LIN

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Linde plc Ordinary Share logo

Linde plc Ordinary Share

LIN🇺🇸
0.00664444
1.59%

As of May 21, 2026 at 10:03 UTC

Chart

About Linde plc Ordinary Share

Sector
INDUSTRIAL INORGANIC CHEMICALS
Website
linde.com
Headquarters
WOKING SURREY
Employees (FY)
65,034
Listed
1992-06-01
FIGI
-

Linde is the largest industrial gas supplier in the world, with operations in over 100 countries. The firm's main products are atmospheric gases (including oxygen, nitrogen, and argon) and process gases (including hydrogen, carbon dioxide, and helium), as well as equipment used in industrial gas production. Linde serves a wide variety of end markets, including chemicals, manufacturing, healthcare, and steelmaking. Linde generated approximately $34 billion in revenue in 2025.

Market Statistics

Market Cap₿ 3.02M
24h Volume₿ 4.29K
24h Change1.59%
7d Change5.29%
1m Change2.52%

Trading Metrics

Trading Volume (BTC)₿ 4.29K

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Latest News

5 articles
The Motley Fool favicon
The Motley Foolwww.fool.com

An ongoing conflict in Iran has disrupted global helium supplies, which are critical for semiconductor manufacturing and AI chip production. Qatar, the world's second-largest helium producer, has halted operations at its major facility with repairs potentially taking five years. Helium prices have doubled since the war began, and supplies could take years to normalize. Asian chipmakers like Samsung and SK Hynix, which import over 60% of their helium from Qatar, face significant challenges, though they have secured alternative suppliers from U.S. firms.

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A helium shortage triggered by geopolitical tensions in the Strait of Hormuz has exposed a critical vulnerability in the AI chip supply chain. Qatar's Ras Laffan facility, which produces 30% of global helium, has been offline since March 2026. Helium is irreplaceable for semiconductor manufacturing processes like EUV lithography and wafer cooling. While recycling, tool redesign, and supply diversification efforts are underway, they offer only incremental improvements. South Korea's Samsung and SK Hynix face the most direct production risk, potentially creating downstream bottlenecks for Nvidia's Blackwell GPU shipments.

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The Motley Foolwww.fool.com

The Iran conflict has disrupted global helium supply and exposed vulnerabilities in semiconductor supply chains, but the AI supercycle remains intact due to unstoppable hyperscaler demand. The geopolitical shock is creating permanent structural advantages for domestic chip manufacturers and industrial gas suppliers with resilient supply networks.

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GlobeNewswire Inc.www.globenewswire.com

The U.S. Power-to-X market is expected to grow from USD 66.70 million in 2025 to USD 185.92 million by 2035 at a 10.80% CAGR, driven by favorable government policies, green hydrogen investments, and renewable energy production. The global P2X market is valued at USD 388.17 million in 2025 and projected to reach USD 1,121.48 million by 2035 at 11.27% CAGR, with Power-to-H₂ dominating at 42% market share and Power-to-NH₃ emerging as the fastest-growing segment.

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The Motley Foolwww.fool.com

Qatar's Ras Laffan facility, which produces 30-38% of the world's helium supply, was damaged by Iranian strikes and declared force majeure. With repairs expected to take 3-5 years and helium being irreplaceable in semiconductor manufacturing, chipmakers face severe production constraints. While companies like Micron, Seagate, and Western Digital face supply challenges, ExxonMobil and Linde stand to benefit from higher helium prices and distribution control.

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