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Japanese Chipmaker Rapidus Sets Sight on Broadcom to Emulate Taiwan Semiconductor's Market Dominance

Daniel Nenni

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Japanese Chipmaker Rapidus Sets Sight on Broadcom to Emulate Taiwan Semiconductor's Market Dominance

Japanese Chipmaker Rapidus Sets Sight on Broadcom to Emulate Taiwan Semiconductor's Market Dominance

Broadcom Inc (NASDAQ:AVGO) could soon avail 2-nm chip samples from Japan’s Rapidus starting in June.

The development marks the Japanese chipmaker’s efforts to emulate key contract chipmaker Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co’s (NYSE:TSM) strategy, which catapulted it into the trillion-dollar market cap, Nikkei Asia reports.


Prior reports indicated that International Business Machines Corp (NYSE:IBM) and Rapidus are co-developing IBM’s 2-nm node technology for implementation at Rapidus’ fab in Japan.

Rapidus is backed by Toyota Motor Corp (NYSE:TM), Sony Group Corp (NYSE:SONY), and six other Japanese companies

Lately, countries including the U.S., Europe, Japan, and others have focused on consolidating their semiconductor base to reduce dependence on China after the 2020 pandemic disrupted global supply chains, triggering a severe semiconductor chip crisis.

Over the past three years, Japan committed ~¥4 trillion ($26 billion) to boost its semiconductor sectors. Up to ¥920 billion of the subsidy went to Rapidus to help produce advanced chips.

Taiwan Semiconductor already has a 2-nm wafer plant in Baoshan, Hsinchu County, scheduled for mass production in 2025.

Taiwan Semiconductor Chair C.C. Wei had highlighted interest in its 2-nm process, which prompted it to ramp up production capacity.

Taiwan Semiconductor’s additional facilities in Kaohsiung will likely start 2-nm production in 2026. It is constructing two advanced fabs in Arizona, with plans to commercialize chips using 3-nm and 2-nm processes in 2028.

Meanwhile, Broadcom, which emerged as the most valuable chip company after Nvidia Corp (NASDAQ:NVDA), is set for a $150 billion AI opportunity per JPMorgan’s Harlan Sur.

This opportunity is backed by its 2-nm and 3-nm technology and strong partnerships with Alphabet Inc (NASDAQ:GOOG) (NASDAQ:GOOGL) Google, and Meta Platforms Inc (NASDAQ:META). Broadcom bagged multi-generational AI ASIC programs with OpenAI and a fifth major customer, all set for a 2026 ramp-up.


 
I can easily imagine Hock Tan wanting a leading edge fab source that is dependent on Broadcom's business, and where his influence will be much greater than with TSMC or Intel.
 
Broadcom is using TSMC N2 for the big runners. The NOT TSMC business is between Intel 18A and Rapidus, maybe both to reduce risk. This is really good news! Still no sign of Samsung 2nm outside of Korean media. :ROFLMAO:

From what I am told the "monopoly" word is being used by the 2nd tier foundry sales people to generate interest. Competition is what drives the semiconductor industry, absolutely.
 
Broadcom is using TSMC N2 for the big runners. The NOT TSMC business is between Intel 18A and Rapidus, maybe both to reduce risk. this is really good news! Still no sign of Samsung 2nm outside of Korean media. :ROFLMAO:

From what I am told the "monopoly" word is being used by the 2nd tier foundry sales people to generate interest. Competition is what drives the semiconductor industry, absolutely.
Pretty sure 2nd option is Intel rn and you don't have 3rd option rapidus is based on IBM IP I don't have high hopes
 
Rapidus will 100% fail in my opinion. They have neither the scale, experience, nor technology to operate a successful business at the leading edge. It’s an absurd venture in all manners
 
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