[ROUNDUP] Semiconductor Export Controls & Entity List Traps with Valentin Povarchuk cover art

[ROUNDUP] Semiconductor Export Controls & Entity List Traps with Valentin Povarchuk

[ROUNDUP] Semiconductor Export Controls & Entity List Traps with Valentin Povarchuk

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Host: Annik Sobing Guest: Valentin Povarchuk, Senior Counsel, Acrevis Law Group Published: March 2026 Length: ~35 minutes Presented by: Global Training Center Lessons from Applied Materials: Export Controls, Entity List Risks, and Semiconductor Enforcement Annik Sobing welcomes Valentin Povarchuk, trade compliance expert with 20+ years across big law, in-house, and boutique firms, for a deep dive into export controls and sanctions—his thought leadership sweet spot. They unpack the Applied Materials $252M settlement for ion implanter sales to SMIC (despite BIS warnings and Entity List designation), Pterodyne Flare’s $1M mitigated penalty (via voluntary disclosure), and how companies navigate entity list risks in semiconductors amid U.S.–China tensions. Valentin teases an April 7 free GTC webinar on due diligence. What You’ll Learn in This Episode Valentin’s background 20+ years advising on customs, AD/CVD, export controls, sanctions; now at Acrevis Law Group helping companies (esp. tech/startups) build compliance programs. Expert in entity list/entity alerts, corporate risk management—not just tariffs/customs. Semiconductor export controls 101 Focus on equipment/software for advanced chips (AI training), not just chips themselves; bipartisan consensus on China as tech adversary (Russia/Belarus secondary). Biden’s AI Diffusion Rule (global licensing limits) revoked by Trump; new approach more “transactional” (trade for access). Uncertainty reigns—no clear replacement yet. Applied Materials case breakdown ($252M penalty) BIS sent is-informed letter warning off SMIC; later Entity List addition. Applied continued via South Korean plant (substantial transformation: assembly/testing to claim “Korean origin” <25% U.S. content). BIS rejected: Substantial transformation irrelevant for Entity List sales (no clear reg definition of “foreign-made” under EAR); “spirit of restrictions” trumps letter. Intentional strategy, not mistake—revenue pressure (competitors ready). Risk management realities Is-informed letters = stop sign for regulators (not yellow light); license applications possible but slow/uncertain amid brain drain at BIS. Balance: Compliance vs. business survival (e.g., 25% revenue at risk); competitors lurk. Bigger firms targeted harder. Practical advice for companies Screen addresses + entities; diligence/parties/end-users critical. Smaller tech/startups: Contract language, certifications, compliance programs mitigate risks without killing deals. Key Takeaways Export controls > tariffs now; semicon/tech under microscope—review Entity List diligence today. Is-informed = hard stop; don’t “get creative” without weighing enforcement (spirit > letter). Voluntary disclosure works—self-report transparently for leniency. Join Valentin’s free April 7 GTC webinar on due diligence. Credits Host: Annik Sobing Guest: Valentin Povarchuk Subscribe & Follow • YouTube • Spotify • Apple Podcasts Join the conversation with fellow trade professionals in the Trade Geeks Community: https://globaltrainingcenter.com/portal/?utm_source=SimplyTradePodcast
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