This is what I do every single day, sadly.
In that case, I commend you for your calmness in the face of adversity. You're taking this much better than anyone else I know, myself included.
The speculators can't be blamed for the shortage. They are a minor factor, if that. If they didn't buy them up, someone would have been hoarding them anyway, and they wouldn't be available at any price.
Imagine a couple of different companies, both of whom make $100k/yr from an electronic device that they manufacture.
'A' makes a product for $100, sells it for $200, qty 1000 pcs/yr. It's a consumer product, not particularly critical.
'B' makes a product for $100, sells it for $1100, qty 100 pcs/yr. This product contains a lot of software and must be calibrated, reliable and traceable.
Now imagine that a key component used in both products is in limited supply, say only 500 pcs are available to purchase.
In the absence of an opportunistic reseller stepping in and snapping them all up, there are a couple of possible outcomes. The 'worst' case (in terms of the ability of the electronics industry as a whole to continue generating revenue and keeping their staff and customers happy) is for 'A' to buy them all. They make $50k, and 'B' makes nothing.
A better case is 'B' buys 100, and 'A' gets the other 400. 'B' can now make the full $100k, and 'A' still makes $40k.
Better yet for 'A' would be to buy all 500, sell 100 to 'B' at a hefty mark-up, and use the rest themselves - but that may be very difficult to do, and not worth it, unless they're already also a reputable component distributor which is unlikely.
Add the scalper, and it all goes horribly wrong.
'A' can't afford to pay over the odds for the part at all, and certainly not the 10x mark-up we've been routinely seeing. They're literally better off burning down their factory and using the land to grow potatoes - which is especially unfortunate given that they'd have been able to buy and use most of the available stock whether they get in before or after 'B' has bought everything they need.
'B' can afford more or less any price, but only if the parts are guaranteed new, genuine, original and as-described - which, of course, they now aren't.
There might be an argument for rationing quantities to ensure that everyone gets a reaonable chance of at least being able to buy some quantity of components. This is definitely happening right now too.