Skip to Content
  • オフィス

    オフィス

    北米・南米
    • Atlanta
    • Austin
    • Bogota
    • Boston
    • Buenos Aires
    • Chicago
    • Dallas
    • Denver
    • Houston
    • Los Angeles
    • Mexico City
    • Minneapolis
    • Monterrey
    • Montreal
    • New York
    • Rio de Janeiro
    • San Francisco
    • Santiago
    • São Paulo
    • Seattle
    • Silicon Valley
    • Toronto
    • Washington, DC
    ヨーロッパ・中東・アフリカ
    • Amsterdam
    • Athens
    • Berlin
    • Brussels
    • Copenhagen
    • Doha
    • Dubai
    • Dusseldorf
    • Frankfurt
    • Helsinki
    • Istanbul
    • Johannesburg
    • Kyiv
    • Lisbon
    • London
    • Madrid
    • Milan
    • Munich
    • Oslo
    • Paris
    • Riyadh
    • Rome
    • Stockholm
    • Vienna
    • Warsaw
    • Zurich
    アジア・オーストラリア
    • Bangkok
    • Beijing
    • Bengaluru
    • Brisbane
    • Ho Chi Minh City
    • Hong Kong
    • Jakarta
    • Kuala Lumpur
    • Manila
    • Melbourne
    • Mumbai
    • New Delhi
    • Perth
    • Shanghai
    • Singapore
    • Sydney
    • Tokyo
    全てのオフィス
  • アルムナイ
  • メディア
  • お問い合わせ
  • 東京オフィス
  • Japan | 日本語

    地域と言語を選択

    グローバル
    • Global (English)
    北米・南米
    • Brazil (Português)
    • Argentina (Español)
    • Canada (Français)
    • Chile (Español)
    • Colombia (Español)
    ヨーロッパ・中東・アフリカ
    • France (Français)
    • DACH Region (Deutsch)
    • Italy (Italiano)
    • Spain (Español)
    • Greece (Elliniká)
    アジア・オーストラリア
    • China (中文版)
    • Korea (한국어)
    • Japan (日本語)
  • Saved items (0)
    Saved items (0)

    You have no saved items.

    後で閲読、共有できるようにするためにブックマークしてください

    Explore Bain Insights
  • 業界別プラクティス
    メインメニュー

    業界別プラクティス

    • 航空宇宙、防衛、政府関連
    • 農業
    • 化学製品
    • インフラ、建設
    • 消費財
    • 金融サービス
    • ヘルスケア
    • 産業機械、設備
    • メディア、エンターテインメント
    • 金属
    • 採掘・鉱業
    • 石油、ガス
    • 紙、パッケージ
    • プライベートエクイティ
    • 公共、社会セクター
    • 小売
    • テクノロジー
    • 通信
    • 交通
    • 観光産業
    • 公益事業、再生可能エネルギー
  • 機能別プラクティス
    メインメニュー

    機能別プラクティス

    • カスタマー・エクスペリエンス
    • サステイナビリティ、 社会貢献
    • Innovation
    • 企業買収、合併 (M&A)
    • オペレーション
    • 組織
    • プライベートエクイティ
    • マーケティング・営業
    • 戦略
    • アドバンスド・アナリティクス
    • Technology
    • フルポテンシャル・トランスフォーメーション
  • Digital
  • 知見/レポート
  • ベイン・アンド・カンパニーについて
    メインメニュー

    ベイン・アンド・カンパニーについて

    • ベインの信条
    • 活動内容
    • 社員とリーダーシップ
    • プレス・メディア情報
    • クライアントの結果
    • 受賞歴
    • パートナーシップを結んでいる団体
    Further: Our global responsibility
    • ダイバーシティ
    • 社会貢献
    • サステイナビリティへの取り組み
    • 世界経済フォーラム(WEF)
    Learn more about Further
  • キャリア
    メインメニュー

    キャリア

    • ベインで働く
      キャリア
      ベインで働く
      • Find Your Place
      • ベインで活躍する機会
      • ベインのチーム体制
      • 学生向けページ
      • インターンシップ
      • 採用イベント
    • ベインでの体験
      キャリア
      ベインでの体験
      • キャリアストーリー
      • 社員紹介
      • Where We Work
      • 成長を後押しするサポート体制
      • アフィニティ・グループ
      • 福利厚生
    • Impact Stories
    • 採用情報
      キャリア
      採用情報
      • 採用プロセス
      • 面接内容
    FIND JOBS
  • オフィス
    メインメニュー

