But Nvidia doesn't actually manufacture its chips.
And the country that does depends on energy shipped through one of the most fragile chokepoints in global trade.
Nvidia Designs The Chips. TSMC Actually Builds Them
Every cutting-edge Nvidia AI processor is manufactured by Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Ltd. (NYSE:TSM).
From training clusters used by large language models to the GPUs powering hyperscale data centers, Nvidia's designs ultimately become physical chips inside TSMC's fabs. That means the AI supply chain runs through Taiwan.
For years, investors have focused on the geopolitical risks around Taiwan's relationship with China. But another vulnerability sits quietly in the background: energy.
Taiwan imports roughly 97–98% of its energy, much of it shipped through global energy routes tied to the Middle East.
In other words, the fabs producing Nvidia's most important chips depend on energy that ultimately flows through the Strait of Hormuz.
South Korea Just Showed What Energy Risk Looks Like
The market recently got a real-time stress test of that vulnerability.
Like Taiwan, South Korea imports nearly all of its energy.
And like Taiwan, its semiconductor industry runs massive fabrication plants that require enormous and continuous power. Once investors realized that geopolitical events could threaten the energy feeding those fabs, semiconductor stocks moved fast.
The Hidden Constraint Behind The AI Boom
The AI boom is being financed at historic scale.
But those chips must first be fabricated at TSMC.
And those fabs consume staggering amounts of power.
Which means the AI supply chain ultimately depends on something far more basic than algorithms. Energy.
And whether the factories building Nvidia's chips can keep their lights on.
Photo: Shutterstock
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