Auto giants rally as China says it will consider exemptions for Nexperia chip exports

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In this photo illustration, the logo of semiconductor manufacturer Nexperia is displayed on a screen.

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Shares of Europe's biggest carmakers rose on Monday as fears over an industry shortage of semiconductors appeared to recede.

China on Saturday said it would consider some exemptions for Nexperia chip exports. It had previously blocked Nexperia semiconductors from leaving the country after the Dutch government seized control of Nexperia, owned by the Chinese company Wingtech.

The standoff between the Netherlands and China had prompted automotive groups to raise the alarm over a worsening chip shortage.

France's Renault, Germany's Mercedes-Benz Group and Milan-listed shares of Jeep-maker Stellantis were all trading up around 3% on Monday morning.

Auto parts suppliers Valeo and Aumovio had advanced 3.3% and 1.8%, respectively, by around 10:54 a.m. London time (5:54 a.m. ET).

Germany's Volkswagen, Porsche and BMW were also trading more than 1.5% higher.

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Shares of Volkswagen and Stellantis over the last three months.

The situation involving Nexperia began in September, when the Dutch government took control of the company, in what was seen as a highly unusual move, reportedly after the U.S. raised security concerns.

In making the decision, the Dutch government cited fears that tech from the company — which specializes in the high-volume production of chips used in automotive, consumer electronics and other industries — "would become unavailable in an emergency."

China responded by blocking exports of the firm's finished products.

German automakers are thought to be especially sensitive to Nexperia-related disruptions because they rely heavily on large, domestic suppliers, known as "Tier 1s," and local production facilities and companies, such as Nexperia, despite much of its manufacturing moving to China.

Japan's Honda Motor became the first known automaker to reduce production due to the problem last week.

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