    オフィス

    • 北米・南米
      オフィス
      北米・南米
      • Atlanta
      • Austin
      • Bogota
      • Boston
      • Buenos Aires
      • Chicago
      • Dallas
      • Denver
      • Houston
      • Los Angeles
      • Mexico City
      • Minneapolis
      • Monterrey
      • Montreal
      • New York
      • Rio de Janeiro
      • San Francisco
      • Santiago
      • São Paulo
      • Seattle
      • Silicon Valley
      • Toronto
      • Washington, DC
    • ヨーロッパ・中東・アフリカ
      オフィス
      ヨーロッパ・中東・アフリカ
      • Amsterdam
      • Athens
      • Berlin
      • Brussels
      • Copenhagen
      • Doha
      • Dubai
      • Dusseldorf
      • Frankfurt
      • Helsinki
      • Istanbul
      • Johannesburg
      • Kyiv
      • Lisbon
      • London
      • Madrid
      • Milan
      • Munich
      • Oslo
      • Paris
      • Riyadh
      • Rome
      • Stockholm
      • Vienna
      • Warsaw
      • Zurich
    • アジア・オーストラリア
      オフィス
      アジア・オーストラリア
      • Bangkok
      • Beijing
      • Bengaluru
      • Brisbane
      • Ho Chi Minh City
      • Hong Kong
      • Jakarta
      • Kuala Lumpur
      • Manila
      • Melbourne
      • Mumbai
      • New Delhi
      • Perth
      • Shanghai
      • Singapore
      • Sydney
      • Tokyo
    全てのオフィス
  • アルムナイ
  • メディア
  • お問い合わせ
  • 東京オフィス
  • Japan | 日本語
    メインメニュー

    地域と言語を選択

    • グローバル
      地域と言語を選択
      グローバル
      • Global (English)
    • 北米・南米
      地域と言語を選択
      北米・南米
      • Brazil (Português)
      • Argentina (Español)
      • Canada (Français)
      • Chile (Español)
      • Colombia (Español)
    • ヨーロッパ・中東・アフリカ
      地域と言語を選択
      ヨーロッパ・中東・アフリカ
      • France (Français)
      • DACH Region (Deutsch)
      • Italy (Italiano)
      • Spain (Español)
      • Greece (Elliniká)
    • アジア・オーストラリア
      地域と言語を選択
      アジア・オーストラリア
      • China (中文版)
      • Korea (한국어)
      • Japan (日本語)
  • Saved items  (0)
    メインメニュー
    Saved items (0)

    You have no saved items.

    後で閲読、共有できるようにするためにブックマークしてください

    Explore Bain Insights
  • 業界別プラクティス
    • 業界別プラクティス

      • 航空宇宙、防衛、政府関連
      • 農業
      • 化学製品
      • インフラ、建設
      • 消費財
      • 金融サービス
      • ヘルスケア
      • 産業機械、設備
      • メディア、エンターテインメント
      • 金属
      • 採掘・鉱業
      • 石油、ガス
      • 紙、パッケージ
      • プライベートエクイティ
      • 公共、社会セクター
      • 小売
      • テクノロジー
      • 通信
      • 交通
      • 観光産業
      • 公益事業、再生可能エネルギー
  • 機能別プラクティス
    • 機能別プラクティス

      • カスタマー・エクスペリエンス
      • サステイナビリティ、 社会貢献
      • Innovation
      • 企業買収、合併 (M&A)
      • オペレーション
      • 組織
      • プライベートエクイティ
      • マーケティング・営業
      • 戦略
      • アドバンスド・アナリティクス
      • Technology
      • フルポテンシャル・トランスフォーメーション
  • Digital
  • 知見/レポート
  • ベイン・アンド・カンパニーについて
    • ベイン・アンド・カンパニーについて

      • ベインの信条
      • 活動内容
      • 社員とリーダーシップ
      • プレス・メディア情報
      • クライアントの結果
      • 受賞歴
      • パートナーシップを結んでいる団体
      Further: Our global responsibility
      • ダイバーシティ
      • 社会貢献
      • サステイナビリティへの取り組み
      • 世界経済フォーラム(WEF)
      Learn more about Further
  • キャリア
    人気検索キーワード
    • デジタル
    • 戦略
    前回の検索
      最近訪れたページ

      Content added to saved items

      Saved items (0)

      Removed from saved items

      Saved items (0)

      Technology Report

      When Will the Chip Shortage End?

      When Will the Chip Shortage End?

      Even with recent investments and signs of improvement, the recovery will be uneven and depend on such wild cards as general economic activity, geopolitical tensions, and shortages of “bleeding-edge” chipmaking equipment.

      著者:Anne Hoecker, Peter Hanbury, Hans Joachim Heider, and Sophia Zou

      • min read
      }

      レポート

      When Will the Chip Shortage End?
      en
      概要
      • The semiconductor shortage won’t end on a single date. Some companies are starting to see relief this year, while others may have to wait until 2024 or later.
      • Softening demand is the fastest route to relief, and it’s conceivable given the slowdown in the global economy.
      • Leading companies are designing their products to increase resilience, systematically assessing risks, investing in value chain innovations, and revamping their operating model.

