
CIO priorities
Analysts warn that the AI hardware ecosystem is becoming increasingly fragmented, as geopolitical and economic pressures create isolated demand pools and disconnected supply chains.
CIOs must be ready for scenarios where US vendors face restrictions on bundling products in China or come under pressure to adjust business terms globally under regulatory scrutiny.
“At the same time, China is accelerating domestic substitution to reduce dependence on US suppliers, potentially shrinking their addressable market,” Rawat said. “This dynamic creates a twofold risk for enterprises, near-term supply disruptions and longer-term cost escalation as vendors attempt to recoup margins elsewhere.”
Procurement strategies must now factor in regulatory volatility, diversified sourcing, and potential price pressures.
“CIOs must design AI infrastructures with supply security in mind for non-dispensable components, and supply resilience for fungible components, while balancing roadmap schedules and total cost of ownership across compute, memory, connectivity, storage, networking, and other infrastructure elements,” Faruqui said.
For enterprises, the message is clear: geopolitical tensions are not just background noise, but direct factors shaping AI infrastructure planning.