Taiwan prosecutors aren't playing around. On Thursday, authorities raided two homes connected to Wei-Jen Lo, a former Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSM) vice president who recently jumped ship to Intel Corp. (INTC). The reason? TSMC claims he may have taken some very expensive secrets with him.
What Prosecutors Found
Taiwan's intellectual property prosecutors seized computers, USB drives, and other storage devices as potential evidence in what's shaping up to be a high-stakes trade secrets investigation. Lo, who spent 21 years at TSMC before joining Intel in October, now faces accusations of violating Taiwan's National Security Act, which protects strategically critical technologies.
A court approved freezing Lo's shares and real estate holdings while the probe continues. That's a pretty serious escalation, signaling prosecutors believe they have something substantial.
TSMC's Bombshell Lawsuit
Earlier this week, TSMC filed a lawsuit after determining there was a "high probability" that Lo used or disclosed trade secrets involving the company's most advanced chip manufacturing processes. We're talking about cutting-edge 5-nanometer, 3-nanometer, and 2-nanometer technology that represents the absolute frontier of semiconductor manufacturing.
TSMC said legal action became necessary because confidential information may have been transferred to Intel. Lo played a key role in bringing TSMC's most advanced chip nodes into mass production during his two decades at the company. Interestingly, before joining TSMC in 2004, he spent 18 years at Intel, making this something of a full-circle career move.
Intel Fires Back
Intel isn't taking these accusations lying down. The company rejected TSMC's claims outright, saying it has "no reason to believe" the allegations have merit based on its internal review. Intel also pointed out that employee movement between chipmakers is a "common and healthy" industry practice, which is true, though usually without the raid-your-house-and-freeze-your-assets drama.
The Bigger Picture
This investigation couldn't come at a more interesting time. Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan is steering an ambitious turnaround effort, sharpening engineering priorities, accelerating AI development, and rebuilding the company's foundry operations. The goal? Catch up with TSMC, which still dominates advanced chip production for customers like Nvidia Corp. (NVDA) and Apple Inc. (AAPL).
The stakes are enormous. TSMC's advanced manufacturing capabilities represent years of research, billions in investment, and trade secrets that competitors would love to access. Whether Intel actually obtained any of that information remains to be seen, but Taiwan's prosecutors are clearly taking the matter seriously.
While TSMC's short-term stock trend has turned negative, the company continues posting strong price trends over medium and long-term periods, reflecting its dominant market position despite the current controversy.