      This article is part of Bain's 2022 Technology Report.

      Explore the report

      As the global semiconductor shortage drags on, every tech executive is asking the same question: When will it end? But the more salient question might be: When will my company get relief?

      The reality is the chip crunch probably won’t end on a single date. Many disruptive factors continue to dog semiconductor supply chains—acute events such as Covid-19 lockdowns and extreme weather that lead to short-term operational disruptions, as well as structural supply chain weaknesses that have caused shortages of “leading-edge” 12-inch wafers with transistors of 28 to 130 nanometers, “lagging-edge” 6- and 8-inch wafers, and advanced substrates for “bleeding-edge” chips with transistors of 5 to 14 nanometers. Each has its own timeline to resolution. As a result, some companies are starting to see relief this year, while others may have to wait until 2024 or later (see Figure 1). At the same time, several wild cards could cause more disruption, including the global economy, geopolitical tensions, and shortages of equipment for manufacturing bleeding-edge chips.

      Figure 1
      Automotive and industrial companies are starting to see relief from chip shortages, but advanced computing products remain in a challenging period

      Many have followed how automotive companies cut back orders when Covid-19 hit, only to find themselves at the back of the line for wafers when they later needed them. But the larger impact has come from skyrocketing demand for technology products, and the long lead times required to build the fabrication plants that supply their chips has led to a chip shortage that has often played out unevenly but has affected nearly every end market in some way.

      Some chip types (and the industries that rely on them) have been hit harder and at different times. After shooting up in 2021, lead times for chip deliveries have flattened at elevated levels in recent months (see Figure 2).

      Figure 2
      After spiking in 2021, semiconductor delivery times flattened at elevated levels

      These shortages will improve faster for certain products and industries, depending on the types of chips they use, but more tech executives are recognizing that the next phase of the shortage will be like the arcade game Whac-A-Mole. As one shortage recedes, giving affected chip buyers all the computing components needed to produce a complete product, those buyers will start to consume chip supplies in another area, causing new shortages to pop up.

      Three wild cards will determine how the shortage plays out.

      • Demand pullback. Unfortunately, the fastest route to relief is softening demand. Inconceivable for the past 2 ½ years, this now seems a distinct possibility, given the economic outlook. There are already reports of tech companies temporarily pausing new component orders and asking suppliers to delay or shrink shipments amid inflation worries and growing inventories.
      • Shortages of extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography equipment. These $150-million-a-pop machines are necessary to build bleeding-edge fabrication plants, and there’s only one supplier, ASML. This bottleneck will likely grow over the next three years or so, potentially constraining capacity and limiting new plant openings at a time when semiconductor makers plan to spend well over $150 billion on new bleeding-edge production facilities (see Figure 3).
      • Geopolitical frictions. The semiconductor supply chain has become a major strategic asset in geopolitical maneuverings, and not just in China and the West. This year, Russia limited exports of noble gases, including neon, a crucial ingredient in chipmaking. That followed Japan’s 2019 restriction of exports to South Korea of high-purity hydrogen fluoride, an etching gas used in semiconductor manufacturing. Growing tensions between China and the US threaten to further bifurcate the global technology ecosystems. The US has already cut off China from receiving advanced tools, and domestic-first policies in China may make it difficult for Western firms to access lagging-edge chips from China, where there’s a concentration of lagging-edge wafer manufacturing hubs coming online. And these are just a few of the reasons that semiconductor consumers will need to increasingly consider geopolitical risks when sourcing their chips.
      Figure 3
      Bleeding-edge fabrication plants will receive the lion’s share of semiconductor capital investments in the next few years

      These wild cards are largely out of tech executives’ control, but companies can take several pragmatic steps to protect themselves against chip shortages and the myriad disruptions to electronics supply chains that are undoubtedly coming.

      Design products for flexible resilience. Leading companies constantly refine their products to increase resilience, ideally beginning early in product development and before a supply disruption hits. In our work with clients and analysis of the global landscape, we’ve found that certain things consistently succeed: reducing a product’s number of parts, reusing components, using standard design approaches and flexible product architecture wherever possible, and decoupling software from hardware. In a chip shortage, for example, the fewer “hooks” the product has into silicon, the better.

      Assess risks regularly. To help identify the next big supply crunch, leading companies proactively and continuously assess risks across their entire supply chain and all scenarios they can imagine. After chasing parts for 18 months, one global technology company recently stepped back to evaluate the potential magnitude and duration of a wide range of risks, including those related to specific suppliers, natural disasters, and geopolitical tensions. This helped highlight where investment was most critical to shoring up supply chain resilience. To reduce its reliance on a single supplier for key components, the company had to pay extra to keep multiple suppliers active and bring its procurement department into product development discussions earlier. As a result, the company should be able to fulfill more orders during the next major component shortage, potentially saving several hundred million dollars of revenue it would have otherwise lost.

