26/05/2026
Most people talking about the chip industry are working off misconceptions.
I've spent time studying this industry closely — and the gap between what people believe and what's actually true is striking.
So I put together 4 of the most common ones. Swipe through and see how many you believed.
Misconception 1 — "The chip shortage happened because there weren't enough factories."
Wrong. Factories had capacity. The problem was demand forecasting failure, cancelled orders, and panic buying that inflated demand 3× above reality.
Misconception 2 — "If Taiwan is disrupted, the entire chip industry collapses."
Partially true — but far narrower than headlines suggest. Taiwan dominates sub-7nm. But over 60% of global chip volume runs on legacy nodes made in Japan, Korea, Europe, and the US.
Misconception 3 — "Just build more fabs and the problem is solved."
A new leading-edge fab takes 4–5 years, costs $20B+, needs 1,000 specially trained engineers, and relies on equipment suppliers that are themselves capacity-constrained. It is a generational bet, not a quick fix.
Misconception 4 — "Smaller node = better chip. Always chase the cutting edge."
The world runs on 28nm MCUs in cars, fridges, industrial controllers, and medical devices. Over 70% of chip volume by unit is legacy nodes — because the right chip for the job is not always the newest one.
The chip industry is one of the most misunderstood sectors in tech and business.
The people who get it right — investors, procurement teams, engineers, strategists — are the ones who look past the headlines and into the actual mechanics.
Which of these surprised you most? Drop it in the comments — I'm curious what's most counterintuitive for people outside the industry.