China's AI Hardware Makers Hit a Wall: Supply Can't Keep Up
Capacity constraints and chip shortages threaten to bottleneck China's AI hardware growth heading into 2026.
China's AI infrastructure buildout is running headfirst into a supply problem. According to analysts cited by Bloomberg, the country's AI hardware suppliers are struggling with capacity constraints and critical component shortages — particularly optical and electronic chips.
The issue isn't demand. That's through the roof. The problem is production can't scale fast enough to match it. Suppliers are effectively maxed out, and the component pipeline isn't filling gaps quickly enough.
The bottleneck could meaningfully limit growth in 2026, putting a ceiling on China's AI hardware expansion at a time when the sector is supposed to be accelerating.
It's a familiar paradox in tech supply chains: the hotter the market, the harder it gets to feed it. For China's AI ambitions, the constraint isn't ambition or capital — it's nuts-and-bolts manufacturing capacity.