Thoughts on the Market

The Looming Bottleneck for Global Tech

39 snips
Mar 13, 2026
A deep look at how disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz could ripple into the semiconductor supply chain. Discussion of Taiwan’s massive power needs for chip fabrication and the limits of LNG inventories. Exploration of sulfur as an overlooked feedstock for chipmaking and how refining shocks can cascade through tech and AI infrastructure costs.
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INSIGHT

Chip Fabrication Is Hugely Energy Intensive

  • Advanced semiconductor fabs are extremely energy intensive and depend on stable power to operate at scale.
  • Shawn Kim notes one leading Taiwan manufacturer uses roughly 9–10% of the country's electricity, making power disruptions materially risky.
INSIGHT

Taiwan's LNG Stocks Are Thin

  • Taiwan depends heavily on imported LNG with limited storage, holding about 1.5 weeks onshore plus several weeks on vessels at sea.
  • Shawn Kim warns Strait of Hormuz shipping disruptions could pressure that LNG chain and raise electricity costs for fabs.
INSIGHT

Sulfur Supply Is A Hidden Chip Input

  • More than 90% of global sulfur comes as a by‑product of oil refining and is converted into sulfuric acid used across semiconductors and batteries.
  • Shawn Kim highlights that refining disruptions from shipping shocks could create second‑order material shortages.
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