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Chinese companies are accelerating a purge of foreign components from their supply chains, as trade tensions with the US threaten to hasten the decoupling between the worldโs two largest economies.
In the weeks since President Donald Trump hit China with steep tariffs, more than two dozen companies listed in Shanghai and Shenzhen have told investors that they were increasing efforts to source domestic inputs to replace foreign products or expected to benefit as their peers localised purchasing.
The financial filings, reviewed by the Financial Times, were issued by companies spanning the semiconductor, chemicals and medical devices sectors. They demonstrate the potential lasting impact of Trumpโs trade war by effecting a permanent reordering of supply chains.
Beijing has long pushed for industrial self-sufficiency with policies dubbed Made in China 2025 and President Xi Jinpingโs โdual circulationโ strategy, which aims to strengthen economic independence while maintaining selective global ties.
That drive had been supercharged by Trumpโs tariffs, which have created further impetus for Chinese companies to try to insulate themselves from geopolitical blowback, as well as by Beijingโs retaliatory levies on imports from the US, which are as high as 125 per cent.
The tariffs would only increase Beijingโs desire for Chinese companies to become more self-sufficient, said Camille Boullenois, analyst at Rhodium Group and author of a recent report on the Made in China 2025 programme. โTheyโre clearly feeling the urgency,โ she added. โThis will signal to them to accelerate as much as possible.โ
People familiar with Chinese officialsโ thinking said Beijing viewed the trade conflict as a validation of its self-reliance policies. They added that officials thought such initiatives had equipped China to weather the latest wave of US pressure.
โThey believe China can now survive without anything from the US or the west and it has given the country the strength to resist Trumpโs trade demands,โ one of the people said.
Estun Automation, one of Chinaโs leading industrial robot makers, told investors in its annual report last month that it was โrapidly capturing the major clients previously held by foreign brandsโ as well as optimising its own supply chain to โincrease the domestic substitution of raw materialsโ.
Increasing localisation โcuts costsโ, said one manager at the company. โ[Itโs] not just the trade war โ the entire global economy is unstable. We want to be able and ready to switch [suppliers],โ they said.
State-owned emergency equipment maker China Harzone Industry Corp told investors last month that while it had already been โvigorously promoting domestic substitutionโ for years, in response to the tariffs it would raise its share of local suppliers to replace the handful of components it still sourced from North America.
The company added that it would also develop a dual circulation model focused on exports to south-east Asia, Africa and South America.
Some analysts have argued that the Made in China 2025 plan, which was launched in 2015, helped spark the trade war during Trumpโs first term by setting explicit targets for domestic businesses to dominate strategic sectors.
A recent report by the EU Chamber of Commerce in China said the policy had succeeded in industries such as electric vehicles, shipbuilding and rail equipment โ where Chinese manufacturing now leads โ but warned that it had also encouraged inefficient investment and overcapacity in some sectors and had stoked tensions with trading partners.
Chinaโs strengthened push to prioritise domestic sourcing also could affect suppliers in third countries.
Thinkon Semiconductor, a Liaoning-based silicon materials provider, told investors it would cut out foreign suppliers to โboost risk resilienceโ. A manager at the company said it did not import US products and was working to replace chemical reagents from Japan, South Korea and Europe.
โTo avoid further risks, we will continue to advance our localisation efforts,โ the person said, asking not to be named.
Estun Automation and Thinkon Semiconductor did not respond to requests for comment.
He Zhixing, who works in corporate affairs at bearing maker Hunan SUND Technological Corp in central Hunan province, said Chinaโs retaliatory tariffs were driving manufacturers to abandon American bearings used in steam and gas turbines.
โThey are reaching out to us, asking us to ramp production,โ he said.
โRight now, everyoneโs talking about substitution,โ he added. Over the long term, he predicted, many customers would switch for good. โIt will be a gradual replacement process.โ


