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This is one of five papers from the full report—Consider This: The weaponisation of supply chains—exploring how key supply chains are evolving – and what it means for long-term investment strategy.

In this paper, we examine the infrastructure behind AI— and the growing pressure it faces. From export controls on advanced chips to rising energy demand in dates centres and the fragility of undersea cables, the risks are real—and rising.

While investors debate the implications for valuations of AI-related firms, the real-world risks of physical disruption loom. While semiconductors are a significant component of the AI supply chain, the broader implications of tariffs on related goods, such as electronics and data centre components that incorporate semiconductors, are also relevant. The inescapable conclusion is that tariffs can have indirect effects that lead to supply chain shortages for AI.

These vulnerabilities may not yet be fully priced in, but they could have far-reaching implications for markets and sectors. For investors, understanding the risks embedded in AI’s supply chain is becoming essential to assessing long-term resilience and opportunity.

Investors should be clear that the physical supply chain of AI cannot be taken for granted and should be considered a major risk factor, with knock-on effects on a wide variety of industrial supply chains.