Friday, 20 March 2026 13:42

China’s Chip Industry in 2026: From “Passive Substitution” to “Aggressive Global Expansion” Featured

In March 2026, China’s General Administration of Customs released a striking data point: integrated circuit (IC) exports in the first two months of the year reached $43.3 billion, a staggering 72.6% year-on-year increase (in USD terms). This surge is not merely a reflection of a global semiconductor cycle rebound. It signals a fundamental reshaping of the industry—driven by AI infrastructure, massive mature-node capacity, and a dramatic revaluation of memory chips.
While the global spotlight remains fixed on NVIDIA’s latest GPUs and ASML’s EUV lithography machines, China’s semiconductor industry has quietly completed a transition from low-cost, high-volume manufacturing to a global player commanding pricing power and high-value exports. Based on the latest data from IDC, TrendForce, SEMI, and Bernstein Research, this article analyzes the leading companies, core segments, competitive strengths, and market share of China’s chip industry in 2026.
1. Design: From “Blooming Flowers” to a “Coming-of-Age” Market
In 2026, China’s IC design sector has matured into a globally competitive force. According to IDC, mainland China’s share of the global IC design market has officially surpassed that of Taiwan, China, and is expected to reach approximately 45% in 2026, making it the world’s second-largest IC design hub .
1.1 AI Chips: Huawei Ascend Captures Half the Market
The landscape of AI chips in China is undergoing a dramatic shift. According to Bernstein Research, 2026 marks a historic turning point: Huawei’s market share in China’s AI chip market is projected to surge to 50%, becoming the undisputed leader. Meanwhile, NVIDIA’s share is expected to plummet from 40% in 2025 to just 8% .

Key Players: Huawei’s Ascend series (910B, 910C) have become the de facto standard for domestic AI computing clusters. Meanwhile, emerging companies like Moore Threads, Enflame, and Iluvatar CoreX are accelerating their IPO processes. For instance, Iluvatar CoreX reported a staggering 4074.52% compound annual growth rate in revenue from 2022 to 2024, reflecting the high market tolerance for the “high-investment, long-cycle” nature of domestic GPU development .
IPO Wave: The trend of major tech giants spinning off their chip units is accelerating. In early 2026, Baidu announced its plan to spin off Kunlunxin for a Hong Kong IPO, while Alibaba is pushing T-Head towards an independent listing. T-Head’s “Yitian 710” server CPU and “Hanguang 800” inference chip are now deployed at scale in Alibaba Cloud and China Unicom’s AI computing centers, proving their commercial viability .

1.2 Specialized Leaders: The “Invisible Champions” of Analog and Interconnect
In the crucial supporting chips for AI, Chinese companies have achieved global pricing power.

Montage Technology: In PCIe Retimer and memory interface chips, Montage forms a global oligopoly alongside US-based Rambus and Japan’s Renesas. The explosive global demand for DDR5 in AI servers has made these high-value interconnect chips a key driver of China’s soaring export value .
Analog ICs: Companies like SG Micro, Joulwatt, and Novosense have leveraged the massive scale of China’s domestic data centers to validate their power management ICs (PMICs) and digital isolators. Having achieved technical parity with international giants, they are now being exported globally via original design manufacturers (ODMs) like Foxconn and Quanta .

2. Manufacturing: The “Vast Ocean” of Mature Nodes
If design is the brain, manufacturing is the skeleton. China’s core competitive advantage lies in building the world’s most formidable capacity for mature-node chips.
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