Taiwan, TSMC and earthquake
TSMC’s $6.6 billion CHIPS Act funding faces uncertainty amid Trump’s accusations of Taiwan “stealing” US chip jobs.
US markets are keenly awaiting more color on Trump’s stance on the “Chips and Science Act” following his public criticism of the costs associated with that bill. Tariff, he argued during his campaign,
TSMC's new U.S. plant is unlikely to get the most advanced chip technology before factories in Taiwan due to complex compliance issues, local construction regulations and various permitting requirements,
TSMC's strong FY24 performance driven by AI chip demand and 3nm chip production, with continued growth projected despite margin pressure in 2025. Learn more on TSM stock here.
TAIPEI (Reuters) -- A 6.4 magnitude earthquake struck a mountainous area of Taiwan's south on Tuesday near the city of Chiayi, the island's weather administration said, with reports of initial minor damage. Chipmaker TSMC said it had evacuated staff at its factories in central and southern Taiwan.
This marks a significant shift from past policies designed to safeguard Taiwan's leadership in semiconductor manufacturing. For years, Taiwanese chipmakers faced strict limits on the types
The Biden Administration's restrictions on China's 16/14nm technology implementation are poised to significantly affect TSMC's Fab 16 in Nanjing.
TSMC has been promised $6.6 billion under the Biden-administration’s CHIPS and Science ACT to help build three cutting-edge chip fabrication plants in Arizona.
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing reported strong Q4 earnings, driven by surging demand for AI-optimized chips, signaling robust AI spending into 2025. Read more here.
Tech demand across the globe is projected to grow by 9%, subject to US trade policy, says S&P Global Industry Credit Outlook 2025.
As Big Tech CEOs plan to attend Trump's inauguration, Jensen Huang is celebrating Lunar New Year in Asia with employees and tech leaders President-elect Donald Trump's inauguration is slated to be full of major business CEOs. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang isn't among them — he's celebrating the Lunar New Year in Asia.