Orply.

Ian King

Bloomberg News U.S. semiconductor reporter covering major chipmakers and the AI hardware market, including AMD, Nvidia, Intel, semiconductor earnings, supply-chain dynamics, and AI-driven chip demand.

AMD’s Forecast Shows AI Demand Is Spreading Beyond GPUs

Bloomberg Technology framed AMD’s sharp rally as evidence that the AI infrastructure trade is widening beyond GPUs. Caroline Hyde, Ian King and RBC’s Srini Pajjuri said AMD’s forecast pointed to renewed demand for CPUs as AI workloads shift toward inference and agentic systems, even as Nvidia remains dominant in accelerators. The program extended that argument across Nvidia’s Corning deal, Microsoft’s power constraints and Apple’s outside-model plans: the AI boom is becoming a contest over compute, connectivity, energy and platform control.

Bloomberg TechnologyMay 7, 202619 min read

AI Demand Is Stress-Testing the Global Semiconductor Supply Chain

Bloomberg’s primer argues that the AI boom is turning the semiconductor supply chain into a strategic stress test, raising demand for advanced processors while exposing how dependent the industry remains on a handful of companies, machines and manufacturing clusters. The source traces that pressure through ASML’s lithography tools, AMD’s AI chip designs, TSMC’s concentration of advanced fabrication in Taiwan, and competing US and Chinese efforts to rebuild domestic capacity. Its central claim is that chips are becoming more economically and politically essential just as their production remains physically fragile, capital-intensive and difficult to replicate.

Bloomberg OriginalsMay 7, 202612 min read

Apple Explores Intel and Samsung for U.S. Chip Production

Mark Gurman said Apple has held early talks with Intel and Samsung about using new U.S. fabs to make future A-series and M-series processors, an exploratory move he framed as a supply-chain redundancy question rather than only a political one. Apple still relies heavily on TSMC, primarily in Taiwan, and Gurman described that geographic and supplier concentration as one of the company’s biggest risks. Across the rest of the broadcast, executives and analysts described a similar shift from exposure to execution: AI companies are giving Washington early model access for review, while enterprise adoption is being tested by security, deployment cost and proprietary data advantages.

Bloomberg TechnologyMay 7, 202614 min read