Taiwan Says Tariff Cuts Are the Goal, Not Worker Training Deals

MarketDash Editorial Team
7 days ago
Taiwan is pushing hard for lower U.S. tariffs on its exports while promoting semiconductor cooperation. But officials are making clear that TSMC worker training isn't on the negotiating table, despite earlier reports suggesting it might be part of a trade deal.

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSM) has become the unlikely centerpiece of a delicate trade negotiation between Taiwan and the United States. The island nation is working to slash tariffs on its exports from 20% down to 15%, and it wants everyone to know that training American workers is not part of the deal—despite what you might have heard.

Taiwan officials told lawmakers Monday that getting those tariffs down is job one in their ongoing talks with Washington. They made a point of clarifying to Reuters that workforce training for U.S. chip manufacturing isn't a bargaining chip in their negotiations, pushing back against earlier speculation that it might be.

Jenni Yang, Taiwan's top trade negotiator, told Reuters the government is laser-focused on hitting that 15% tariff target and hopes to wrap up an agreement before the year ends. She's also pitching what Taiwan calls the "Taiwan model"—basically encouraging the U.S. to build science-park-driven tech clusters that mirror the semiconductor success Taiwan has achieved at home.

Here's an interesting wrinkle: according to Reuters, Taiwan's semiconductor exports are currently exempt from that 20% U.S. tariff rate anyway. But the threat looming over everything is President Trump's previous declaration that semiconductor imports could eventually face tariffs approaching 100% unless companies manufacture inside the United States or commit to doing so. That very much includes Taiwan Semiconductor.

The Worker Training Question

Earlier reports suggested the Trump administration was exploring a deal that would involve fresh Taiwanese investment and training programs for U.S. workers in advanced manufacturing. The idea was straightforward: Taiwan boosts investment in American chip manufacturing and trains U.S. workers, and in exchange, Taiwan gets relief from those tariffs.

Both sides are definitely negotiating terms that would connect semiconductor cooperation with reduced trade barriers. But Taiwan is drawing a line on what's actually up for discussion.

Meanwhile, Taiwan Semiconductor—the world's leading contract chipmaker—is already knee-deep in a massive U.S. expansion, pouring $165 billion into building fabs in Arizona. That's real money going into American manufacturing capacity, regardless of what happens in the trade talks.

Economy Minister Kung Ming-hsin said the government could potentially support worker training efforts for Taiwan Semiconductor if needed, but he made it crystal clear that such assistance isn't a bargaining item in the trade negotiations. It's a subtle but important distinction: we might help, but we're not trading it for tariff cuts.

TSMC's Financial Muscle

The $1.5 trillion contract chipmaker just demonstrated why it has so much leverage in these discussions. The company boosted its third-quarter dividend by 20% after posting record profits and locking in major investments for future capacity.

Taiwan Semiconductor raised its cash payout to 6 New Taiwan dollars (roughly $0.19) per share following a stellar July-September period where net income hit NT$452.3 billion ($14.56 billion). That performance was fueled by relentless demand from heavyweight customers like Nvidia Corp (NVDA) and Apple Inc (AAPL).

The chipmaker also greenlit a nearly $15 billion capital plan to expand both advanced and specialty technology fabs while funding research and development. When you're spending that kind of money, you tend to get a seat at the table in trade discussions.

Not everything is perfect, though. Despite those strong earnings, free cash flow dropped to NT$139.4 billion due to lower operating cash generation. Still, the company's shares are up 48% this year, powered by its central role in global AI and smartphone supply chains.

The bottom line here is that Taiwan wants lower tariffs, period. Worker training might happen as a side benefit of TSMC's Arizona expansion, but Taiwan isn't treating it as currency in trade negotiations. That's a meaningful distinction as both countries navigate the complex politics of semiconductor manufacturing and economic cooperation.

TSM Price Action: Taiwan Semiconductor shares were down 1.55% at $287.00 during premarket trading on Friday.

