China has resumed chip exports to the Dutch-owned Nexperia plants — a move that brings relief to Europe’s automakers. Shipments had been frozen for weeks amid a political struggle over control of the company (as we previously reported).

⚠️ Crisis in October: The Dutch government stripped Nexperia of control, citing “national security risks.” In response, Beijing blocked exports from the company’s Chinese plant — which accounts for about 70% of total output.

🚗 Automakers on alert: VW, Honda, Volvo, and Jaguar Land Rover all warned of production stoppages. Honda’s Mexico plant even halted operations. Analysts called Nexperia “small in revenue, huge in impact.”

🇨🇳 Signal from Beijing: China’s Ministry of Commerce confirmed new exemptions for “civilian use,” following EU pressure and talks between Brussels and The Hague.

💬 Pressure on The Hague: Beijing urged the Netherlands to “correct its wrongful practices,” while promising to stabilize Europe’s chip supply in return.

📈 Supply chain relief: Honda will resume production on November 21, and Europe’s automotive association reports signs of easing tension — for now.

Why Nexperia matters

Sources: BBC, Yahoo Finance, APNews

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