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Hewlett Packard Chief Worries about Chip Storage

Navigating the global chip shortage is going to be difficult, according to Antonio Neri, president and CEO of Hewlett Packard Enterprise (NYSE:HPE), which sells hardware and software to businesses worldwide.

"It’s not going to be easy but I actually believe we’re going to be in a much better shape after the summer of 2022," Neri told the media on Wednesday. His comments came in response to a question on whether the coronavirus pandemic could lead to further chip shortage issues.

New chip fabrication plants, known as fabs, will come online and create more capacity, Neri said, adding that this should alleviate some of the supply chain issues.

German technology and engineering group Bosch has built a new one billion euro ($1.2 billion U.S.) semiconductor plant in Dresden — the capital of the German state of Saxony and one of Europe’s biggest semiconductor clusters — over the last two years and production started in July.

Harald Kroeger, a member of the Bosch management board, revealed in August that supply chains have buckled in the last year as demand for chips in everything from cars to PCs and electric toothbrushes had surged worldwide.

Major chipmakers including TSMC, Samsung (NASDAQ:SSNLF), and Intel (NASDAQ:INTC) have also announced new factories recently but they won’t be ready for several years and they will make advanced chips, which are more abundant than some of the older chips.

As for HPE, its shares grew 14 cents, or 1%, to $14.35.