State of the Chain · Jun 19, 2026
State of the Supply Chain — June 2026
An auto-generated, data-only snapshot of the semiconductor & AI supply chain as of 2026-06-19: 531 companies, $42.23T tracked market cap, the segment leaders, top chokepoints, the capex race, and the biggest deals on record. No editorializing — every figure is computed from the dataset.
The chain at a glance
wafergraph tracks 531 companies across 12 segments of the semiconductor & AI value chain. All figures below are computed from the live dataset, market data as of 2026-06-19.
Source: wafergraph dataset; market caps via Yahoo Finance × SEC EDGAR shares; financials via SEC EDGAR. As of 2026-06-19.
The largest players by market value
The ten most valuable companies in the tracked chain. Concentration at the top is extreme: the top company alone is $5.10T.
- 1NVIDIA$5.10T
- 2Alphabet (Google)$4.49T
- 3Apple$4.38T
- 4Microsoft$2.82T
- 5Amazon (Annapurna Labs)$2.63T
- 6TSMC$2.40T
- 7Broadcom$1.96T
- 8Tesla$1.50T
- 9Meta Platforms$1.47T
- 10AMD$876.2B
Source: live market caps, as of 2026-06-19.
Segment leaders
The most valuable company in each of the 12 value-chain segments, with the number of tracked companies competing in it.
- 1Materials: Linde88 companies$236.8B
- 2Equipment (Front End): ASML63 companies$743.7B
- 3Equipment (Back End): Advantest24 companies$142.6B
- 4EDA & IP: Arm Holdings27 companies$469.4B
- 5Design (Fabless): NVIDIA100 companies$5.10T
- 6IDM: Texas Instruments22 companies$293.8B
- 7Foundry: TSMC17 companies$2.40T
- 8Memory: GigaDevice Semiconductor28 companies$65.2B
- 9Analog, Power, RF: Texas Instruments73 companies$293.8B
- 10OSAT: ASE Technology21 companies$89.0B
- 11Distribution & Misc: Dell Technologies47 companies$265.4B
- 12AI & Data Center: Alphabet (Google)88 companies$4.49T
Leader = largest tracked market cap in the segment (live caps).
Top chokepoints
The companies the rest of the chain depends on most. "Downstream dependence" measures transitive downstream reach weighted by market dominance, normalized 0–100 — the higher the score, the more of the chain breaks if this node does.
- 1Ajinomoto197 downstream · $33.74T at risk100
- 2Carl Zeiss SMT196 downstream · $34.46T at risk100
- 3TRUMPF196 downstream · $34.46T at risk100
- 4ASML195 downstream · $33.71T at risk99
- 5Lasertec193 downstream · $33.65T at risk98
- 6ASMPT203 downstream · $33.82T at risk86
- 7Kulicke & Soffa203 downstream · $33.82T at risk86
- 8Mitsui High-tec203 downstream · $33.82T at risk86
- 9TOWA203 downstream · $33.82T at risk86
- 10Atlas Copco201 downstream · $36.01T at risk85
Source: wafergraph risk model (criticality index). Methodology: /methodology.
Where the chain is thin
Single-source dependencies and the most concentrated segments — the places a single disruption propagates furthest. 5 companies are flagged as effective monopolies in their niche.
- 1ASMLSole supplier of EUV lithography machines required for all leading-edge chips.monopoly
- 2AjinomotoSupplies effectively all ABF build-up film, the insulator in advanced CPU/GPU substrates.monopoly
- 3LasertecOnly supplier of actinic EUV photomask inspection systems.monopoly
- 4Carl Zeiss SMTSole maker of the precision optics inside every ASML lithography system.monopoly
- 5TRUMPFSole supplier of the CO2 drive lasers powering EUV light sources.monopoly
Thinnest segments by company count: Foundry (17), OSAT (21), IDM (22), Equipment (Back End) (24).
