r/investing Mar 8, 09:53 AM
The U.S. just drafted global AI chip export controls, here's the actual portfolio implication most people are getting wrong So the Bloomberg and Reuters reports from March 5 sent semiconductor stocks lower, which is the correct first-order reaction. But I think most of the commentary is conflating two different questions: who gets hurt by this specific draft framework, and whether this changes the investment thesis for AI infrastructure.
On the first question: yes, if finalized as written, Nvidia and AMD face bureaucratic friction on their international order pipelines. That's real. The tiered licensing structure (under 1K GPUs = basic review, 200K+ = host-government security commitments) adds latency to hyperscaler orders in Europe and Asia. That's not nothing.
But here's what I think the market is missing: the draft explicitly exempts domestic U.S. data center demand. The hyperscaler capex cycle (AWS, Azure, Google) is overwhelmingly U.S.-centric in terms of build-out timing. Microsoft just committed $80B in data center capex for 2025–2026. That doesn't stop at the border.
More importantly, export controls on chip sales don't affect the companies that make the equipment used to manufacture chips. ASML's EUV machines are still going to TSMC to produce the chips Nvidia designs. AMAT, LRCX, KLAC supply process equipment to every foundry on the planet building advanced nodes. TSMC's 2nm capacity is fully sold out for 2026 regardless of what happens to U.S. chip export rules.
So the honest read is: controls are a headwind for NVDA and AMD international revenue growth. They're largely neutral or mildly positive for equipment companies and pure foundry plays like TSM.
Separately, the AVAV situation is more interesting than it looks. The stock dropped 17% on March 2 on SCAR recompetition risk. But SCAR revenue is ~6% of their FY2026 guidance. They just got a $186M Switchblade delivery order. And they're reporting Q3 earnings March 10. If the SCAR situation resolves and Q3 shows execution, the stock could recover meaningfully. If Q3 misses and SCAR confirms lost revenue, it's a different conversation. That binary setup is why we haven't added to the position.
Happy to discuss any of this further, curious what others are seeing on the export control framework specifically.
submitted by /u/acceinvestments
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