Samsung Electronics, South Korea’s leading chipmaker, is struggling to keep up with Taiwan’s TSMC, the world’s largest semiconductor contract manufacturing (foundry) company, in the global chip foundry market.
Despite risks like geopolitical tensions and high capital expenses, TSMC's long-term vision and market leadership make it a compelling investment. Read more here.
Taiwan's government has been swift to respond to the talk of huge tariffs by the recently inaugurated 47th president of the United States.
Duties would raise prices for a range of consumer goods, while scaring off further Taiwanese investments in the U.S., experts warn.
The tariffs would ensnare cutting-edge smartphone and PC-related chips for Apple, AMD and Nvidia if enacted. But Trump is betting his plan will bring more chip production to the US.
TSMC's AI demand and robust financial health highlight its growth. Find out why TSM stock, along with DeepSeek’s contributions, is poised for future success.
Taiwan's government will soon look at whether it needs to help its domestic industry over threats by U.S. President Donald Trump to put tariffs on semiconductors, Premier Cho Jung-tai said on Wednesday.
In TSMC’s case, this is in the form of a $12 billion semiconductor factor in Arizona, supporting by a $6.6 billion CHIPS Act subsidy won last year. Since then, the semiconductor giant has pledged to build two more facilities in Arizona, bringing the company’s total planned investment to around $65 billion.
Intel's next-gen desktop CPU Nova Lake won't be pure 18A, it seems... but at least it'll have some 18A compute.
KLA's outlook aligns with industry projections, foreseeing a 5% year-over-year growth in the WFE market, similar to the forecasts by Lam Research Corporation (NASDAQ:LRCX). Positioned to outperform these industry expectations,
TSMC suspends southern factory operations due to earthquakes in Taiwan TSMC pauses select operations in southern Taiwan following significant seismic activity