S’pore semiconductor firms ramp up US presence to ride AI boom


Visiontec aims to grow its US team to five employees by the end of 2027, and double that to 10 by 2029. — The Straits Times

SINGAPORE: To meet the surging global demand for advanced chips used in artificial intelligence (AI) applications, Singapore semiconductor companies are rapidly expanding their presence in the United States, adding facilities and boosting manpower.

Advanced semiconductor packaging firm Ecsal Technologies is eyeing a new US facility and expects to double its headcount in the United States by the end of 2026.

It comes as the Singapore company seeks to capitalise on the AI boom, which has emerged as a significant driver of investment and economic growth in the United States.

The company is moving quickly to stay competitive in the AI race, such as by speeding up its product development cycle, Ecsal Technologies managing director Edmund Chua told The Straits Times.

“We used to renew a product or model every two years. Now we are looking at refreshing them once every six months due to the shortening of the semiconductor cycle,” he said, referring to the accelerated pace of innovation in the industry.

The company currently operates a service support base in Arizona to serve clients there and in other US states, with plans to expand to Texas to be closer to its customers.

Firms like Ecsal Technologies are critical to the semiconductor ecosystem, supplying equipment used in the packaging of advanced processors and memory chips.

The US semiconductor industry remains the global leader, accounting for just over half of global semiconductor sales revenue, according to a 2025 Semiconductor Industry Association report.

Other Singapore semiconductor firms are also expanding in the United States to tap growing demand driven by generative AI and high-performance computing.

Since setting up shop in El Dorado Hills in November 2025, wafer defect inspection systems provider Industrial Vision Technology (Visiontec) has been receiving strong interest from potential customers.

“At the moment, customers send their wafers to Singapore because we do not yet have a testing platform in the United States,” said Visiontec’s US general manager Howard Sin. Wafers are the physical foundation on which semiconductor chips are built.

Sin said that setting up a US-based testing platform is a key priority. The firm is considering California, New Jersey or North Carolina for their proximity to major clients and research institutions.

Visiontec is also engaging with US chipmakers including Wolfspeed, which develops and manufactures semiconductor technologies based on silicon carbide for power electronics applications.

Visiontec aims to grow its US team to five employees by the end of 2027, and double that to 10 by 2029. Sin said there is strong demand for high-quality, high-performance wafer defect inspection systems as the AI boom fuels the need for more advanced chips, for which even minor defects can affect performance and yield.

“We are riding this wave of AI and its energy needs. AI needs compute, data and power – power is the most formidable pillar. There’s a need for these systems to run on very high-efficiency, high-reliability chips,” he added in a Zoom interview from El Dorado Hills, where the firm’s US business development office is based.

The area was chosen for its proximity to Silicon Valley – a two-and-a-half-hour drive away – giving Visiontec access to major technology firms such as Nvidia, Broadcom and Intel, as well as a broader ecosystem of AI and semiconductor companies, Sin said.

Similarly, semiconductor testing equipment maker AEM, which counts US chip giant Intel as a long-time customer, set up a sales office and research and development centre in Carlsbad, California, to be closer to its US clients.

While the US market presents significant growth opportunities, Singapore semiconductor firms continue to grapple with challenges ranging from talent recruitment to higher operating costs. Breaking into the market is no easy feat, said Visiontec’s Sin, but once a company establishes itself, those barriers can become a competitive advantage. — The Straits Times/ANN

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