      Get closer to the semiconductor supply chain. In this era of increasingly frequent and intense supply disruptions, traditional supply chain approaches won’t cut it. Many leading tech companies are developing closer relationships with their suppliers and the semiconductor ecosystem. Some are subsidizing suppliers’ production capacity in exchange for a guaranteed, agreed-upon volume of product. Foxconn has gotten even more hands-on, forming joint ventures to build chip fabs in India and Malaysia. Others are doing more semiconductor design in-house and developing new capabilities to do so.

      Revamp the operating model. To pull all of this off, leading companies are refreshing their operating model to improve collaboration among engineering, sales and marketing, and procurement—the teams critical to managing through and preparing for supply disruptions. For example, these companies create rapid feedback mechanisms to help the three departments communicate better and prioritize the most important customer requests and the highest-value product redesign opportunities. They further strengthen these operational muscles by emphasizing cross-functional collaboration in their training programs.

      After two years of chaos, some tech companies are finally starting to see some relief from the chip shortage. The recovery will be choppy, but leading companies are moving quickly to control what they can, investing in supply chain resilience so they’re ready for whatever comes next.

      Read the Next Chapter

      How Companies Can Build a Supply Chain for the Circular Economy

      Value Evolution

      • The Rise of Growth Equity Investors

      • A Multicloud World

      • Welcome to Web3

      • The US-China Decoupling

      Competitive Battlegrounds

      • Defending against Disruption

      • The Engine 2 Imperative

      • AI’s Next Frontier

      • The Industrial IoT

      Operational Advantage

      • Beyond the Rule of 40

      • Sales Productivity

      • Consumption-Based Pricing

      • Software R&D Efficiencies

      • The Chip Shortage

      • The Circular Economy

      Read our 2022 Technology Report

      Explore the report Download PDF
      著者
      • Headshot of Anne Hoecker
        Anne Hoecker
        パートナー, Silicon Valley
      • Headshot of Peter Hanbury
        Peter Hanbury
        パートナー, San Francisco
      • Headshot of Hans Joachim Heider
        Hans Joachim Heider
        パートナー, Munich
      • Headshot of Sophia Zou
        Sophia Zou
        パートナー, Shanghai
      関連業種
      • Cloud Computing
      • IoT
      • IT Services
      • Semiconductors
      • Software
      • テクノロジー
      関連するコンサルティングサービス
      • サプライチェーン
      Technology Report
      Product Management: The Key to Unlocking Return on Your Software R&D Investment

      Product management is instrumental to boosting returns on software development investments, but few companies do it well.

      詳細
      Technology Report
      Quantum Computing Moves from Theoretical to Inevitable

      Quantum will likely become part of a mosaic, working with classical computing to solve big problems.

      詳細
      CIO Insights
      Despite Tech Layoffs, Competition for Talent Remains Fierce

      Tech workers increasingly value career development opportunities and remote or hybrid work options, while compensation has soared.

      詳細
      サプライチェーン
      How AI Is Starting to Transform Circular Packaging

      There are 15 AI use cases companies across the value chain can use today to accelerate circularity.

      詳細
      Technology Report
      How Can We Meet AI’s Insatiable Demand for Compute Power?

      Technological innovation, new revenue, and public support may be needed to fund and supply enough electricity.

      詳細
      First published in 9月 2022
      Tags
      • CIO Insights
      • Cloud Computing
      • IoT
      • IT Services
      • Semiconductors
      • Software
      • Technology Report
      • サプライチェーン
      • テクノロジー

      クライアント支援事例

      Helping a Midsize ERP Player Compete against the Giants

      ケーススタディを見る

      業績改善 Aggressively growing an IT service provider with a high-performance culture

      ケーススタディを見る

      顧客戦略、マーケティング Sales blueprint puts IT Services Co.'s growth back on track

      ケーススタディを見る

      お気軽にご連絡下さい

      私達は、グローバルに活躍する経営者が抱える最重要経営課題に対して、厳しい競争環境の中でも成長し続け、「結果」を出すために支援しています。

      ベインの知見。競争が激化するグローバルビジネス環境で、日々直面するであろう問題について論じている知見を毎月お届けします。

      *プライバシーポリシーの内容を確認し、合意しました。

      プライバシーポリシーをご確認頂き、合意頂けますようお願い致します。
      Bain & Company
      お問い合わせ Sustainability Accessibility Terms of use Privacy Cookie Policy Sitemap Log In

      © 1996-2026 Bain & Company, Inc.

      お問い合わせ

      How can we help you?

      • ビジネスについて
      • プレス報道について
      • 採用について
      全てのオフィス