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Nvidia's exposure to Asian supply chains for components hits 90% of its production costs

tomshardware.com 2026-05-04 Luke James
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NvidiaSemiconductor Supply ChainTSMCAsia ManufacturingAI Chips3nm ProcessLPDDR5XData Center GPURobotics PlatformAutomotive SoCMemory SupplyChip Packaging
News Summary
According to Bloomberg, Nvidia now sources approximately 90% of its production costs from Asian suppliers, up from 65% a year earlier. This reflects the company's established data center supply chain,... Read original →
Industry Analysis
Nvidia’s 90% reliance on Asian suppliers isn’t just cost optimization—it’s a strategic vulnerability. The convergence of TSMC’s 3nm capacity constraints and LPDDR5X shortages creates a dual choke point, deepening dependence on Taiwan and Korea. Although Jetson Thor skips CoWoS, it still competes for the same scarce 3nm wafers needed for HBM-packed data center GPUs, forcing premature EOL of older LPDDR4-based platforms—a form of generational lock-in. With U.S. packaging fabs still ramping, geopolitical shocks could severely disrupt output. Rivals like AMD may exploit this by promoting chiplet architectures with domestic assembly to lure risk-averse customers. Over the next 12–24 months, if LPDDR5X yields stall or Arizona packaging lags, Nvidia may face margin pressure or delayed roadmaps—shifting its AI dominance from pure tech leadership to a test of supply chain resilience.
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