Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSM) continues to ride the AI wave, posting solid November numbers that underscore just how hungry tech giants are for cutting-edge chips. The world's largest contract chipmaker reported November 2025 revenue of approximately 343.61 billion New Taiwan dollars, marking a 24.5% jump compared to the same month last year.
Sure, revenue dipped 6.5% from October, but that's just normal month-to-month noise. The bigger picture tells a more compelling story: for the eleven months through November, Taiwan Semiconductor's net revenue climbed 32.8% year-over-year to 3.47 trillion New Taiwan dollars. Not too shabby for a company already operating at massive scale.
The AI Gold Rush Continues
Taiwan Semiconductor's stock has surged 54% year-to-date, and it's not hard to see why. The company is essentially the arms dealer in the AI gold rush, supplying the advanced chips that power everything from Nvidia's (NVDA) data center GPUs to custom AI processors from Alphabet Inc. (GOOGL) Google and Amazon.com Inc. (AMZN).
To meet this avalanche of demand, the chipmaker is going all-in on expansion. It's ramping up its 2-nanometer fabrication footprint with heavy investments in new facilities and advanced packaging technology. The company is even outsourcing parts of its Chip on Wafer on Substrate (CoWoS) advanced packaging operations because demand is literally overwhelming its existing capacity. When you're turning away business because you can't make chips fast enough, that's a pretty good problem to have.
The global expansion effort isn't happening in a vacuum, either. Taiwan Semiconductor has pulled in close to 147 billion New Taiwan dollars (about $4.71 billion) in government subsidies over the past two years. The U.S., Japan, Germany, and China are all backing the company's plans to build factories on their soil, each eager to secure domestic access to advanced chip manufacturing.
Looking Ahead to Q4 and Beyond
Taiwan Semiconductor's fourth-quarter 2025 guidance suggests the momentum isn't slowing down. The company expects revenue between $32.20 billion and $33.40 billion, comfortably above the $31.97 billion analyst consensus. Management is also projecting gross margins of 59% to 61% and operating profit margins of 49% to 51%, which are frankly eye-watering numbers that reflect the company's pricing power and operational efficiency.
Taiwan Semiconductor shares traded up 0.64% at $305.33 during premarket trading on Wednesday, hovering near the stock's 52-week high of $311.36. For a company with this market cap, that kind of sustained momentum speaks volumes about investor confidence in the AI buildout continuing well into the future.
The bottom line? As long as tech companies keep racing to build bigger and better AI systems, Taiwan Semiconductor is positioned to cash those checks. The company has the technology, the capacity expansion plans, and apparently the government backing to maintain its dominant position at the center of the AI supply chain.