Samsung secures Tesla, NVIDIA orders as TSMC faces AI-driven demand surge with 72% market dominance
TSMC, the world’s largest foundry (semiconductor contract manufacturer), has seen a surge in orders from big tech companies, with its cutting-edge process capacity for 2028 effectively sold out. This has led to analysis suggesting that Samsung Electronics’ foundry business, as an alternative to TSMC, could gain opportunities.
According to Taiwan’s Economic Daily and other sources on the 20th, TSMC’s 2-nanometer (1 nanometer is one-billionth of a meter) process has been fully booked until 2028 due to overwhelming demand from major tech firms like NVIDIA, AMD, Qualcomm, and Apple, which are prioritizing TSMC’s 2-nanometer process for their latest AI chips. While TSMC is aggressively expanding production lines worldwide, including in the U.S. and Japan, it remains insufficient to meet AI-driven demand. Even TSMC’s fourth Arizona plant, slated for mass production in 2030 and set to specialize in sub-2-nanometer processes, has already been fully reserved before construction began. Demand is expected to surge further as companies like Google and Amazon develop custom chips alongside existing AI chipmakers such as NVIDIA and AMD.
TSMC’s production limitations are seen as an opportunity for Samsung Electronics. As of the fourth quarter of last year, TSMC held a dominant 72% global foundry market share, while Samsung Electronics trailed at 7%. However, only TSMC and Samsung Electronics can produce cutting-edge 2-nanometer processes. This positions Samsung as a viable alternative for big tech. Recently, Samsung has secured consecutive orders from Tesla and NVIDIA. It also plans to target big tech clients through its factory under construction in Taylor, Texas. Consequently, there are forecasts that Samsung’s foundry division, which has faced years of losses, could turn profitable this year.
A key challenge for Samsung is achieving stable yield rates (proportion of good products) in advanced processes to build customer trust. A source from the semiconductor industry stated, “To move beyond being an alternative and become a primary choice by capitalizing on TSMC’s weaknesses, Samsung will ultimately need to prove its technological capabilities.”
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TSMC, the world’s largest foundry (semiconductor contract manufacturer), has seen a surge in orders from big tech companies, with its cutting-edge process capacity for 2028 effectively sold out. This has led to analysis suggesting that Samsung Electronics’ foundry business, as an alternative to TSMC, could gain opportunities.
According to Taiwan’s Economic Daily and other sources on the 20th, TSMC’s 2-nanometer (1 nanometer is one-billionth of a meter) process has been fully booked until 2028 due to overwhelming demand from major tech firms like NVIDIA, AMD, Qualcomm, and Apple, which are prioritizing TSMC’s 2-nanometer process for their latest AI chips. While TSMC is aggressively expanding production lines worldwide, including in the U.S. and Japan, it remains insufficient to meet AI-driven demand. Even TSMC’s fourth Arizona plant, slated for mass production in 2030 and set to specialize in sub-2-nanometer processes, has already been fully reserved before construction began. Demand is expected to surge further as companies like Google and Amazon develop custom chips alongside existing AI chipmakers such as NVIDIA and AMD.
TSMC’s production limitations are seen as an opportunity for Samsung Electronics. As of the fourth quarter of last year, TSMC held a dominant 72% global foundry market share, while Samsung Electronics trailed at 7%. However, only TSMC and Samsung Electronics can produce cutting-edge 2-nanometer processes. This positions Samsung as a viable alternative for big tech. Recently, Samsung has secured consecutive orders from Tesla and NVIDIA. It also plans to target big tech clients through its factory under construction in Taylor, Texas. Consequently, there are forecasts that Samsung’s foundry division, which has faced years of losses, could turn profitable this year.
A key challenge for Samsung is achieving stable yield rates (proportion of good products) in advanced processes to build customer trust. A source from the semiconductor industry stated, “To move beyond being an alternative and become a primary choice by capitalizing on TSMC’s weaknesses, Samsung will ultimately need to prove its technological capabilities.”
TSMC's 2-Nanometer Sold Out; Samsung Foundry Gains
TSMCs 2-Nanometer Sold Out; Samsung Foundry Gains Samsung secures Tesla, NVIDIA orders as TSMC faces AI-driven demand surge with 72% market dominance
