US gov't blocks China's largest LED chipmaker's $239 million bid to acquire Dutch lighting firm Lumileds — US blocks acquisition attempt of European firm

 A worker produces chips for mobile phones, cars, LED lighting at a workshop in Huai 'an city.
(Image credit: Getty Images)

Sanan Optoelectronics, China's largest LED chipmaker, has abandoned its $239 million bid to acquire Dutch lighting firm Lumileds after the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS) ruled the deal posed "irresolvable U.S. national security risks," the South China Morning Post reported. This marks the second time in 10 years that CFIUS has torpedoed a Chinese attempt to buy Lumileds, and it comes amid a deepening governance crisis at Sanan itself.

The issue CFIUS seems to have is that Lumileds’ product portfolio relies on compound semiconductor material gallium nitride (GaN) chips, which have significant military applications, including for radar systems for antiballistic missiles and in the U.S. Air Force's Space Fence orbital debris tracking system.

The first Chinese attempt to buy Lumileds collapsed in January 2016 when a consortium led by Go Scale Capital tried to acquire an 80.1% stake from Philips for $2.9 billion, with CFIUS blocking it over concerns about GaN technology transfer. Philips eventually sold the same stake to Apollo Global Management at a steep discount in 2017. Lumileds then filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in August 2022, exiting 63 days later. Sanan and Malaysian partner Inari Amertron announced their joint $239 million acquisition in August 2025, but even at a fraction of the original price, CFIUS wouldn’t allow it.

Article continues below

It’s not just Lumileds; compound semiconductors have been a consistent red line for CFIUS in other acquisition attempts. The committee blocked Fujian Grand Chip's attempted acquisition of German equipment maker Aixtron, for example, over the same GaN concerns, and effectively killed Infineon's proposed purchase of Wolfspeed from Cree over GaN-on-silicon-carbide technology.

CFIUS, as is usually the case, hasn’t disclosed its reasoning for blocking Sanan’s bid, but it’s easy to read between the lines. Lumileds operates across automotive lighting, display, and mobile markets, employing around 3,500 people in more than 15 countries, and its GaN expertise is a core part of the business.

For Sanan, this blocked acquisition caps off a brutal few months. In March, China's National Supervisory Commission detained the company's founder and controlling shareholder, Lin Xiucheng, for investigation. Sanan's share price hit consecutive daily limit-down drops, erasing roughly 13 billion yuan ($1.89 billion) in market capitalization within two days.

Then on April 7, Lin's son-in-law and the company's vice chairman and general manager, Lin Kechuang, was also placed under investigation by authorities in Chongqing. All 29.47% of company shares held by the Lin family's holding vehicles have been judicially frozen. Sanan said the failed deal won't materially affect its finances and that it would continue pursuing international expansion.

Google Preferred Source

Follow Tom's Hardware on Google News, or add us as a preferred source, to get our latest news, analysis, & reviews in your feeds.

Luke James
Contributor

Luke James is a freelance writer and journalist.  Although his background is in legal, he has a personal interest in all things tech, especially hardware and microelectronics, and anything regulatory. 

  • Faiakes
    Why does the USA to have a say in it?
    Reply
  • MG1103
    Faiakes said:
    Why does the USA to have a say in it?
    The explanation is in the article, not the title.
    Reply
  • auspex
    MG1103 said:
    The explanation is in the article, not the title.
    It's not. So, again, why does the US have a say?
    Reply
  • auspex
    I totally get why the US has an interest, here, but I really wanted to know HOW the US can block a Chinese company from buying a Dutch company
    Reply
  • PEnns
    MG1103 said:
    The explanation is in the article, not the title.
    Show it to us please. Copy and paste is a thing, you know.
    Reply
  • SpicyLlama
    auspex said:
    I totally get why the US has an interest, here, but I really wanted to know HOW the US can block a Chinese company from buying a Dutch company
    Under Section 721 of the Defense Production Act, CFIUS can review any foreign investment that results in control of a business engaged in U.S. interstate commerce. Lumileds has a significant US-based manufacturing operation, zero chance the US would allow a Chinese company to take over and move all operations to China.
    Reply
  • Cavaler
    SpicyLlama said:
    Under Section 721 of the Defense Production Act, CFIUS can review any foreign investment that results in control of a business engaged in U.S. interstate commerce. Lumileds has a significant US-based manufacturing operation, zero chance the US would allow a Chinese company to take over and move all operations to China.
    So it can block selling US portion of the business, and China doesn't want the rest without it?
    Reply
  • SpicyLlama
    Cavaler said:
    So it can block selling US portion of the business, and China doesn't want the rest without it?
    The US can block the entire sale.

    China wants the IP that would come with a technology transfer. They'll lay everybody off, close up shop in both Europe and the US and move the equipment to China. Blocking the sale is reasonable given the history of Chinese investment, Kuka and Nortel Networks are both good examples. This is largely how they acquired their rare earths business too, which is now all located in the mainland.
    Reply