design, and semiconductor manufacturing.A successful businessman from China bought the Dutch company. He  invested heavily and the company grew with several research and  manufacturing sides throughout Europe and the world. The company paid a  lot of taxes and the Dutch were happy.
 Wingtech in 2019 acquired Nexperia, a Dutch semiconductor firm that  was formerly part of Philips’ chip division, NXP. Headquartered in the  Netherlands, Nexperia is a global semiconductor company with a rich  European history and over 12,500 employees across Europe, Asia, and the  United States.
 
 In December 2024, the U.S. Department of Commerce added Wingtech to its Entity List,  restricting its access to American components and technology. The U.S.  unilateral sanctions threatened heavy losses and forced the Apple  supplier to announce, in March 2025, the spin-off of a major part of its  operations.
 
 Zhang Xuefeng is the founder of Wingtech and CEO of Nexperia, which  closed the 2024 financial year with a total revenue of $2.06 billion.
 
 
 
 In late 2024 Wingtech was put on the U.S. entity list to block  Chinese semiconductor development by cutting it off from U.S. products  and technology licenses.
 
 In June 2024 the U.S. planned to extend the entity list. Not only  would chip companies in China be prohibited from use of U.S. content but  any international company that was 50% or more owned by a Chinese  entity would likewise be penalized.
 
 On September 30 2025 the U.S. Commerce Department  extended its export restrictions:
 
 
 
 
 A U.S. Commerce Department interim final rule vastly  expands the number of entities subject to export control restrictions by  extending the Entity List and MEU List restrictions to non-U.S.  entities 50% or more owned, directly or indirectly, by listed parties  effective as of September 29, 2025.(The new Chinese  export controls on rare earth metals and certain other technologies are a direct response to those new U.S. restrictions.)
 
 
 The U.S. move cut of Nexperia and other partially Chinese owned companies in Europe from U.S. content.
 
 The Dutch government, which had been forewarned and pressed by the U.S.,  panicked:
 
 
 US officials told their Dutch counterparts that the  Chinese CEO of Nexperia “will have to be replaced” for the company to be  exempt from Washington’s entity list, newly disclosed court documents  show.On Sunday October 12, after the company was seized, Wingtech dropped a bombshell filing with the Shanghai Stock Exchange.  It describes  how Nexperia’s 2nd level management, under Dutch government pressure,  deposed of the Chief Executive Officer and owner of the company:
 The disclosure comes after the Dutch government effectively seized  control of the semiconductor firm, a subsidiary of the Chinese company  Wingtech, forcing a change in management under an obscure law known as  the Goods Availability Act.
 
 In doing so, the Dutch authorities removed founding CEO Zhang Xuezheng from his role, sparking fury in Beijing.
 
 Court documents released by the Amsterdam Court of Appeal on Tuesday show that the  United States told Dutch officials in June about a forthcoming change  in the entity list, which bars American companies from trading with  firms on the list.
 
 
 
 
 On 1 October 2025 (Netherlands time), Ruben Lichtenberg, a  Dutch national who serves as the statutory director and Chief Legal  Officer (CLO) of both Nexperia Holding and Nexperia Semiconductor,  filed—with the support of two other executives, Chief Financial Officer  (CFO) Stefan Tilger and Chief Operating Officer (COO) Achim Kempe, both  German nationals—an urgent petition before the Enterprise Chamber  requesting a corporate investigation and immediate provisional measures  on behalf of both Nexperia entities.Wingtech’s official WeChat blog released a  scathing announcement, which was widely distributed in China.
 On the same day, the Enterprise Chamber granted several emergency  measures immediately, without a hearing, which took effect at once.  These measures included suspending Mr. Zhang Xuezheng from his positions  as executive officer of Nexperia Holding and non-executive director of  Nexperia Semiconductor; suspending the operation of Article 3 of the  Board Rules of Nexperia Semiconductor, which defines the CEO’s duties  and authorities; and placing all shares held by Wingtech subsidiary  ???????? Yuching Holding Limited (a Hong Kong-registered company and the  sole shareholder of Nexperia Holding) under temporary management by an  independent third-party trustee for management purposes, effective until  the Enterprise Chamber’s oral hearing scheduled for 6 October 2025 and  its subsequent ruling on the request for immediate relief.
 
 
 
 
 Internal Legal Actions Are a Malicious Extension of External PressureToday the Chinese government reacted to the Dutch raid of the Chinese  owned company by cutting it off from Chinese technologies and products:
 Certain foreign executives within Nexperia have attempted to use  legal means to forcibly alter the company’s ownership structure.
 
 Their actions are closely aligned with the Dutch government’s  administrative directives and, in essence, represent an effort to usurp  shareholder rights and subvert lawful corporate governance under the  guise of “compliance.”
 
 We strongly condemn such politically motivated attempts to seize control.
 
 We Will Resolutely Defend Our Lawful Rights
 …
 
 
 
 
 Chipmaker Nexperia, a subsidiary of China’s Wingtech  Technology and a major supplier of mature chips for the automotive and  consumer electronics sectors, announced on Tuesday that it has been  banned by the Chinese Ministry of Commerce from exporting products made  in China, including those produced by its subcontractors, after the  Dutch government took over the company using a Cold-War-era law to  secure Europe’s chip supply.If the Dutch government does not retract its decision to practically  confiscate Nexperia the company will die. Its business is globalized.  Parts of its products are made all over the world. Its products and  sales in Europe depend on subcontractor products which are made in  China.
 Nexperia said it is seeking an exemption from the export ban, which  could affect Dutch access to its chips. The company operates an  80,000-square-meter assembly site in Guangdong province near Hong Kong,  as well as fabrication, assembly, and testing facilities in Germany, the  Philippines, Malaysia, and Britain.
 
 
 
 The company is important to Europe. It produces some 90 billion bread  and butter components per year which flow into other higher value  European products. Sure, other Chinese companies will be happy to  replace those parts. But where is the win for the Netherlands or Europe  in that?
 
 In the trade war between U.S. and China Europe should have stayed  neutral. It should not have buckled under pressure from either side but  rely on its own substantial trade powers to stay out of the fight. It is  a fight in which the U.S. has  no chance to win.
 
 It was a huge mistake by the Dutch to submit to U.S. demands and to  seize Nexperia. It was a huge mistake for Europe to submit to U.S.  demands.
 
 The minions leading Europe who have allowed for this  deserve to be fired over their utter strategic stupidity.
 
 
 Posted by b on October 14, 2025 at 15:33 UTC |  Permalink
 
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