The "end user" lead time is not related to the manufacturing process. It is virtually certain that chips in general are made in batches and each batch goes on the shelf. Hence when you look at date codes you find these in discrete "quanta" with many missing codes.
Lead time is quoted to manipulate demand and to create fear. The typical cycle is that prices generally keep falling, slowly. At a certain point the business decides it has gone too far and the reps are instructed to spread the feared "a"-word: allocation. Then buyers go crazy and start placing orders. You get shortages and 26 week lead times. 6 months later there is a bloodbath and things are good for another year or two.
And it swaps around. One year you get tantalum caps. Another year you would get RAM chips...
Since I started in my own business in 1978 I've seen this many times. This time it lasted 3 years due to covid having distorted everything. But the bloodbath will be bigger, too, and much more satisfying to those who actually create wealth (manufacturers) than those who just skim a percentage off the top (resellers)
The famous LM2936 is now back to pre-bubble pricing. Maxim is still trying to hang in there with totally crazy pricing. Just had a conversation with their "chatline" and they are still not communicating in a normal human way; it is still using support tickets on their website <bang head > which I could not log into despite assistance
They don't seem to know that a MAX489 has a drop in replacement at 1/3 of the price.