Most concentrated segments (HHI)
Market-share concentration measured by the Herfindahl-Hirschman Index — the sum of squared firm shares (0–10000). Standard bands: below 1500 competitive, 1500–2500 moderately concentrated, above 2500 highly concentrated. The top of this list is where a handful of firms hold the market; a separate lens from the graph chokepoints above.
- 1LithographyHighly concentrated · CR3 100% · leader ASML7,986
- 2GPU & AI AcceleratorsHighly concentrated · CR3 96% · leader NVIDIA7,808
- 3HBMHighly concentrated · CR3 100% · leader SK hynix4,248
- 4Pure-Play FoundryHighly concentrated · CR3 79% · leader TSMC4,060
- 5FPGAHighly concentrated · CR3 86% · leader AMD3,395
- 6DRAMHighly concentrated · CR3 97% · leader Samsung Electronics3,321
- 7Mobile SoCModerately concentrated · CR3 77% · leader MediaTek2,247
- 8NANDModerately concentrated · CR3 72% · leader Samsung Electronics2,167
- 9EDA SoftwareModerately concentrated · CR3 75% · leader Synopsys2,093
- 10Silicon WafersModerately concentrated · CR3 65% · leader Shin-Etsu Chemical1,758
Source: wafergraph market-share estimates (updated 2026-06-15). Shares are approximate, not audited; the fragmented "other" tail is excluded, so each HHI is a conservative lower bound.
The capex race
Capital expenditure is the clearest signal of who is building the AI buildout. Combined hyperscaler capex alone is $378.7B.
- 1Amazon (Annapurna Labs)$131.8B
- 2Alphabet (Google)$91.4B
- 3Meta Platforms$69.7B
- 4Microsoft$64.6B
- 5TSMC$30.3B
- 6Oracle$21.2B
- 7Micron Technology$15.9B
- 8Intel$14.6B
- 9Apple$12.7B
- 10CoreWeave$10.3B
Source: SEC EDGAR latest annual capex. As of 2026-06-19.
Fastest-growing companies
Year-over-year revenue growth from the latest reported fiscal year — where the demand is landing in the chain.
- 1Credo TechnologyFY2026+205.7%
- 2NVIDIAFY2026+65.5%
- 3Micron TechnologyFY2025+48.9%
- 4Super Micro ComputerFY2025+46.6%
- 5Marvell TechnologyFY2026+42.1%
- 6AMDFY2025+34.3%
- 7nVent ElectricalFY2025+29.5%
- 8Arista NetworksFY2025+28.6%
Source: SEC EDGAR year-over-year revenue. Latest reported FY.
Most profitable
Annual net income — the cash engines funding the buildout.
- 1Alphabet (Google)$132.2B
- 2NVIDIA$120.1B
- 3Apple$112.0B
- 4Microsoft$101.8B
- 5Amazon (Annapurna Labs)$77.7B
- 6Meta Platforms$60.5B
- 7TSMC$35.3B
- 8Broadcom$23.1B
Source: SEC EDGAR latest annual net income.
Biggest deals on record
The largest M&A, AI-compute, and capacity commitments in the tracked deal corpus (71 sourced deals).
- 1Stargate Project launched2025-01-21 · announced$500.0B
- 2OpenAI–Oracle $300B cloud deal2025-09-10 · announced$300.0B
- 3OpenAI commits $250B to Azure2025-10-28 · announced$250.0B
- 4Broadcom's attempted Qualcomm takeover2017-11-06 · terminated$117.0B
- 5NVIDIA invests up to $100B in OpenAI2025-09-22 · announced$100.0B
- 6Micron's NY & Idaho memory megafabs2022-10-04 · under_construction$100.0B
- 7TSMC's $65B Arizona fabs2024-04-08 · under_construction$65.0B
- 8Broadcom acquires VMware2022-05-26 · completed$61.0B
Source: wafergraph deals database (each entry links a public source).