Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. Ltd. (TSM) delivered the kind of earnings report Thursday that makes investors sit up and pay attention. The chipmaker posted a 35% surge in net profit, easily beating analyst estimates and sending a clear message: whatever doubts you had about AI demand, put them aside.
As the exclusive manufacturer of NVIDIA Corp. (NVDA) GPUs, TSMC sits at the center of the AI infrastructure boom. When they report numbers like these, it reverberates through the entire ecosystem.
Why Neocloud Companies Are Celebrating
For neocloud providers like CoreWeave, Inc. (CRWV) and Nebius Group N.V. (NBIS), TSMC's blowout quarter amounts to a lifeline. These companies have built their entire business model around one core idea: secure massive allocations of Nvidia's latest architectures—Blackwell and the upcoming Rubin chips, manufactured on TSMC's advanced 3nm and 2nm nodes—and provide specialized compute power that even hyperscalers struggle to offer.
The problem? Their value proposition only works if they can actually get the chips. TSMC's stellar results and forward guidance address two critical concerns that have been weighing on neocloud stocks:
Supply Security: Record manufacturing yields and capacity expansion mean CoreWeave and Nebius can actually fulfill their multibillion-dollar backlogs. No chips, no revenue. TSMC just gave them breathing room.
Demand Strength: When the world's largest foundry raises its 2026 capital expenditure to between $52 billion and $56 billion, it's not doing so on a hunch. That spending reflects massive, long-term orders from tech companies betting heavily on AI infrastructure.




