Marketdash

TSMC Rides AI Wave to $33 Billion Quarter, Crushing Expectations

MarketDash Editorial Team
2 days ago
Taiwan Semiconductor delivered blockbuster results with $33.1 billion in quarterly revenue, fueled by relentless AI chip demand and strong iPhone sales that easily beat analyst forecasts.

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When you're the company that makes the chips powering the AI revolution, you tend to have pretty good quarters. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSM) just proved that point emphatically, reporting Friday that it pulled in 1.05 trillion New Taiwanese dollars (about $33.1 billion) during the October through December period.

That's roughly 20.5% higher than the same quarter last year and comfortably above what analysts expected. The Street was looking for around 1.02 trillion New Taiwanese dollars, so TSMC cleared that bar with room to spare. The results landed right within the company's own guidance range of $32.2 billion to $33.4 billion.

The AI Spending Train Keeps Rolling

Here's the thing about artificial intelligence right now: companies are absolutely convinced it's the future, and they're putting their money where their algorithms are. TSMC sits at the absolute center of this frenzy because it manufactures the advanced chips that make AI actually work.

Nvidia Corp. (NVDA) executives this week pushed back against worries that everyone's building data centers faster than anyone can figure out what to do with them. According to Bloomberg, they're feeling pretty confident about their revenue outlook, which is good news for TSMC since they make Nvidia's chips.

And it's not just AI chips. TSMC also produces processors for Apple Inc. (AAPL), and the iPhone 17 launch in September likely gave the chipmaker an extra boost. When Apple sells phones, TSMC makes money. Simple as that.

The post-ChatGPT AI boom has been very, very good to Taiwan Semiconductor. They've positioned themselves as the essential supplier for advanced AI accelerators, and when you're essential to the hottest technology trend in decades, business tends to be brisk.

Just look at the spending happening right now. Tech giants including Microsoft Corp. (MSFT) and Meta Platforms Inc. (META) are collectively pouring more than $1 trillion into data center projects. That's trillion with a T. All of those facilities need cutting-edge chips, and TSMC is the company making them.

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Wall Street Ups Its Estimates

Analysts are taking notice and adjusting their models accordingly. The full fourth-quarter earnings report drops on January 15, complete with updated guidance for the current quarter, the full year, and capital spending forecasts for 2026. But Wall Street isn't waiting around.

Goldman Sachs just raised its price target by 35% to 2,330 New Taiwanese dollars, pointing to projections of 30% revenue growth in 2026. That's not a typo. They're expecting TSMC to grow revenue by nearly a third next year.

JPMorgan is equally bullish, forecasting that operating margins will climb above 50% for the first time in three years. When you're producing chips that everyone desperately needs and you've got limited competition at the cutting edge, you get to command those kinds of margins.

The narrative here is straightforward: TSMC has become indispensable to the AI hardware race, and they're steadily capturing more and more of the advanced chip manufacturing capacity that big tech companies are scrambling to secure. It's a pretty enviable position to be in.

TSM Price Action: Taiwan Semiconductor shares were up 0.36% at $319.17 during premarket trading on Friday.

TSMC Rides AI Wave to $33 Billion Quarter, Crushing Expectations

MarketDash Editorial Team
2 days ago
Taiwan Semiconductor delivered blockbuster results with $33.1 billion in quarterly revenue, fueled by relentless AI chip demand and strong iPhone sales that easily beat analyst forecasts.

Get Apple Alerts

Weekly insights + SMS alerts

When you're the company that makes the chips powering the AI revolution, you tend to have pretty good quarters. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSM) just proved that point emphatically, reporting Friday that it pulled in 1.05 trillion New Taiwanese dollars (about $33.1 billion) during the October through December period.

That's roughly 20.5% higher than the same quarter last year and comfortably above what analysts expected. The Street was looking for around 1.02 trillion New Taiwanese dollars, so TSMC cleared that bar with room to spare. The results landed right within the company's own guidance range of $32.2 billion to $33.4 billion.

The AI Spending Train Keeps Rolling

Here's the thing about artificial intelligence right now: companies are absolutely convinced it's the future, and they're putting their money where their algorithms are. TSMC sits at the absolute center of this frenzy because it manufactures the advanced chips that make AI actually work.

Nvidia Corp. (NVDA) executives this week pushed back against worries that everyone's building data centers faster than anyone can figure out what to do with them. According to Bloomberg, they're feeling pretty confident about their revenue outlook, which is good news for TSMC since they make Nvidia's chips.

And it's not just AI chips. TSMC also produces processors for Apple Inc. (AAPL), and the iPhone 17 launch in September likely gave the chipmaker an extra boost. When Apple sells phones, TSMC makes money. Simple as that.

The post-ChatGPT AI boom has been very, very good to Taiwan Semiconductor. They've positioned themselves as the essential supplier for advanced AI accelerators, and when you're essential to the hottest technology trend in decades, business tends to be brisk.

Just look at the spending happening right now. Tech giants including Microsoft Corp. (MSFT) and Meta Platforms Inc. (META) are collectively pouring more than $1 trillion into data center projects. That's trillion with a T. All of those facilities need cutting-edge chips, and TSMC is the company making them.

Get Apple Alerts

Weekly insights + SMS (optional)

Wall Street Ups Its Estimates

Analysts are taking notice and adjusting their models accordingly. The full fourth-quarter earnings report drops on January 15, complete with updated guidance for the current quarter, the full year, and capital spending forecasts for 2026. But Wall Street isn't waiting around.

Goldman Sachs just raised its price target by 35% to 2,330 New Taiwanese dollars, pointing to projections of 30% revenue growth in 2026. That's not a typo. They're expecting TSMC to grow revenue by nearly a third next year.

JPMorgan is equally bullish, forecasting that operating margins will climb above 50% for the first time in three years. When you're producing chips that everyone desperately needs and you've got limited competition at the cutting edge, you get to command those kinds of margins.

The narrative here is straightforward: TSMC has become indispensable to the AI hardware race, and they're steadily capturing more and more of the advanced chip manufacturing capacity that big tech companies are scrambling to secure. It's a pretty enviable position to be in.

TSM Price Action: Taiwan Semiconductor shares were up 0.36% at $319.17 during premarket trading on Friday.