A fresh supply chain shock may be brewing for the tech industry, and it could eventually affect the price of PCs, smartphones, and other consumer electronics. According to a new report from DigiTimes, semiconductor manufacturers are facing sharp increases in the cost of key materials used in chip production. The spike is being driven by geopolitical instability and tightening supply chains, particularly for metals used in compound semiconductors.

One metal drawing particular attention is gallium, a critical element used in advanced semiconductor technologies. Market data show gallium prices have surged dramatically in recent months, reaching roughly $2,100 per kilogram in early March 2026, more than doubling from levels seen in early 2025. While the issue lies deep within the semiconductor supply chain, analysts warn that the ripple effects could eventually reach the consumer electronics market.
Why are chip materials suddenly getting more expensive?
A combination of geopolitical tensions and supply constraints is driving the latest price spike. The Middle East conflict has raised concerns about global energy supplies and logistics routes, pushing up costs across multiple industrial materials used in semiconductor production. DigiTimes reports that several high-temperature metals used in chipmaking, including tungsten, tantalum, and molybdenum, have also seen steep price increases.

At the same time, the gallium market is already under pressure from export restrictions and licensing requirements by China, which dominates global production of the metal. The country’s control over the supply of gallium has been a recurring point of tension in global technology trade disputes.
What does this mean for PCs and smartphones?
Gallium is an important material in compound semiconductors such as gallium arsenide (GaAs) and gallium nitride (GaN). These are commonly found in RF modules, power electronics, LEDs, and high-efficiency chips used across smartphones, laptops, networking gear, and data-center hardware. When the cost of such a key material rises sharply, chip manufacturers typically have three choices: absorb the higher costs, redesign components, or pass the increase along the supply chain. In many cases, those costs gradually trickle down from suppliers to chipmakers, then to device manufacturers.
The timing adds further pressure as the semiconductor industry is already facing a tight memory supply and strong demand from AI infrastructure. While immediate gadget price hikes aren’t guaranteed, supply chain shifts like this often show up months later in the cost of consumer electronics.



