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The US Supreme Court has struck down the bulk of import tariffs introduced during the Trump administration, a decision that should reduce one layer of added cost on computer components. While this won't instantly fix supply problems—RAM shortages and production bottlenecks are still in play—the ruling removes a legal drag on prices and cross-border hardware trade.
- What happened: The court invalidated most of the tariffs that had been applied to a wide range of imported goods, including many PC parts and electronics.
- Immediate impact: Importers and manufacturers could see lower landed costs, which may eventually filter down to retail prices for GPUs, CPUs, motherboards and other components.
- Not a silver bullet: Component scarcity—especially in memory markets—continues to limit availability and keep some prices elevated despite tariff relief.
- Timing and pass-through: Any consumer savings depend on how quickly suppliers, distributors and retailers adjust pricing; benefits may appear over months rather than overnight.