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Texas Instruments plans $60 billion US investment under Trump push

Daniel Nenni

Admin
Staff member
Texas Instruments plans $60 billion US investment under Trump push

A Texas Instruments Office is shown in San Diego, California, U.S., April 24, 2018. REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo
18 Jun 2025 09:13PM(Updated: 19 Jun 2025 01:43AM)


WASHINGTON :Texas Instruments said on Wednesday it will spend more than $60 billion to expand its U.S. manufacturing footprint, the latest chipmaker to ramp up domestic production amid pressure from the Trump administration to reshore the semiconductor supply chain.

In December, the Biden administration finalized a $1.61 billion government subsidy for Texas Instruments to support construction of three new facilities after the company announced plans to invest at least $18 billion under the $52.7 billion CHIPS and Science bill.

The company said on Wednesday the $60 billion will be used to build or expand seven chip-making facilities at three sites in Texas and Utah, including two new facilities in Sherman, Texas, and will create 60,000 jobs, calling it the "largest investment in foundational semiconductor manufacturing in U.S. history."

In August 2024, the company said it could build seven chip-building facilities and spend up to $40 billion on its Sherman, Texas operations and $21 billion on Utah and other Texas plants.

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Texas Instruments has been building facilities in Texas and one in Utah as part of efforts to boost in-house manufacturing and stave off rising competition from Chinese analog chipmakers.

The company did not give a precise timeline for the investment, which includes up to $46 billion in Texas and about $15 billion in Utah. Texas Instruments said its long-term CapEx plan is unchanged.

Unlike AI chip firms Nvidia and AMD, TI makes analog or foundational chips used in everyday devices such as smartphones, cars and medical devices, giving it a large client base that includes Apple, SpaceX and Ford Motor.

The spending plan follows similar announcements from others in the semiconductor industry, including Micron, which said last week that it will expand its U.S. investment by $30 billion, taking its planned spending to $200 billion.

Analysts have said they see the spending plans as overtures to U.S. President Donald Trump, who has repeatedly threatened to kill the $52.7 billion 2022 CHIPS and Science Act and warned of potential new tariffs on semiconductor imports.

Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said on Wednesday the Texas Instruments investment will boost "foundational semiconductors that go into the electronics that people use every day. Our partnership with TI will support U.S. chip manufacturing for decades to come."

Like other companies unveiling such spending commitments, TI's announcement includes funds already allocated to facilities that are either under construction or ramping up.

 
Texas Instruments plans $60 billion US investment under Trump push

A Texas Instruments Office is shown in San Diego, California, U.S., April 24, 2018. REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo
18 Jun 2025 09:13PM(Updated: 19 Jun 2025 01:43AM)


WASHINGTON :Texas Instruments said on Wednesday it will spend more than $60 billion to expand its U.S. manufacturing footprint, the latest chipmaker to ramp up domestic production amid pressure from the Trump administration to reshore the semiconductor supply chain.

In December, the Biden administration finalized a $1.61 billion government subsidy for Texas Instruments to support construction of three new facilities after the company announced plans to invest at least $18 billion under the $52.7 billion CHIPS and Science bill.

The company said on Wednesday the $60 billion will be used to build or expand seven chip-making facilities at three sites in Texas and Utah, including two new facilities in Sherman, Texas, and will create 60,000 jobs, calling it the "largest investment in foundational semiconductor manufacturing in U.S. history."

In August 2024, the company said it could build seven chip-building facilities and spend up to $40 billion on its Sherman, Texas operations and $21 billion on Utah and other Texas plants.

This service is not intended for persons residing in the E.U. By clicking subscribe, I agree to receive news updates and promotional material from Mediacorp and Mediacorp’s partners.

Texas Instruments has been building facilities in Texas and one in Utah as part of efforts to boost in-house manufacturing and stave off rising competition from Chinese analog chipmakers.

The company did not give a precise timeline for the investment, which includes up to $46 billion in Texas and about $15 billion in Utah. Texas Instruments said its long-term CapEx plan is unchanged.

