TLDRs:
- Nexperia China tells staff to prioritize local management over Dutch HQ orders amid tension.
- Dutch emergency law seizure targets only the parent company, not China-based subsidiaries.
- China’s export restrictions block Dutch oversight, keeping Dongguan operations largely independent.
- Rivals may exploit supply concerns, targeting Nexperia’s high-volume automotive chip production.
Nexperia China has instructed its employees to follow directives from local management rather than the company’s Dutch headquarters, escalating a growing corporate standoff.
The announcement, communicated through an internal letter over the weekend, signals a clear pushback against Dutch oversight after authorities in the Netherlands assumed temporary control of the company’s management citing national security concerns.
The company, which is owned by China-based Wingtech Technology, confirmed on social media that operations in China, including the Dongguan plant and offices in Shanghai, Beijing, Shenzhen, and Wuxi, are managed locally. Employees at these sites are compensated by the Chinese entity, reinforcing the operational independence from the Dutch headquarters.
Dutch Seizure Faces Legal Limits
The Netherlands invoked the Goods Availability Act, an emergency law allowing the state to temporarily assume control over companies critical to national security.
In a letter to the Dutch Parliament dated Oct 14 (https://t.co/bnAFwyiWpx), 🇳🇱 Minister of Economic Affairs Vincent Karremans lays out his reasons for seizing control of Nexperia from 🇨🇳 Wingtech (闻泰科技) and CEO 🇨🇳 Zhang Xuezheng (张学政):
“Recently, I have received serious… pic.twitter.com/T1IDnyUMJg
— Byron Wan (@Byron_Wan) October 20, 2025
This measure, however, only applies to the parent entity and its European operations. Subsidiaries incorporated in mainland China are outside its reach, significantly limiting the practical effect of the Dutch takeover.
Dutch authorities removed CEO Zhang Xuezheng from his post and have restricted certain corporate actions, such as relocating units or terminating executives, for up to one year. Despite these actions, the Dutch intervention has no enforcement power over Nexperia China, creating a jurisdictional deadlock.
Export Controls Intensify the Stand-Off
China’s Ministry of Commerce has compounded the situation by issuing an export ban on certain finished components manufactured domestically.
This policy effectively blocks the Dutch administration from exerting influence over Chinese operations since the majority of Nexperia’s products, about 70%, are assembled at the Dongguan facility.
The export restrictions mean that even though the Dutch authorities have legal authority over the European parent, they cannot redirect operations or access product flows in China. As a result, the standoff has become a geopolitical and corporate balancing act, with government-to-government negotiations between the Netherlands and China underway.
Rivals Eye Supply Opportunities
The uncertainty surrounding Nexperia’s operations presents a window of opportunity for competitors. Companies such as Infineon, ON Semiconductor, STMicroelectronics, and Rohm may target customers concerned about potential supply disruptions, especially for automotive-grade components.
Nexperia’s Dongguan plant processes over 50 billion pieces annually, focusing on high-demand and medium-power SMD packages, DFN formats, and wafer-scale options. Competitors are likely to prioritize pin-compatible replacement components for diodes, transistors, and other discrete families most affected by the export constraints.
Electronics distributors are also preparing inventory buffers to meet potential demand spikes from automotive and industrial equipment manufacturers seeking alternative suppliers during this period of geopolitical uncertainty.