If you want to understand who really runs the semiconductor industry, just look at who's lining up to use Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSM)'s newest technology. The company recently fired up production of its 2-nanometer chips, and the customer list reads like a who's who of tech: Nvidia (NVDA), Apple (AAPL), AMD (AMD), Qualcomm (QCOM), plus the hyperscale cloud providers Microsoft (MSFT), Amazon (AMZN), and Alphabet (GOOGL) Google.
This isn't just an incremental upgrade. The new "N2" process represents Taiwan Semiconductor's first node using nanosheet transistors, also called gate-all-around (GAA) technology. And according to analysts surveyed by EE Times on Thursday, this launch should keep the company years ahead of rivals Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd (SSNLF) and Intel Corp (INTC).
The Customer Queue Tells the Story
When more than a dozen major customers are reportedly engaged around a new manufacturing process before it even hits volume production, that tells you something about market confidence. TechInsights vice chair Dan Hutcheson told EE Times that interest in N2 is remarkably broad, spanning chip designers and cloud companies alike.
The timing matters too. Taiwan Semiconductor will keep most of its leading-edge capacity in Taiwan, according to International Business Strategies CEO Handel Jones, who told EE Times that a smaller 2nm footprint is expected in the U.S. by 2028. That geographic concentration gives the company manufacturing density advantages that competitors struggle to match.
Why the Lead Keeps Growing
Here's the uncomfortable reality for Samsung and Intel: the gap isn't closing. Jones told EE Times that the distance between Taiwan Semiconductor and its closest challengers appears to be widening rather than shrinking. That's not what you want to hear if you're trying to compete in advanced chipmaking.
The reason comes down to execution. Analysts told EE Times that Taiwan Semiconductor's consistent delivery on capacity, roadmap timing, and process technology continues to set it apart while competitors work through their own advanced-node challenges.
Independent analyst Mike Demler told EE Times that Intel (INTC)'s 18A process does give it a credible shot to attract additional foundry customers as it matures. Taiwan Semiconductor's N2 begins its GAA transition without backside power delivery in the first iteration, which could leave a narrow technical opening. But Demler added that Taiwan Semiconductor can extend its edge over the next several years by layering in incremental upgrades across follow-on nodes and variants.
DGA Group's Paul Triolo told EE Times that geopolitics and supply assurance could create selective openings for competitors, particularly where customers want non-Taiwan production, redundancy, or different commercial terms. But even those factors would leave Taiwan Semiconductor dominant overall.
Wall Street Sees Pricing Power in the AI Boom
The company's technological lead is translating into serious financial performance. Following Taiwan Semiconductor's strong start to 2026, a wave of brokerages has raised price forecasts on the stock, Bloomberg reported on Thursday.
JP Morgan's Gokul Hariharan raised his forecast by 24% to 2,100 New Taiwanese dollars, citing demand for advanced manufacturing and pricing power. That pricing power piece is crucial. When you're the only game in town for cutting-edge chips that power AI systems, you can charge accordingly.
Taiwan Semiconductor is set to report its December-quarter results next week, and analysts surveyed by Bloomberg expect year-over-year sales growth of about 18% and operating margin above 50%. That 50% operating margin would mark a three-year high and reflects the premium the company can command for its most advanced processes.
Think about what that means: when every major AI chip needs your manufacturing capacity, and nobody else can deliver the same performance or volume, you essentially have a license to print money. The AI boom isn't just driving revenue growth for Taiwan Semiconductor. It's driving margin expansion because customers have limited alternatives for the most advanced nodes.
What This Means for the Chip Ecosystem
Taiwan Semiconductor's dominance creates an interesting dynamic for the entire semiconductor industry. Chip designers can push the envelope on performance because they know Taiwan Semiconductor can manufacture whatever they design. Cloud companies building custom AI accelerators have a reliable manufacturing partner who can deliver at scale. But that concentration also means any disruption to Taiwan Semiconductor's operations would ripple through the entire tech sector.
The 2nm launch reinforces a pattern that's held for years: Taiwan Semiconductor sets the pace, competitors scramble to catch up, and the gap between them stays wide or grows wider. Barring a major execution stumble or geopolitical disruption, that dynamic looks set to continue well into the second half of the decade.
TSM Price Action: Taiwan Semiconductor (TSM) shares were up 1.33% at $322.92 during premarket trading on Thursday. The stock is approaching its 52-week high of $333.08.




