TSMC first-quarter profit rises 58%, beats estimates as AI demand holds steady

TSMC Profit Increase

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.

ASML raises 2026 guidance as AI chips demand remains strong

ASML guidance for 2026 raised

ASML’s decision to raise its 2026 guidance underlines a simple reality: demand for advanced AI chips is not easing, and the world’s most important semiconductor equipment maker remains at the centre of that surge.

The company signalled stronger-than-expected orders for its extreme ultraviolet (EUV) and next‑generation high‑NA systems, driven by chipmakers racing to expand capacity for AI accelerators, data‑centre processors and cutting‑edge logic nodes.

Bottleneck

The upgrade matters because ASML sits at the bottleneck of global chip production. Only a handful of firms can even buy its most advanced machines, and those firms – chiefly TSMC, Intel and Samsung – are all scaling up AI‑focused manufacturing.

Their capital expenditure plans have held firm despite broader economic uncertainty, suggesting that AI infrastructure is becoming a non‑discretionary investment rather than a cyclical one.

Two forces are driving the momentum. First, hyperscalers continue to pour billions into AI clusters, creating sustained demand for the most advanced lithography tools.

Long-term lock in

Second, geopolitical pressure to secure domestic chip capacity is pushing governments and manufacturers to lock in long‑term equipment orders.

ASML’s raised outlook reinforces the sense that the semiconductor cycle is diverging: consumer electronics remain patchy, but AI‑related manufacturing is entering a multi‑year expansion.

The key question now is whether supply can keep pace with the ambition of its customers.

TSMC’s 35% Revenue Surge Signals the New Centre of Gravity in Global Tech

TSMC revenue surges

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) has delivered a striking 35% year‑on‑year jump in first‑quarter revenue, reaching a record NT$1.13 trillion.

The result underscores just how dramatically the centre of gravity in global technology has shifted towards advanced semiconductor manufacturing, with artificial intelligence now the defining force behind industry growth.

Relentless AI demand

TSMC’s performance is being powered by relentless demand for cutting‑edge chips from major clients such as Apple and Nvidia.

As AI infrastructure spending accelerates worldwide, the company has become one of the few manufacturers capable of producing the most sophisticated processors required for training and running large‑scale models.

March alone saw revenue climb more than 45%, highlighting the strength and urgency of this demand.

Ambition

Analysts suggest TSMC is on track to exceed its already ambitious 30% annual growth target, helped not only by volume but also by reported price increases for its most advanced nodes.

Even as smartphone and PC markets remain uneven, AI‑related orders are more than compensating.

With more companies—from hyperscalers to AI start‑ups—designing their own chips, TSMC’s strategic position looks increasingly unassailable.

Upcoming earnings and ASML’s results next week will offer further clues about the momentum behind the semiconductor sector’s AI‑driven boom.

ASML and AMD shares climb on positive U.S. geopolitical news

U.S. and China microchips

ASML

Shares in the Dutch company ASML soared by around 10% on Wednesday 31st July 2024 following a Reuters report indicating that the firm might be exempt from the broadened export restrictions on chipmaking equipment to China.

Additionally, it was also reported that the U.S. is contemplating an expansion of the foreign direct product rule.

U.S. chip export restrictions to China could exclude allies such as the Netherlands, Japan, South Korea, Israel, Taiwan, Singapore and Malaysia. Taiwan is the home of TSMC, the world’s biggest chip manufacturing plant.

AMD

Shares of global semiconductor companies surged on Wednesday 31st July 2024, lifted by positive earnings within the sector and reports suggesting potential easing of U.S. export restrictions to China.

AMD emerged as one of the standout performers, with its shares climbing over 9% in U.S. premarket trading following a robust second-quarter earnings report.