Unlike AI chip firms Nvidia and AMD, TI makes analog or foundational chips used in everyday devices such as smartphones, cars and medical devices, giving it a large client base that includes Apple, SpaceX and Ford Motor.

The spending plan follows similar announcements from others in the semiconductor industry, including Micron, which said last week that it will expand its U.S. investment by $30 billion, taking its planned spending to $200 billion.

Analysts have said they see the spending plans as overtures to U.S. President Donald Trump, who has repeatedly threatened to kill the $52.7 billion 2022 CHIPS and Science Act and warned of potential new tariffs on semiconductor imports.

Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said on Wednesday the Texas Instruments investment will boost "foundational semiconductors that go into the electronics that people use every day. Our partnership with TI will support U.S. chip manufacturing for decades to come."

Like other companies unveiling such spending commitments, TI's announcement includes funds already allocated to facilities that are either under construction or ramping up.


Isn't $100 billion or $200 billion a better target? Why did Texas Instruments' ambitions stop at $60 billion? 🙂😭

At this speed, we may achieve $1 trillion US semiconductor investment milestone by the end of 2025.
 
Isn't $100 billion or $200 billion a better target? Why did Texas Instruments' ambitions stop at $60 billion? 🙂😭

At this speed, we may achieve $1 trillion US semiconductor investment milestone by the end of 2025.

Agreed!!!

I am expecting someone to be investing $10Zn [Zillion] at some point
 
Hold on a moment. Just checking over some basic numbers here. TI's annual sales appear to be running about $70bn. So perhaps $60bn isn't totally off the scale. Depending on how many years it's spread over.

But ... TI currently has around 34K employees worldwide. And this new plan will supposedly create 60K new jobs. That's an almost 200% increase in headcount in just a few years ?! Apart from anything else, where are they going to find all these people ? Also noting that the investment cost per job created appears to be $1m. Even if they're cheating and including the current 34K staff in the "new jobs created" total ( a sadly common ploy), this is still an incredible (in the original sense of the word) rate of headcount growth.

Perhaps you need to issue Trump-style press releases to even qualify for backing these days. I can't imagine this sort of thing getting released 30 years ago.
 
You guys are brutal.... 🤣

Actually being super stingy is one of the most important secrets for TI's success over all these years. $60B obviously just a joke.
 
Hold on a moment. Just checking over some basic numbers here. TI's annual sales appear to be running about $70bn. So perhaps $60bn isn't totally off the scale. Depending on how many years it's spread over.

But ... TI currently has around 34K employees worldwide. And this new plan will supposedly create 60K new jobs. That's an almost 200% increase in headcount in just a few years ?! Apart from anything else, where are they going to find all these people ? Also noting that the investment cost per job created appears to be $1m. Even if they're cheating and including the current 34K staff in the "new jobs created" total ( a sadly common ploy), this is still an incredible (in the original sense of the word) rate of headcount growth.

Perhaps you need to issue Trump-style press releases to even qualify for backing these days. I can't imagine this sort of thing getting released 30 years ago.

Texas Instruments’ annual revenue is not near $70 billion. With 2024 revenue at $15.64 billion and net profit at $4.78 billion, this newly announced $60 billion investment must be spread over 10 to 15 years (or more) to ensure TI doesn’t risk bankruptcy.

TI Revenue
2024: $15.641B
2023: $17.519B
2022: $20.028B

TI Net Income
2024 $4.78B
2023 $6.48B
2022 $8.71B
 
Texas Instruments’ annual revenue is not near $70 billion. With 2024 revenue at $15.64 billion and net profit at $4.78 billion, this newly announced $60 billion investment must be spread over 10 to 15 years (or more) to ensure TI doesn’t risk bankruptcy.

TI Revenue
2024: $15.641B
2023: $17.519B
2022: $20.028B

TI Net Income
2024 $4.78B
2023 $6.48B
2022 $8.71B
They might also be counting on a massive devaluation of the US dollar. The dollar is arguably overvalued by a factor of 5X and so in the future when the dollar is not the reserve currency, these numbers would pen out.
 
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