Middle East Conflict Fuels Surging PCB Prices, Strains Global Electronics Supply Chain
April 27, 2026
Global PCB prices are rising as Middle East conflict and supply-chain disruptions tighten access to high-purity PPE resin, copper, epoxy, and shipping routes, with ripple effects across electronics from AI servers to smartphones.
Copper foil and glass-fiber costs are climbing, copper makes up about 60% of PCB raw-material costs and has risen up to 30% year-to-date; epoxy resin lead times have stretched from weeks to as long as 15 weeks.
Goldman Sachs and other analysts say PCB prices surged as much as 40% in April versus March as manufacturers scramble for inputs, with inventories buffering only temporarily.
Geopolitical tensions, including U.S.-Israel positioning and Hormuz-related blockades, are disrupting global trade routes and amplifying supply-chain risk for tech manufacturing.
Additional pressures come from disruptions to photoresists and tighter naphtha availability tied to Middle East conflicts, fueling broader supply constraints.
Analysts project ongoing tightness in the supply chain, with inventories acting as buffers for now, but Hormuz disruptions and the broader conflict keep risk elevated.
The AI industry faces multi-year capex stress tests as geopolitical shocks disrupt materials, logistics, and manufacturing ecosystems, potentially prolonging cost pressures.
Geopolitics are translating into tangible electronics costs and slower innovation cycles, underscoring the fragility of global manufacturing networks.
The conflict is framed as having a lasting, destabilizing impact on supply chains and consumer prices, highlighting the interconnection of energy markets, geopolitics, and tech production.
The broader takeaway is that regional conflicts can rapidly affect technology costs and cadence of product launches, revealing vulnerabilities in modern electronics supply chains.
U.S. manufacturers report tariff uncertainties and material shortages tied to the Middle East conflict as significant challenges, per the Federal Reserve Beige Book.
Manufacturers face higher costs that may be absorbed, eroded margins, or passed to consumers as inventory planning grows uncertain in a crisis-prone supply chain.
Summary based on 15 sources
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Sources

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