TSMC’s 58% surge in first‑quarter profit is the clearest sign yet that the AI boom is no longer a cyclical uplift but a structural shift reshaping the entire semiconductor industry.
The Taiwanese chipmaker delivered record earnings, comfortably beating analyst expectations, as demand for advanced processors continued to outstrip supply.
Net income reportedly reached NT$572.48 billion, marking a fourth consecutive quarter of record profits, while revenue climbed to NT$1.134 trillion, driven overwhelmingly by high‑performance computing and AI‑related orders.
What stands out is the composition of that growth. Roughly three‑quarters of TSMC’s wafer revenue reportedly came from advanced nodes, with 3‑nanometre chips alone accounting for a quarter of shipments.
Nvidia
Nvidia has now overtaken Apple as TSMC’s largest customer, underscoring how AI accelerators have become the industry’s most valuable real estate.
TSMC’s executives described AI demand as “extremely robust”, with customers signalling multi‑year achievements rather than the usual stop‑start ordering cycle.
The company also moved to reassure investors over supply‑chain risks linked to the Middle East conflict, saying it has diversified sources for critical gases such as helium and hydrogen.
With capacity running hot and capital spending set to hit the top end of guidance, TSMC is positioning itself as the indispensable chipmaker in the AI era.


