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TSMC first-quarter profit likely soared but Trump policies cloud outlook

Daniel Nenni

Admin
Staff member
cc2351b7f1d9c0ccd637b6a9e567d8d6

FILE PHOTO: A logo of chip giant TSMC can be seen in Tainan, · Reuters

By Ben Blanchard and Wen-Yee Lee

TAIPEI (Reuters) - TSMC, the main global producer of advanced chips used in artificial intelligence applications, is set to report a 54% leap in first-quarter profit on Thursday, though is also likely to flag risk from trade policies of U.S. President Donald Trump.

The world's largest contract chipmaker, whose customers include Apple and Nvidia, has benefited from a trend towards implementing AI features in online products. But the firm faces headwind not just from Trump's import tariffs but also his criticism of Taiwan's dominance of the chip industry.

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co is set to report net profit of T$347.8 billion ($10.74 billion) for the three months through March 31, according to a LSEG SmartEstimate drawn from 17 analysts. SmartEstimates give greater weighting to forecasts from analysts who are more consistently accurate.

That estimate compares to the 2024 first-quarter net profit of T$225.5 billion.

TSMC has been spending billions of dollars on new factories overseas, though it said most manufacturing will remain in Taiwan. It announced a $100 billion investment with Trump at the White House last month, on top of $65 billion pledged for three plants in the U.S. state of Arizona.
Trump has both praised Taiwan's chip industry and threatened it with tariffs.

Last week, he said he had told TSMC it would have to pay a tax of up to 100% if it did not build factories in the U.S. On Sunday, he said the exclusion of smartphones and computers from tariffs on China will be short-lived, pledging a national security trade investigation into the semiconductor sector.

"The company will likely double down on overseas fab investments to mitigate the geopolitical risk, despite two to three percentage points of gross margin dilution for the next five years," said analyst Sravan Kundojjala.

"This will likely ensure TSMC gets favourable treatment from the U.S. government and minimise the tariff burden."

Apple's iPhones, given they are mainly made in China, is another risk area for TSMC, said Cathay Futures analyst Venson Tsai.
"If the iPhone can't be sold, then TSMC's chips can't either," Tsai said.

TSMC last week reported a surge in first-quarter revenue in Taiwan dollars, slightly ahead of market expectations. The company gives its revenue outlook in U.S. dollars on its quarterly earnings call, scheduled for 0600 GMT on Thursday.

It will also update its outlook for the current quarter as well as for the full year, including planned capital expenditure for production increases.

On its last earnings call in January, TSMC said it expected capital spending this year to be $38 billion to $42 billion, an increase of as much as 41% from last year.

 
It certainly will be a good quarter. N3 is in full production and has 99% market share. Next year N3 revenue will be even bigger. The thing I am looking closely at is the relationship between TSMC and the White House. I would not bet against CC Wei, absolutely.
 
cc2351b7f1d9c0ccd637b6a9e567d8d6

FILE PHOTO: A logo of chip giant TSMC can be seen in Tainan, · Reuters

By Ben Blanchard and Wen-Yee Lee

TAIPEI (Reuters) - TSMC, the main global producer of advanced chips used in artificial intelligence applications, is set to report a 54% leap in first-quarter profit on Thursday, though is also likely to flag risk from trade policies of U.S. President Donald Trump.

The world's largest contract chipmaker, whose customers include Apple and Nvidia, has benefited from a trend towards implementing AI features in online products. But the firm faces headwind not just from Trump's import tariffs but also his criticism of Taiwan's dominance of the chip industry.

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co is set to report net profit of T$347.8 billion ($10.74 billion) for the three months through March 31, according to a LSEG SmartEstimate drawn from 17 analysts. SmartEstimates give greater weighting to forecasts from analysts who are more consistently accurate.

That estimate compares to the 2024 first-quarter net profit of T$225.5 billion.

TSMC has been spending billions of dollars on new factories overseas, though it said most manufacturing will remain in Taiwan. It announced a $100 billion investment with Trump at the White House last month, on top of $65 billion pledged for three plants in the U.S. state of Arizona.
Trump has both praised Taiwan's chip industry and threatened it with tariffs.

Last week, he said he had told TSMC it would have to pay a tax of up to 100% if it did not build factories in the U.S. On Sunday, he said the exclusion of smartphones and computers from tariffs on China will be short-lived, pledging a national security trade investigation into the semiconductor sector.

"The company will likely double down on overseas fab investments to mitigate the geopolitical risk, despite two to three percentage points of gross margin dilution for the next five years," said analyst Sravan Kundojjala.

"This will likely ensure TSMC gets favourable treatment from the U.S. government and minimise the tariff burden."

Apple's iPhones, given they are mainly made in China, is another risk area for TSMC, said Cathay Futures analyst Venson Tsai.
"If the iPhone can't be sold, then TSMC's chips can't either," Tsai said.

TSMC last week reported a surge in first-quarter revenue in Taiwan dollars, slightly ahead of market expectations. The company gives its revenue outlook in U.S. dollars on its quarterly earnings call, scheduled for 0600 GMT on Thursday.

It will also update its outlook for the current quarter as well as for the full year, including planned capital expenditure for production increases.

On its last earnings call in January, TSMC said it expected capital spending this year to be $38 billion to $42 billion, an increase of as much as 41% from last year.

I guess having Trump say you're the biggest doesn't matter, dumping $100 billion in the U.S. doesn't matter, holding a press conference with Trump so Trump can feel big doesn't matter. Who the hell is going to trust the U.S. for any business deal, even after Trump is gone? Who the hell can say the next U.S. president won't just ignore any deal that's been made?

 
It certainly will be a good quarter. N3 is in full production and has 99% market share. Next year N3 revenue will be even bigger. The thing I am looking closely at is the relationship between TSMC and the White House. I would not bet against CC Wei, absolutely.

CC Wei cannot be outsmarted by something SO well telegraphed as "Taiwan stole our chip business" and "TSMC could face 100% tariffs"
 
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Include Jensen Huang in that mix:

Nvidia to mass produce AI supercomputers in Texas as part of $500 billion U.S. push​


Key Points
  • - Nvidia announced a push to produce NVIDIA AI supercomputers entirely in the U.S. for the first time.
  • - Its Blackwell AI chips have started production in Phoenix at Taiwan Semiconductor plants.
  • - The news comes after President Donald Trump imposed high reciprocal tariffs on a long list of countries.

 
TSM has been blessed with top end management from the founders to today, very few companies have managed to pull off such a long run of great management. Hats off to Morris Chang who skills ranged from the technical to business to politics, a very rare combination. TSM is one of my earliest investments and Home Depot, both well run companies. I even persuaded my mother to invest in both early.
 
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