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AI boom delivers record net profit for Taiwan’s TSMC

David Peterson by David Peterson
October 16, 2025
in Tech
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TSMC said its net profit for the first three months of 2025 rose 60.3 percent from a year ago. ©AFP

Taipei (AFP) – Taiwanese tech titan TSMC reported Thursday a record net profit for the third quarter on skyrocketing demand for microchips used to power iPhones and artificial intelligence. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, the world’s largest contract chipmaker, has been a massive beneficiary of the frenzy in AI investment. TSMC’s clients Nvidia and Apple are among firms pouring many billions of dollars into chips, servers, and data centres, fuelling concerns about a financial bubble.

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“AI demand actually continues to be very strong — stronger than we thought three months ago,” TSMC chairman and chief executive CC Wei told a briefing. TSMC said net profit for the three months to September soared 39.1 percent from a year ago to NT$452.3 billion (US$14.7 billion), a quarterly record. The figure beat expectations of NT$406.67 billion, according to a Bloomberg News survey of analysts. Third-quarter revenue was up 30 percent, also higher than forecasts.

TSMC’s announcement follows a flare-up in trade tensions between Washington and Beijing, and concerns about US export restrictions to China and possible tariffs on chips. China’s rare earth export curbs and bid to ramp up its own chip industry have also sparked fears about the impact on AI. Even if the Chinese market were not available to TSMC and its customers, Wei said “AI growth will be very dramatic” and “very positive.”

AI-related spending is soaring worldwide and is expected to reach approximately $1.5 trillion by 2025, according to US research firm Gartner, and over $2 trillion in 2026 — nearly two percent of global GDP. “It’s not just Apple’s new iPhone driving sales. AI clients like Nvidia and AMC are ramping up orders for high-end chips as well,” Dilin Wu, research strategist at Pepperstone, told AFP ahead of the earnings release. “It shows TSMC’s technology and capacity are still hard to replicate, and that underpins both margins and valuations for the company.”

Looking ahead, Wu said companies “might pull forward shipments to avoid restrictions, so basically front-running the tariffs.” That would be “especially AI chip and GPU clients, certainly in the Chinese market,” she said. The concentration of production in Taiwan has long been seen as a “silicon shield” protecting it from an attack by China, which claims it as part of its territory — and an incentive for the United States to defend it.

While TSMC plans to invest an additional US$100 billion in the United States, Washington has been pressuring Taipei to shift more production to US soil. US Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick said recently he had proposed to Taiwan a 50-50 split in chip production, which Taipei rejected.

© 2024 AFP

Tags: AIsemiconductorstaiwan
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