Semiconductors & Electronics

Industry: Semiconductors & Electronics

The global semiconductor and electronics industry remains the foundational layer enabling nearly every other technology trend discussed across this site — from AI data centers and humanoid robotics to EV power electronics and defense systems — while itself navigating unprecedented demand from AI computing, a geopolitically-driven restructuring of manufacturing geography, and a parallel transformation in how chips are packaged and integrated.

Advanced packaging and chiplets: the new frontier

As traditional transistor scaling (Moore's Law in its classic form) continues to face diminishing returns and escalating costs at the most advanced process nodes, advanced packaging technology — methods for combining multiple chips (which may be manufactured on different process nodes, even by different companies) into a single integrated package — has emerged as a critical enabler of continued performance scaling. The global semiconductor advanced packaging and chiplet technology market reflects this shift, encompassing technologies including 2.5D and 3D packaging (stacking chips vertically with high-bandwidth interconnects), chip-to-chip interconnect standards (including the UCIe — Universal Chiplet Interconnect Express — standard that aims to enable an ecosystem of interoperable chiplets from different manufacturers), and the specialized manufacturing capability required for these advanced packaging processes. This shift has particular significance for AI accelerator chips, where advanced packaging enables the integration of compute dies with high-bandwidth memory (HBM) in configurations essential for AI training and inference performance — making advanced packaging capacity, alongside leading-edge fabrication capacity, a critical bottleneck in AI chip supply.

OSAT: the back-end manufacturing layer

The outsourced semiconductor assembly and test (OSAT) industry — companies that provide the packaging, assembly, and testing services for chips manufactured by foundries — has seen its strategic importance elevated significantly by the advanced packaging trend described above. Leading OSAT companies (ASE Technology, Amkor, JCET, and others) are making substantial capital investments in advanced packaging capacity, in some cases representing a more significant capital allocation shift than at any point in the industry's history, as advanced packaging capability becomes a genuine differentiator and capacity constraint rather than a commoditized back-end service. Geographic diversification of OSAT capacity has also become a policy priority in several markets, with the US CHIPS Act's scope extending to packaging and testing capacity (not just front-end fabrication), reflecting recognition that semiconductor supply chain resilience requires capability across the full manufacturing chain, not just leading-edge fabrication.

AI accelerator competition and the memory bottleneck

The AI accelerator market continues to be dominated by NVIDIA, whose data center GPU products remain the primary computing platform for AI training and much AI inference, though competitive dynamics continue to evolve with AMD's MI-series accelerators gaining share in certain workloads, and major cloud providers (Google with TPUs, Amazon with Trainium/Inferentia, Microsoft with Maia) continuing to develop custom AI silicon for their own infrastructure, partly to reduce NVIDIA dependency and partly to optimize for their specific workload characteristics. High-bandwidth memory (HBM) — the specialized memory technology that sits alongside AI compute dies via the advanced packaging techniques described above — has become one of the most capacity-constrained components in the entire AI hardware supply chain, with SK Hynix, Samsung, and Micron all making substantial capital investments in HBM production capacity, though lead times for new HBM capacity (which requires specialized manufacturing capability distinct from standard DRAM production) mean that HBM supply constraints are expected to persist as a binding factor on overall AI accelerator availability.

Geopolitics and manufacturing geography

Semiconductor manufacturing geography continues to be reshaped by export control policies (particularly US restrictions on advanced semiconductor manufacturing equipment and AI chip exports to China) and by substantial government incentive programs (the US CHIPS Act, EU Chips Act, and similar programs in Japan, South Korea, and India) aimed at diversifying advanced semiconductor manufacturing capacity away from its historical concentration in Taiwan (where TSMC remains the dominant leading-edge foundry) and South Korea. TSMC's expanding fabrication capacity in Arizona, Samsung's expansion in Texas, and Intel's foundry ambitions all represent significant shifts in where leading-edge semiconductor manufacturing occurs, though Taiwan's TSMC continues to maintain its position at the absolute leading edge of process technology, with new fabs outside Taiwan generally running processes that, while advanced, may trail TSMC's most leading-edge Taiwan facilities by one process generation.

China's semiconductor self-sufficiency drive

China's domestic semiconductor industry continues to advance under substantial government support aimed at reducing dependency on foreign semiconductor technology, with notable progress in mature-node manufacturing capacity (where Chinese foundries including SMIC have expanded capacity substantially, creating oversupply concerns in certain mature-node chip categories globally) and continued, though more constrained, progress at advanced nodes given export control restrictions on the manufacturing equipment required for leading-edge production. China's electronics manufacturing ecosystem — encompassing not just semiconductors but the broader consumer electronics, telecommunications equipment, and increasingly automotive electronics supply chains — remains globally dominant in scale even as geopolitical considerations drive diversification of certain supply chain segments.

Regional dynamics

Beyond the US-China-Taiwan dynamics central to most semiconductor geopolitical analysis, India has emerged as an increasingly significant participant in the global semiconductor ecosystem, with substantial government incentive programs attracting both OSAT investment (assembly and testing facilities) and, more recently, initial fabrication facility commitments, positioning India as a complementary location within diversified semiconductor supply chains rather than a near-term competitor to leading-edge manufacturing hubs.

Research intelligence sought by semiconductor and electronics enterprise buyers

Buyers of semiconductor and electronics market research typically require: advanced packaging and chiplet technology roadmap analysis by manufacturer; OSAT capacity investment tracking and competitive positioning; AI accelerator and HBM supply-demand balance forecasting; semiconductor manufacturing geography shift analysis tied to policy incentives; and China semiconductor self-sufficiency progress assessment by process node and application.

All semiconductor and electronics market research reports on this platform are produced by human analysts drawing on primary data from company financial disclosures, semiconductor industry association statistics, export control filings, and capital expenditure announcements.

Price range (USD)
$450 up to $22,000
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reports match your search
Navadhi Market Research · Semiconductors & Electronics
Published

Global Semiconductor Advanced Packaging & Chiplet Technology Market Strategic Research Report

The global semiconductor advanced packaging and chiplet technology market is undergoing its most consequential structural transformation since the late 1990s shift f…

$29.6B
2024
$137.8B
2032
▲ 21.2%CAGR2024–2032
21.2% CAGR $29.6B in 2024 270 pages Global
$3,500.00 from
Forecast $137.8B by 2032
View report
Navadhi Market Research · Semiconductors & Electronics
Published

Global Outsourced Semiconductor Assembly and Test (OSAT) Market Strategic Research Report

The global Outsourced Semiconductor Assembly and Test (OSAT) market is experiencing transformational growth, driven primarily by the explosive demand for Advanced Pa…

284 pages Global
$3,500.00 from
View report