Author: Site Editor Publish Time: 04-21-2026 Origin: Site
You know how it is, folks – the US and Iran couldn’t hash out a truce over some petty bullshit again. So the Hogwarts Strait just slapped on two new toll booths. Now they’re both mumbling “ceasefire,” but all that nuclear war fog and World War 3 drama? Vanished into thin air. The stock market? Don’t even start – those lush green bucks flipped to bloody red numbers overnight. And our future? I figure it’s going up in flames right alongside those missiles and fighter jets screaming by. Humanity’s done for, that’s all there is to it.
Tehran will never cede control of Strait of Hormuz, senior Iranian politician tells BBC
But while the suits in Washington and Tehran play their high-stakes game of chicken, there’s another quiet apocalypse ripping through the world’s factories: the industrial automation giants have unleashed a full-blown price hike tsunami. ABB, Schneider Electric, Eaton, Omron, and the rest are jacking up tags on everything from PLCs and servo drives to contactors and sensors. It’s not some minor tweak – we’re talking 4% to 200%+ jumps hitting in early 2026, and it’s slamming manufacturers from Shenzhen to Stuttgart. If your production line runs on robots, controllers, or power gear, buckle up. This isn’t a blip. It’s the new normal.
March 31, 2026, looked like any other day until ABB, Eaton, Schneider Electric, and China’s own Inovance fired off price adjustment notices that lit up the sector. ABB slapped a 4% hike across its imported smart power and building products, effective April 1. Eaton went harder: MCCB molded-case breakers up 8%, imported xStart contactors up 15%, and xStartC models a brutal 25%. Schneider pulled a sneaky “delist + inflate” combo – Lexium 16 servo series gets delisted after September 30 with a 10% pre-exit bump, Lexium 28 up 5%, and flexible conveyance systems? Standard movers up 130%, HD versions a jaw-dropping 200%.
Omron kicked it off earlier in February via its official channels, hiking PLCs, motion controllers, robots, relays, sensors, switches, and temp controllers across the board – 5% to 50% with zero grace period. This isn’t isolated. Siemens, Mitsubishi, Delta, Rockwell, plus chip players like ADI, Infineon, and SMIC have all joined the party since late 2025. Hikes land between 5-30% on average. The entire automation supply chain is bleeding red ink – and passing it straight to you.
Every notice screams “raw material costs.” But the numbers don’t lie – they’re savage.
Precious metals and commodities are on fire. Silver exploded over 140% in 2025, blasting past $80/oz on NYMEX. Copper hit $13,300/ton with massive deficits. Gold? Up 70%+ in its biggest annual run since 1979. These aren’t niche metals – silver paste is over 50% of multilayer inductor and bead costs, copper wires motors and cables, gold plates high-end chips. Omron flat-out called out “sustained high prices for silver, copper, and conductive materials” in its notice.
Memory chips are the precision strike. DDR4/DDR5 server memory went nuclear – 256GB DDR5 sticks over $40k, DDR4 modules up 1,800% in 2025. PLCs got hit hardest because modern ones now juggle control plus data caching and OPC UA networking. Mid-range units like Inovance’s AC700/AC800 series jumped ~20%. Industrial-grade memory is locked, validated, and hard to swap – so those 40-50% spot spikes shred margins.
Logistics and supply chains are still bleeding from geopolitics. ABB’s notice nailed it: Red Sea reroutes around the Cape add 30-40% distance, Russia-Ukraine blocks European land routes, sea freight up 150-200%. Insurance, fuel, delays – it all compounds. Tariffs and trade wars just poured gasoline on it.
Wafer foundry capacity is choking. 8-inch utilization is heading to 85-90% in 2026. TSMC is hiking advanced nodes (5nm to 2nm) 3-5% yearly for four years straight – 2nm wafers could hit $30k each. SMIC and others followed with ~10% bumps. The upstream pain flows straight downstream.
Here’s the twist: some foreign players are using hikes and delistings to quietly reshape their China exposure. Schneider’s Lexium 16 exit and Siemens S7-300 legacy bumps (10-35%) scream “strategic pivot.” Long-tail spare parts for old lines still need support – so prices climb to cover it.
That opens the door for domestic champs. Inovance’s servo share jumped from 6.2% in 2019 to 16.3% by 2021; small PLCs from 2.9% to 6.9%. Local firms are hiking too (3-8% range), but from a lower base, so their value proposition still crushes. Yet they’re not immune – Inovance admitted in past notices it ate costs during COVID to keep deliveries alive, but the pressure finally broke through.
After years of brutal price wars that crushed margins, 2025’s demand rebound gave everyone the excuse to “reset value.” Higher prices = healthier profits = sustainable R&D instead of death-by-discount.
These aren’t random hikes. Giants like Omron sit at the nervous system of factories – raise their prices and every downstream line feels it. But the real move? Ditch low-end volume wars. Use cost pressure as cover to pivot to premium, high-margin tech.
AI servers and EVs are sucking the supply chain dry. One EV chews 80-100 kg of copper (vs. 25 kg for ICE). AI data centers are forecast to explode power demand 165% by 2030. Every hyperscaler grabbing DRAM/NAND and power silicon leaves less for industrial gear.
Even dealer networks are getting restructured – fewer fat margins for middlemen, more direct value capture by manufacturers.
Analysts see storage chips staying tight through 2026, with server DRAM/NAND demand up 40-50%. Tariffs, metals volatility, and AI “irresistible force” mean sustained pressure. Downstream factories can’t fully pass costs to end customers – they’ll optimize, localize, and hunt alternatives.
Bottom line? The 2026 automation price storm isn’t just about spreadsheets and spreadsheets. It’s the visible crack where geopolitics, AI hunger, and decades of under-investment finally collide. Factories worldwide are about to pay the real price of keeping the machines running in a world that’s anything but stable. Buckle up – the robots aren’t getting cheaper anytime soon.