Chinese AI firm iFlytek has created a new subsidiary focused on chip design and artificial intelligence software, underscoring China’s accelerating push to build a home-grown semiconductor ecosystem amid fresh US tariff pressure on Chinese-made chips.
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New chip With A New AI Design Entity
iFlytek has set up Shandong Yixun Information Technology with registered capital of 50 million yuan (about US$7.1 million), according to Chinese corporate database Qichacha.
The new company’s business scope includes integrated circuit design, AI software development and technical consulting for online AI public-service platforms.
Shandong Yixun adds to a growing portfolio of AI-and chip-related units under iFlytek, which is listed in Shenzhen and known for its speech-recognition and large language model technologies.
New Stance on US Tariffs
iFlytek has been on the US Entity List since 2019, limiting its access to advanced American chips and pushing it to rely more heavily on Chinese processors from suppliers such as Huawei.
The US Trade Representative has now launched a new tariff action on a broad range of Chinese semiconductor imports, setting an additional duty rate of 0 per cent initially, which will rise after 18 months on June 23, 2027, with the final rate to be announced 30 days in advance.
Analysts say this delayed tariff escalation increases long-term uncertainty for China’s chip exporters and further encourages Chinese tech groups to invest in domestic semiconductor design and production capacity.
Developing Indigeneous AI Chips
iFlytek’s leadership has repeatedly stressed its commitment to using domestically designed chips, even if that slows development timelines for its large AI models by several months compared with systems built on leading-edge US GPUs.
The company’s X-series large models, including the X1.5 version launched in November, are described as being trained entirely on Chinese computing infrastructure, positioning iFlytek as a flagship user of home-grown AI hardware.
The establishment of Shandong Yixun is expected to deepen iFlytek’s in-house expertise in AI accelerators and system-level design that can support future generations of its foundation models and industry applications.
Key Comments
In response to queries about Shandong Yixun, iFlytek has said that detailed business plans for the new entity are still being refined, but the strategic direction is clear: to strengthen its capabilities in core semiconductor technologies and AI platforms that do not depend on restricted foreign components.
The company has indicated that Shandong Yixun will initially prioritise collaborative projects with local governments, research institutes and ecosystem partners in Shandong and Anhui to accelerate innovation in AI chips and public-service AI platforms.
iFlytek added that the subsidiary is part of a broader roadmap to “build a secure, controllable and open AI infrastructure” for China’s digital economy, aligning with national goals for tech self-reliance while supporting developers and enterprise customers with more competitive AI computing solutions.





