KEY POINTS
  • Citing supply chain challenges due to Russia's war in Ukraine, Gupta said the two countries capture a large part of the market share, with Russia and Ukraine being the largest exporters of krypton — a gas used in the chip production.
  • Semiconductors are used in everything, from mobile phones and computers to cars as well as home appliances.
  • Rising inflation and expectations of more monetary tightening are already causing a "consumer-led slowdown," said Gupta.
The global chip shortage will continue, and consumers will have to pay for it, an analyst from the International Data Corporation said.

The global chip shortage is not over yet, and the war in Ukraine continues to put a strain on supplies of important parts needed, one analyst told CNBC Tuesday.

"The semiconductor supply is not going to increase immediately. There are a lot of raw materials, gases, which were required for production of those semiconductors," Vinay Gupta, the International Data Corporation's Asia-Pacific research director told CNBC's "Squawk Box Asia."