
CXMT IPO Creates Windfall for China Chip Supply Chain
CXMT IPO Creates Windfall for China’s Chip Supply Chain
When ChangXin Memory Technologies (CXMT) completes its 295 billion yuan ($40.6 billion) initial public offering on the Shanghai STAR Market — the largest semiconductor IPO in Chinese history — the biggest winners may not be CXMT itself. They will be the dozens of domestic suppliers that have spent years building capacity specifically for China’s only DRAM manufacturer. From ultra-high-purity sputtering targets to wet electronic chemicals, the CXMT supply chain represents the most concentrated ecosystem of domestic semiconductor material and equipment companies in China. As the global DRAM market hits $137.14 billion in Q1 2026, up 245% year-over-year, these suppliers are positioned to capture a wave of expansion capital that will reshape China’s memory chip industry for the next decade.
The IPO and What It Funds
ChangXin Memory Technologies, formally Hefei ChangXin Integrated Circuit Manufacturing Co., Ltd., filed its STAR Market IPO prospectus in late 2024 and is expected to complete the listing in 2026. The 295 billion yuan offering will fund three core initiatives: expansion of existing 12-inch wafer fabrication capacity, upgrades to DRAM process technology nodes, and accelerated R&D into advanced memory products including High Bandwidth Memory (HBM) for AI accelerators.
The HBM ambition is particularly significant. With U.S. export restrictions blocking Chinese companies from accessing SK Hynix and Samsung’s HBM products — a dynamic explored in our analysis of US-China semiconductor decoupling — CXMT has become China’s only viable path to domestic HBM production. The company is reportedly targeting HBM2E and HBM3-equivalent products, which require advanced DRAM die stacking, Through-Silicon Via (TSV) technology, and extreme process uniformity — all of which demand massive investment in both equipment and materials.
For CXMT’s suppliers, this means a sustained, multi-year expansion cycle. Every new wafer fab line requires silicon wafers, photoresist, specialty gases, sputtering targets, wet chemicals, spare parts, and etching equipment. The IPO transforms CXMT from a capital-constrained domestic player into the best-funded memory chipmaker in China, with direct implications for every company in its supply chain.
The Supplier Ecosystem — Who Benefits
| Supplier | Product | CXMT Relevance | Other Major Customers |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jiangfeng Electronics (江丰电子, 300666) | Ultra-high purity sputtering targets (tungsten, titanium, tantalum) | Core supplier of 5N+ (99.999%) tungsten targets for DRAM metallization layers | TSMC, Samsung, Intel, SK Hynix |
| Shengong Shares (神工股份, 688233) | Large-diameter monocrystalline silicon materials | Core consumables for plasma etching electrodes and silicon components in DRAM fabrication | Global DRAM and logic fabs |
| Xingfu Electronics (兴福电子, 002574) | Wet electronic chemicals (acids, solvents, etchants) | Certified supplier for IC etching and cleaning processes; also qualified by SMIC, YMTC, SK Hynix | SMIC, YMTC, SK Hynix, Intel |
| AMEC (中微公司, 688012) | Plasma etching equipment | Covers most DRAM process steps; high aspect ratio etching critical for advanced memory nodes | SMIC, YMTC, TSMC, GlobalFoundries |
| Naura Technology (北方华创, 002371) | Deposition, etching, and oxidation equipment | Domestic alternative to Applied Materials for multiple DRAM fab steps | SMIC, YMTC, Hua Hong |
| Photoresist suppliers (Jiangsu Nata, Crystal Clear) | ArF/i-line photoresist for lithography | Increasing domestic substitution for JSR, TOK, and Shin-Etsu photoresist | Domestic fabs broadly |
Jiangfeng Electronics (江丰电子)
Founded in 2005 and listed on the Shenzhen Stock Exchange, Jiangfeng Electronics is China’s leading manufacturer of sputtering targets — the high-purity metal discs used in physical vapor deposition (PVD) to create thin-film layers on semiconductor wafers. The company’s ultra-high purity tungsten targets, with purity levels of 5N+ (99.999% or higher), are critical consumables in DRAM metallization. Each DRAM wafer requires dozens of sputtering steps, making target consumption directly proportional to wafer output. CXMT’s fab expansion translates directly into increased target orders for Jiangfeng. The company already supplies global leaders including TSMC, Samsung, and Intel, but CXMT represents its largest domestic DRAM customer and a strategic anchor in the Chinese market.
Shengong Shares (神工股份)
Shengong Shares, listed on the STAR Market, specializes in large-diameter monocrystalline silicon materials used as consumables in plasma etching chambers — the equipment that carves microscopic circuit patterns into silicon wafers. In DRAM fabrication, etching is one of the most repeated and critical process steps, requiring silicon electrodes, rings, and other components that degrade with use and must be replaced regularly. Shengong’s products are core consumables in this process, and as CXMT adds wafer capacity, consumption of these silicon components scales linearly. The company’s focus on semiconductor-grade silicon materials positions it as a key beneficiary of any domestic DRAM expansion.
