Global chip sales expected to hit $1 trillion this year, industry group says


FILE PHOTO: Semiconductor chips are seen on a circuit board of a computer in this illustration picture taken February 25, 2022. REUTERS/Florence Lo/Illustration/File Photo

SAN FRANCISCO, Feb 6 (Reuters) - ‌Global semiconductorsales are expected to hit $1 trillion this ‌year, the Semiconductor Industry Association said on Friday.

The ‌group, which represents most U.S. chip firms, said thatchip sales hit $791.7 billion in 2025, an increase of 25.6% over the previous year. That ‍booming growth is expected to continue ‍into this year as ‌major technology firms aroundthe world spend hundreds of billions of ‍dollars ​to build out data centers for artificial intelligence.

The growth leader and largest segment of chips was ⁠the kind of advanced computing chips made ‌by Nvidia, Advanced Micro Devices and Intel. Sales of those products ⁠increased by 39.9%, ‍totaling $301.9 billion in 2025.

The second-largest category was memory chips, whose prices are soaring amid an AI-induced shortage. Memory chip ‍sales rose34.8% to $223.1 billion.

But the AI boom ‌has extendedto nearly every part of the chip industry, with John Neuffer, the president and chiefexecutive of the Washington, D.C.-based industry group, saying that executives at a range of smaller firms expressed optimism for 2026 when he recently visited Silicon Valley.

"The refrain I heard was, 'No one knows what's ‌going to happen with the AI build out a year from now, but my orders are completely full,'" Neuffer told Reuters. "At ​least for the next year, we're on a pretty, pretty strong glide path."

(Reporting by Stephen Nellis in San FranciscoEditing by Shri Navaratnam)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Tech News

Are chemicals from smartphones and TVs threatening dolphins?
The rise and fall of a 3D printing empire
Battle of the AI brands: What's with the OpenAI v Anthropic rivalry?
The AI Evangelists on a mission to shake up Japan
OpenAI Robotics head resigns after deal with Pentagon
AI increasingly mentioned in children’s stories, research shows
A modern-day fairy tale about cycles of trauma
Did Obsidian master the art of the efficient epic?
Pok�mon Pokopia replaces conflict with creature comforts
US draws up strict AI guidelines amid Anthropic clash, FT reports

Others Also Read