Pegatron Chairman Says Chip Secrets Won't Break Taiwan Semi's Dominance

MarketDash Editorial Team
18 days ago
After allegations that a former executive took sensitive process data to Intel, industry leaders are explaining why Taiwan Semiconductor's manufacturing edge can't simply be copied and pasted to competitors.

Nvidia Corp. (NVDA) delivered another blockbuster earnings report that sent semiconductor stocks soaring Thursday, including Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSM), which climbed over 2% in premarket trading. Not bad for a company dealing with allegations that one of its former executives walked out the door with some of its most sensitive manufacturing secrets.

Taiwan Semi has already gained 43% this year thanks to relentless demand from Nvidia and Apple Inc. (AAPL), and apparently neither investors nor industry insiders are losing much sleep over the alleged data theft. That confidence got a public boost from Pegatron Corp. Chairman Tung Tzu-hsien, who addressed the situation at a technology forum in Taipei.

The Alleged Leak

Here's what reportedly happened: Lo Wei-jen, a former executive vice president at TSMC, allegedly took confidential data related to the company's cutting-edge 2nm, A16, and A14 process technologies before retiring in July. Last month, he joined Intel Corp. (INTC). Taiwan's High Prosecutors' Office has launched an investigation through its Intellectual Property Branch, and TSMC is gathering evidence while considering legal action.

On the surface, this sounds like a nightmare scenario for the world's dominant contract chipmaker. But Tung wasn't sweating it.

Why Stolen Blueprints Don't Equal Success

Speaking to reporters, Tung emphasized that Taiwan's semiconductor ecosystem remains "globally competitive" and wouldn't be undermined by "one or two individual incidents." His reasoning gets at something fundamental about advanced chip manufacturing that often gets lost in the drama of corporate espionage stories.

According to Tung, Taiwan Semiconductor's real advantage isn't just its process technology on paper. It's the company's deeply flexible manufacturing system that can maintain high production yields while simultaneously serving dozens of customers with wildly different requirements. That's an operational achievement built over decades, not something you can replicate by copying some files.

He pointed out that any stolen information would offer only "limited reference value" because production lines vary enormously across different chipmakers. Each facility has distinct tools, unique configurations, and specific operational flows that make direct replication "nearly impossible." In other words, having the recipe doesn't mean you can bake the cake, especially when the recipe assumes you have a kitchen that took 30 years to build.

Geopolitical Pressure and Competition

The timing of these concerns isn't random. Taiwan Semiconductor faces mounting geopolitical scrutiny as tensions between the U.S. and China continue to shape the semiconductor industry. China has been aggressively expanding its domestic chip capabilities, often recruiting former Taiwanese engineers to help close the technology gap.

Despite these challenges, Tung noted that Taiwan Semiconductor has continued strengthening its process leadership and maintaining its central role in the global semiconductor supply chain. The company's dominance in advanced manufacturing remains virtually unchallenged.

That assessment isn't just local pride talking. British investment firm Baillie Gifford & Co. recently told CNBC's Squawk Box Asia that it recommends doubling down on Taiwan Semiconductor, describing the company's position in advanced contract chip manufacturing as a "de facto monopoly." The firm emphasized TSMC's strategic importance to both the global technology sector and the booming AI industry.

The Investigation Continues

While industry leaders project confidence, the legal process is moving forward. Taiwan's prosecutors are investigating Lo's actions, and TSMC is methodically building its case for potential litigation. Whether this becomes a landmark intellectual property case or fizzles out remains to be seen.

For now, the market seems to agree with Tung's assessment. Taiwan Semiconductor shares traded up 2.22% to $288.63 in premarket action Thursday, continuing a year that's seen the company cement its position as the indispensable partner to the world's most valuable tech companies. Apparently, investors believe that competitive moats in semiconductor manufacturing run deeper than any single employee's knowledge.

Pegatron Chairman Says Chip Secrets Won't Break Taiwan Semi's Dominance

MarketDash Editorial Team
18 days ago
After allegations that a former executive took sensitive process data to Intel, industry leaders are explaining why Taiwan Semiconductor's manufacturing edge can't simply be copied and pasted to competitors.

Nvidia Corp. (NVDA) delivered another blockbuster earnings report that sent semiconductor stocks soaring Thursday, including Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSM), which climbed over 2% in premarket trading. Not bad for a company dealing with allegations that one of its former executives walked out the door with some of its most sensitive manufacturing secrets.

Taiwan Semi has already gained 43% this year thanks to relentless demand from Nvidia and Apple Inc. (AAPL), and apparently neither investors nor industry insiders are losing much sleep over the alleged data theft. That confidence got a public boost from Pegatron Corp. Chairman Tung Tzu-hsien, who addressed the situation at a technology forum in Taipei.

The Alleged Leak

Here's what reportedly happened: Lo Wei-jen, a former executive vice president at TSMC, allegedly took confidential data related to the company's cutting-edge 2nm, A16, and A14 process technologies before retiring in July. Last month, he joined Intel Corp. (INTC). Taiwan's High Prosecutors' Office has launched an investigation through its Intellectual Property Branch, and TSMC is gathering evidence while considering legal action.

On the surface, this sounds like a nightmare scenario for the world's dominant contract chipmaker. But Tung wasn't sweating it.

Why Stolen Blueprints Don't Equal Success

Speaking to reporters, Tung emphasized that Taiwan's semiconductor ecosystem remains "globally competitive" and wouldn't be undermined by "one or two individual incidents." His reasoning gets at something fundamental about advanced chip manufacturing that often gets lost in the drama of corporate espionage stories.

According to Tung, Taiwan Semiconductor's real advantage isn't just its process technology on paper. It's the company's deeply flexible manufacturing system that can maintain high production yields while simultaneously serving dozens of customers with wildly different requirements. That's an operational achievement built over decades, not something you can replicate by copying some files.

He pointed out that any stolen information would offer only "limited reference value" because production lines vary enormously across different chipmakers. Each facility has distinct tools, unique configurations, and specific operational flows that make direct replication "nearly impossible." In other words, having the recipe doesn't mean you can bake the cake, especially when the recipe assumes you have a kitchen that took 30 years to build.

Geopolitical Pressure and Competition

The timing of these concerns isn't random. Taiwan Semiconductor faces mounting geopolitical scrutiny as tensions between the U.S. and China continue to shape the semiconductor industry. China has been aggressively expanding its domestic chip capabilities, often recruiting former Taiwanese engineers to help close the technology gap.

Despite these challenges, Tung noted that Taiwan Semiconductor has continued strengthening its process leadership and maintaining its central role in the global semiconductor supply chain. The company's dominance in advanced manufacturing remains virtually unchallenged.

That assessment isn't just local pride talking. British investment firm Baillie Gifford & Co. recently told CNBC's Squawk Box Asia that it recommends doubling down on Taiwan Semiconductor, describing the company's position in advanced contract chip manufacturing as a "de facto monopoly." The firm emphasized TSMC's strategic importance to both the global technology sector and the booming AI industry.

The Investigation Continues

While industry leaders project confidence, the legal process is moving forward. Taiwan's prosecutors are investigating Lo's actions, and TSMC is methodically building its case for potential litigation. Whether this becomes a landmark intellectual property case or fizzles out remains to be seen.

For now, the market seems to agree with Tung's assessment. Taiwan Semiconductor shares traded up 2.22% to $288.63 in premarket action Thursday, continuing a year that's seen the company cement its position as the indispensable partner to the world's most valuable tech companies. Apparently, investors believe that competitive moats in semiconductor manufacturing run deeper than any single employee's knowledge.