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US wants equity stakes in chip makers for CHIPS Act cash grants, sources say

Andrea Shalal, David Shepardson, Nandita Bose and Max A. Cherney (Reuters)
Washington, DC/San Francisco
Wed, August 20, 2025 Published on Aug. 20, 2025 Published on 2025-08-20T11:01:38+07:00

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Semiconductor chips are seen on a circuit board of a computer in this illustration picture taken on Feb. 25, 2022. Semiconductor chips are seen on a circuit board of a computer in this illustration picture taken on Feb. 25, 2022. (Reuters/Florence Lo)

U

S Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick is looking into the government taking equity stakes in Intel as well as other chip companies in exchange for grants under the CHIPS Act that was meant to spur factory-building around the country, two sources said.

As part of a plan to revive US manufacturing – a key Trump agenda – Lutnick said earlier on Tuesday the US government wants an equity stake in Intel in exchange for cash grants approved by the administration of former President Joe Biden.

Now Lutnick wants to expand that plan to other companies, according to a White House official and a person familiar with the situation.

The Trump administration has recently made unusual deals with US companies, including allowing AI chip giant Nvidia to sell its H20 chips to China in exchange for the US government receiving 15 percent of those sales. The Pentagon is slated to become the largest shareholder in a small mining company to boost output of rare earth magnets.

The government's intervention in corporate matters has worried critics who say President Donald Trump's actions create new categories of corporate risk and that a bad bet could mean a hit to taxpayer funds.

Much of the funding under the CHIPS Act has not yet been dispersed for companies such as Micron, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co, Samsung and Intel.

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TSMC and Intel declined comment. Micron, Samsung and the White House did not respond to requests for comment on whether Lutnick is considering more stakes.

Taking lawmaker questions in Taipei on Wednesday and asked whether the US government could take a stake in TSMC, Taiwan Economy Minister Kuo Jyh-huei said his ministry would consult with the company, which he pointed out was private and not a state-owned enterprise.

"We will also discuss with the National Development Council, as it is a shareholder of TSMC. We will thoroughly understand the underlying meaning of the US Commerce Secretary's remarks, but this will require some time for discussion and assessment," Kuo said.

The two sources told Reuters on Tuesday that Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent is also involved in the CHIPS Act discussions, but that Lutnick is driving the process. The Commerce Department oversees the $52.7 billion CHIPS Act money.

Lutnick has been pushing the equity idea, the sources said, adding that Trump likes the idea.

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt confirmed earlier that Lutnick was working on a deal with Intel to take a 10 percent government stake.

"The president wants to put America's needs first, both from a national security and economic perspective, and it's a creative idea that has never been done before," she told reporters.

Speaking on CNBC, Lutnick said the US wants a return on its "investment".

"We'll get equity in return for that [...] instead of just giving grants away," he said.

President Donald Trump has previously said he wanted to kill the CHIPS Act program.

Lutnick's comments suggested any stake would be nonvoting, meaning it would not enable the US government to tell the company how to run its business.

His comments came a day after SoftBank Group agreed to invest $2 billion in Intel, which has struggled to compete after years of management blunders.

"The Biden administration literally was giving Intel money for free and giving TSMC money for free, and all these companies just giving the money for free, and Donald Trump turned it into saying, 'Hey, we want equity for the money. If we're going to give you the money, we want a piece of the action for the American taxpayer'," Lutnick said.

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