Xingfu Electronics (兴福电子)
Xingfu Electronics produces wet electronic chemicals — ultra-pure acids, solvents, and etching solutions used throughout semiconductor fabrication for cleaning, etching, and surface preparation. The company has achieved supplier qualification from CXMT, SMIC, YMTC, and even SK Hynix’s China operations, making it one of the most widely certified domestic chemical suppliers in China’s semiconductor industry. DRAM fabrication is particularly chemical-intensive, with hundreds of wet processing steps per wafer. As CXMT scales production, Xingfu’s chemical volumes will increase proportionally, and the company’s multi-customer certification provides revenue diversification that reduces dependence on any single fab.
AMEC (中微公司)
Advanced Micro-Fabrication Equipment (AMEC), listed on the STAR Market, is China’s most successful domestic etching equipment manufacturer. The company’s plasma etching systems cover most DRAM fabrication process steps, and its high aspect ratio etching technology is particularly critical for advanced memory nodes where deep, narrow trenches must be etched with extreme precision. AMEC competes directly with Lam Research and Tokyo Electron in CXMT’s fab, and the IPO-funded capacity expansion represents a significant equipment procurement opportunity. Each new DRAM fab line requires hundreds of etching chambers, and AMEC is positioned to capture a growing share of these orders as CXMT prioritizes domestic equipment sourcing.
Industry Context — The DRAM Boom and China’s Supply Chain Imperative
The timing of CXMT’s IPO coincides with an extraordinary DRAM market upcycle. Global DRAM revenue reached $137.14 billion in Q1 2026, a 245% increase year-over-year, driven by insatiable demand for HBM in AI training and inference chips — a market where even established players like Samsung and SK Hynix are scrambling to solve thermal and packaging challenges. This boom has made memory semiconductor manufacturing one of the most profitable sectors in the global technology industry — and has intensified China’s urgency to build domestic capacity.
U.S. export restrictions on advanced semiconductor equipment and HBM products have made CXMT’s expansion not just a commercial opportunity but a strategic national priority. China currently imports over 90% of its DRAM supply, primarily from Samsung and SK Hynix. CXMT’s ability to produce DRAM domestically — and eventually HBM — directly addresses this dependency. The 295 billion yuan IPO is, in effect, a market-funded national security initiative.
For the supply chain companies, this creates a unique dynamic: they are not just commercial suppliers to a growing customer, but strategic partners in a national technology self-sufficiency program — a thesis that has not gone unnoticed by global investment banks, as Morgan Stanley’s bullish 2026 semiconductor report made clear. Government incentives, priority procurement policies, and reduced competition from restricted foreign suppliers all work in favor of domestic companies like Jiangfeng, Shengong, Xingfu, and AMEC.
Forward-Looking — What to Watch
The CXMT IPO will trigger a multi-year investment cycle that will reshape China’s semiconductor materials and equipment landscape. Three developments deserve close attention:
HBM timeline: CXMT’s progress on HBM production will determine the scale and speed of equipment procurement. If the company achieves HBM2E qualification by 2027 — as some analysts expect — equipment orders could accelerate significantly, benefiting AMEC, Naura, and Jiangfeng in particular.
Domestic substitution rates: Monitor what percentage of CXMT’s new fab equipment and materials are sourced domestically versus imported. Higher domestic content directly benefits the supply chain companies profiled here, while also indicating China’s progress toward semiconductor self-sufficiency.
Pricing power: As CXMT scales and its suppliers gain volume, watch for margin expansion at companies like Xingfu and Shengong. The combination of growing demand and reduced foreign competition could create favorable pricing dynamics for domestic suppliers through 2028 and beyond.
The CXMT IPO is not just a capital markets event. It is the financial foundation for China’s most ambitious semiconductor supply chain buildout. Every company that feeds into CXMT’s fabs — from tungsten targets to etching chemicals to plasma equipment — stands to benefit from the largest single expansion in China’s memory chip history.
For the full semiconductor industry analysis and market impact assessment, see our primary report: ChangXin Technology IPO Reshapes China DRAM Industry on STAR Market.
Sources
- ChangXin Memory Technologies IPO Prospectus, Shanghai STAR Market filing, 2024-2025
- TrendForce, Global DRAM Revenue Report Q1 2026
- Jiangfeng Electronics (300666) Annual Report 2025, Shenzhen Stock Exchange
- Shengong Shares (688233) Annual Report 2025, Shanghai STAR Market
- Xingfu Electronics (002574) Supplier Qualification Disclosures, 2024-2025
- AMEC (688012) Annual Report and Equipment Order Disclosures, 2025
- SemiAnalysis, “China’s DRAM Push: CXMT IPO and HBM Ambitions,” 2025
- China Securities Regulatory Commission, STAR Market IPO Queue Updates, 2025-2026








