The world’s largest chipmaker has sent a chill through the markets with a stark warning: prices are going up. For the UK’s tech sector, already battered by Brexit red tape and global uncertainty, this is the last thing it needed. The news hit the wires this morning, and the reaction was immediate.
Shares in UK-listed tech firms took a hit, and the pound wobbled against the dollar. The message from the chipmaker was clear: rising input costs, coupled with unprecedented demand, mean higher prices for everyone downstream. For the UK, a nation that prides itself on being a hub for semiconductor design, the warning is particularly ominous.
We may design the chips, but we don’t manufacture them. That leaves us exposed to the whims of a few giant foundries in Taiwan and South Korea. The logic is simple: if chips cost more, everything that uses them becomes more expensive.
This includes cars, smartphones, and even the NHS’s medical equipment. The inflationary pressure is a headache for the Bank of England, which is already fighting a losing battle against rising prices. Capital flight is a real risk as investors seek safer havens.
The government’s fiscal response will be critical, but there is a limit to what it can do. Printing money is not a solution; it only stokes inflation further. The market efficiency I have championed for years is being tested.
The supply chain is only as strong as its weakest link, and right now, that link is the concentration of manufacturing. The UK must diversify its sources. But that requires time and money, two things in short supply.
For now, we are left with a stark reality: the chips we rely on are getting pricier. The bottom line is that the cost of progress is rising. We must brace for impact.









