lostpacket
Well-Known Member
I wonder if something like this will be taught in business school. It probably seemed prudent to auto makers to reduce their orders in the face of what seemed like an immiment recession and they may have even known that their suppliers wanted to pivot away from low margin chips, but I wonder if they realized there would be so much demand for the higher margin chips that their suppliers would be unable or unwilling to pivot back.Nobody wants to invest the billions in capital it takes to build these chips for fear of the auto industry iterating into a need for more powerful/smaller chips. The problem isn't simply that the foundries reallocated the chips to other industry. Its that when the auto companies cancelled their alotments, the foundries got out of the business of making the low margin chipsets---and rebuilt their lines to manufacture the newer architecture (HIGHER MARGIN) chips.
Seems like a considerable risk to just in time manufacturing.
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