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The industry is fixated on the GPU shortage, but the proliferation of AI agents will create massive demand for general-purpose compute, leading to a CPU bottleneck. As millions of agents perform tasks, the availability of CPU cores—not just specialized processors—will become the primary constraint on growth for compute providers.

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While GPUs dominate AI hardware discussions, the proliferation of AI agents is causing a significant, often overlooked, CPU shortage. Agents rely on CPUs for web queries, data processing, and other tasks needed to feed GPUs, straining existing infrastructure and driving new demand for companies like Arm and Intel.

The focus in AI has evolved from rapid software capability gains to the physical constraints of its adoption. The demand for compute power is expected to significantly outstrip supply, making infrastructure—not algorithms—the defining bottleneck for future growth.

While GPUs train models, CPUs are essential for two key workloads: running reinforcement learning environments and executing the code generated by AI. This has created a massive, often overlooked demand spike, making CPUs a critical, sold-out component in the AI infrastructure stack and a hidden bottleneck.

The focus on GPUs for AI overlooks a critical bottleneck: CPU shortages. AI agents require massive CPU power for non-GPU tasks like web queries and data prep. This demand is straining existing infrastructure and creating new market opportunities for CPU makers like ARM.

While GPUs are key for model training, the next AI wave of autonomous agents relies more on CPUs. The task of controlling and orchestrating multiple agents and tool calls is fundamentally a CPU-based process. This is creating a new hardware bottleneck and shifting focus to CPU manufacturers.

The current AI boom focuses on GPUs for "thinking" (Gen AI). The next phase, "Agentic AI" for "doing," will rely heavily on CPUs for task orchestration and memory for context, creating new investment opportunities in this previously overshadowed hardware.

The focus on GPUs for AI overlooks a critical bottleneck: a growing CPU shortage. AI agents rely heavily on CPUs for orchestration tasks like tool calls, database queries, and web searches. This hidden demand is causing hyperscalers to lock in multi-year CPU supply contracts.

SiFive's Krste Asanović highlights that while GPUs are the focus of the AI boom, the CPUs that feed them data are a critical bottleneck. As AI accelerates tasks like coding by 30x, the corresponding CPU-bound tasks like compiling also need a 30x speedup, driving demand for specialized CPU IP.

After the current memory crunch, the next AI infrastructure bottleneck will be CPU and networking. The complex orchestration required for emerging agentic AI systems will strain these resources, a trend already visible in companies like Fastly seeing demand spikes just for workload orchestration.

While GPUs get the headlines, AI expert Tae Kim warns of a major coming CPU shortage. The complex orchestration, tool calls, and database queries required by AI agents are creating huge demand for CPU cores, a trend confirmed by major chipmakers and hyperscalers.