Even if fighting in Iran actually stops, the damage to supply chains could last years, putting pressure on major chipmakers like Micron and TSMC.
A war most people thought was about oil exposed a hidden weak point: helium. Without it, AI chips can’t be made at scale.
Even if the ceasefire holds and diplomats find a way to resolve the mess in Iran, one thing is already true: The artificial intelligence (AI) chip supply chain will never look at the Middle East the same way again. As Vice President JD Vance led a U.S. delegation to Pakistan for negotiations this week -- with Iran's parliament speaker simultaneously warning of "new cards on the battlefield" -- the fragile two-week ceasefire that began April 7 is careening toward an eventual end with no deal in sight.
Peace, whenever it comes, will not undo what the last two months revealed about how dangerously thin the margins are in global chip manufacturing.
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The moment U.S. and Israeli forces launched Operation Epic Fury on Feb. 28, striking Iranian military and government sites and closing the Strait of Hormuz to commercial traffic, markets focused almost entirely on oil. That made sense on the surface. About 20% of the world's daily oil supply transits the Strait. But the deeper, slower-moving crisis was unfolding in a gas most people associate with birthday balloons: helium.
Qatar's Ras Laffan Industrial City is responsible for roughly 30% to 38% of the world's helium supply. Helium is not optional in semiconductor manufacturing -- it is used to cool silicon wafers during chemical etching, to help purify clean rooms, and to detect microscopic leaks in the ultra-clean environments where advanced chips are made. There is currently no substitute.
In early March, Iranian strikes damaged Ras Laffan's LNG production infrastructure, forcing QatarEnergy to declare force majeure and halt operations. Helium spot prices roughly doubled in the weeks that followed.
What makes this particularly cruel for the AI build-out is that it further stretched a supply chain that already had no slack. Chunks of high-bandwidth memory were sold out through 2026. Advanced chip packaging lead times stretched one to two years before the first strike. The AI investment boom is, as analysts at J.P. Morgan put it, "increasingly supply constrained, not demand-constrained."
The damage from a constrained helium supply does not land evenly across the chip industry. The companies most exposed are those whose production processes are most helium-intensive and whose manufacturing footprint overlaps most directly with Middle East energy dependency.
Samsung and SK Hynix produce roughly two-thirds of the world's memory chips -- high-bandwidth memory that Nvidia's (NASDAQ: NVDA) AI chips depend on. South Korea sources a significant share of its industrial helium from Qatar and the broader Gulf region, and South Korean industrial power prices rose as supply lines were disrupted.
Both companies are heavily embedded in the supply chains of U.S.-listed AI names. When Samsung and SK Hynix struggle to meet production targets, the ripple effects reach Nvidia, Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT), and every hyperscaler ordering HBM chips for their AI clusters.
Micron Technology (NASDAQ: MU), the closest U.S. equivalent in the memory chip space, faces similar exposure. Micron's manufacturing processes are helium-dependent, and its domestic production alone cannot insulate it if global supply tightens. Morningstar flagged Micron as part of the broader group of chipmakers whose margins could compress meaningfully if the Qatar helium situation persists through the summer.
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing (NYSE: TSM) deserves particular attention. TSMC is the foundry that makes Nvidia's most advanced AI chips, and Taiwan imports 97.7% of its energy -- with roughly seven days of LNG reserves. Oxford Economics estimated that Taiwan's industrial production could fall 0.7% below baseline if helium and energy constraints persist for six months. The vulnerability here is real.
The New York Times reported that the Iran war "damaged helium production infrastructure that could take many years to restore." That is the key phrase investors need to internalize. Even a ceasefire this week does not flip the Ras Laffan facilities back online. Repairs to major LNG and helium facilities can take years.
For investors holding positions in memory-intensive AI chip names, particularly those reliant on Korean production, the honest takeaway is this: The headline risk around the Iran war may be fading, but the underlying supply chain damage is neither priced into the stocks nor reflected in the consensus estimates.
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JPMorgan Chase is an advertising partner of Motley Fool Money. Micah Zimmerman has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends JPMorgan Chase, Micron Technology, Microsoft, Nvidia, and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.