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AI boom “at risk” due to looming chip crisis

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A deepening shortage of memory chips is rapidly evolving into a legitimate risk for investors, with portfolios heavily exposed to AI, tech, consumer electronics and automotive sectors, the CEO of a leading financial advisory has warned.

“This is a potential profit shock building in plain sight,” said Nigel Green, CEO of deVere Group.

“Investors who assume uninterrupted scaling in artificial intelligence and tech need to reassess exposure, as supply constraints at this level can quickly translate into margin pressure, delayed revenues and sharper equity swings.”

The investment implications are immediate, warned Green.

Companies reliant on high-bandwidth memory and advanced DRAM face rising input costs and potential production delays.

It affects revenue timing, capital expenditure cycles and forward guidance, which are variables that directly drive valuations.

Industry leaders are flagging the strain, as AI infrastructure expansion is memory-intensive. Data centres, cloud platforms and advanced computing systems require significant volumes of high-performance memory.

Apple’s Tim Cook has acknowledged supply pressures affecting product flows, while Tesla’s Elon Musk has previously described semiconductor shortages as constraints on production scaling.

“If supply lags demand, deployment timelines extend and costs rise. This introduces real risk to earnings projections that have underpinned recent equity gains,” the deVere founder said.

Automotive manufacturers are particularly exposed with electric vehicles (EVs) relying on substantial onboard computing capacity, making them highly sensitive to memory availability. Production bottlenecks can lead to missed delivery targets and revenue revisions, impacting share prices.

Consumer electronics face similar pressures. Rising component costs filter through to retail pricing, which can test demand elasticity. If consumers delay upgrades due to higher prices, revenue growth slows.

Pricing power

Memory producers themselves may experience pricing power in the short term, potentially benefiting equity holders in that segment.

Yet upstream strength often coincides with downstream stress, creating dispersion within the broader AI and tech ecosystem.

The inflationary dimension adds complexity. Sustained hardware cost increases can influence broader price indices, affecting rate expectations, bond yields and currency movements. Investors with cross-asset exposure should factor in the potential for renewed volatility.

Emerging markets integrated into semiconductor supply chains may see currency fluctuations as trade dynamics adjust.

Equity volatility could rise in hardware-dependent indices, particularly if earnings guidance weakens.

“Investors should treat memory supply as a strategic variable. Diversification across sectors, geographies and asset classes becomes more important when a single bottleneck has systemic reach,” Nigel Green explained.

“Periods like this reward disciplined portfolio review,” he added.

“Seeking professional advice and reassessing allocations is prudent as this situation develops. AI momentum remains powerful. Yet beneath the optimism, the silicon squeeze is tightening.”