Taiwan Says Tariff Cuts Are the Goal, Not Worker Training Deals

MarketDash Editorial Team
7 days ago
Taiwan is pushing hard for lower U.S. tariffs on its exports while promoting semiconductor cooperation. But officials are making clear that TSMC worker training isn't on the negotiating table, despite earlier reports suggesting it might be part of a trade deal.

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSM) has become the unlikely centerpiece of a delicate trade negotiation between Taiwan and the United States. The island nation is working to slash tariffs on its exports from 20% down to 15%, and it wants everyone to know that training American workers is not part of the deal—despite what you might have heard.

Taiwan officials told lawmakers Monday that getting those tariffs down is job one in their ongoing talks with Washington. They made a point of clarifying to Reuters that workforce training for U.S. chip manufacturing isn't a bargaining chip in their negotiations, pushing back against earlier speculation that it might be.

Jenni Yang, Taiwan's top trade negotiator, told Reuters the government is laser-focused on hitting that 15% tariff target and hopes to wrap up an agreement before the year ends. She's also pitching what Taiwan calls the "Taiwan model"—basically encouraging the U.S. to build science-park-driven tech clusters that mirror the semiconductor success Taiwan has achieved at home.

Here's an interesting wrinkle: according to Reuters, Taiwan's semiconductor exports are currently exempt from that 20% U.S. tariff rate anyway. But the threat looming over everything is President Trump's previous declaration that semiconductor imports could eventually face tariffs approaching 100% unless companies manufacture inside the United States or commit to doing so. That very much includes Taiwan Semiconductor.

The Worker Training Question

Earlier reports suggested the Trump administration was exploring a deal that would involve fresh Taiwanese investment and training programs for U.S. workers in advanced manufacturing. The idea was straightforward: Taiwan boosts investment in American chip manufacturing and trains U.S. workers, and in exchange, Taiwan gets relief from those tariffs.

Both sides are definitely negotiating terms that would connect semiconductor cooperation with reduced trade barriers. But Taiwan is drawing a line on what's actually up for discussion.

Meanwhile, Taiwan Semiconductor—the world's leading contract chipmaker—is already knee-deep in a massive U.S. expansion, pouring $165 billion into building fabs in Arizona. That's real money going into American manufacturing capacity, regardless of what happens in the trade talks.

Economy Minister Kung Ming-hsin said the government could potentially support worker training efforts for Taiwan Semiconductor if needed, but he made it crystal clear that such assistance isn't a bargaining item in the trade negotiations. It's a subtle but important distinction: we might help, but we're not trading it for tariff cuts.

TSMC's Financial Muscle

The $1.5 trillion contract chipmaker just demonstrated why it has so much leverage in these discussions. The company boosted its third-quarter dividend by 20% after posting record profits and locking in major investments for future capacity.

Taiwan Semiconductor raised its cash payout to 6 New Taiwan dollars (roughly $0.19) per share following a stellar July-September period where net income hit NT$452.3 billion ($14.56 billion). That performance was fueled by relentless demand from heavyweight customers like Nvidia Corp (NVDA) and Apple Inc (AAPL).

The chipmaker also greenlit a nearly $15 billion capital plan to expand both advanced and specialty technology fabs while funding research and development. When you're spending that kind of money, you tend to get a seat at the table in trade discussions.

Not everything is perfect, though. Despite those strong earnings, free cash flow dropped to NT$139.4 billion due to lower operating cash generation. Still, the company's shares are up 48% this year, powered by its central role in global AI and smartphone supply chains.

The bottom line here is that Taiwan wants lower tariffs, period. Worker training might happen as a side benefit of TSMC's Arizona expansion, but Taiwan isn't treating it as currency in trade negotiations. That's a meaningful distinction as both countries navigate the complex politics of semiconductor manufacturing and economic cooperation.

TSM Price Action: Taiwan Semiconductor shares were down 1.55% at $287.00 during premarket trading on Friday.

    Taiwan Says Tariff Cuts Are the Goal, Not Worker Training Deals - MarketDash News