Back in April, we by the US government. Specifically, the goal of the probe was to look at the country's reliance on foreign semiconductor production and how such imports might affect national security. In a press conference after a meeting with President Trump and the EU held over the weekend, it was announced that the results of the investigation would be published within two weeks, suggesting that new or higher tariffs on imported chips are on the way, too.
News of the announcement was reported by , as part of its more comprehensive coverage of the , where America will impose a 15% import tariff on most EU goods. While discussing the terms and nature of the deal in a press meeting, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick also announced that the results of the investigation into chip imports and national security would be released in two weeks.
It probably won't matter if the investigation determines that there is zero risk to national security, a verdict that I strongly suspect will not be the outcome, as any opportunity to add import tariffs is likely to be grasped with both hands when [[link]] the [[link]] industry it relates to is so highly profitable at the moment. Earlier this month, Nvidia reached a market cap, and while it does , all of its chips are made in Taiwan.
Whatever the final outcome of the probe is, it probably means US-based PC enthusiasts will be paying more for their CPUs, graphics cards, RAM sticks, motherboards, PSUs, and so on. How much more is completely unknown at this point, but for the sake of the PC gaming industry, I hope that the new US-EU trade deal is considered the model to aim for, rather than one to blow out of the water.

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