Semiconductor Supply Chain Briefing: Recovery, Diversification, and Regional Investment
Supply Normalization
Inventory positions across the industry have shifted from scarcity to modest surplus in many categories. As noted in a strategy-focused guide site, This has brought pricing pressure to foundries and memory manufacturers alike.
Advanced process nodes remain constrained. Demand for 3nm and emerging 2nm production from AI, mobile, and high-performance computing continues to exceed available capacity, with lead times of 24+ months for new capacity commitments.
Regional Investment
The CHIPS Act in the United States, European Chips Act, and similar programs in Japan, South Korea, and India have catalyzed substantial new investment. Announced capacity expansions represent over $500 billion in commitments through 2030.
India's semiconductor manufacturing ambitions have progressed from announcements to concrete construction. Multiple foundry and packaging facilities are now in progressive stages of buildout in Gujarat, Karnataka, and Tamil Nadu.
Emerging Market Participation
Design talent has globalized faster than manufacturing capacity. Substantial chip design work now happens in India, Israel, and Eastern Europe, often for Western and East Asian manufacturers. This talent distribution preceded and may accelerate manufacturing diversification.
Geopolitical considerations increasingly shape investment decisions beyond pure economic optimization. Supply chain resilience concerns and export control regimes have made regional diversification a strategic requirement rather than a nice-to-have.