The Sun (Malaysia)

TSMC posts 9% profit rise in Q1

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Taiwan Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Company (TSMC) announced yesterday a nearly 9% increase in net profits in the first quarter of this year.

The chipmaking giant – whose clients include Apple and Nvidia – controls more than half the world’s output of silicon wafers, used in everything from smartphone­s and cars to missiles.

The company said yesterday its net profit increased 8.9% on-year in January-March to NT$225.4 billion (RM33.3 billion) compared to NT$206.9 billion in the same period last year.

First-quarter revenues also rose 13% year-on-year to NT$592.6 billion, it said.

“Advanced technologi­es, defined as seven-nanometre and more advanced technologi­es, accounted for 65% of total wafer revenue,“it said.

TSMC – which produces some of the tiniest, most advanced microchips in the world – had sought to quell investor fears in the past by pointing to the increasing demand for AI-related products, which need high-performing silicon wafers to function.

Meanwhile, their customers – and government­s concerned about critical supplies – have called for the firm to make more chips off the island.

Self-ruled Taiwan is claimed by neighbouri­ng China, which has in recent years ramped up political and military pressures against Taipei.

In February, TSMC launched a new fabricatio­n plant in the southern Japanese island of Kyushu – a coup for Japan as it vies with the United States and Europe to woo semiconduc­tor firms with huge subsidies.

Experts had called the new plant in Japan “the most significan­t TSMC internatio­nal investment to open in many years”.

TSMC also said this month it would build a third semiconduc­tor factory in Arizona, raising its total investment in the US to US$65 billion (RM311 billion).

It already had plans to build two plants in Arizona, and another one in Germany.

The preliminar­y agreement with the US Commerce Department – tied to a major investment law called the Chips and Science Act – would see TSMC receiving up to US$6.6 billion in direct funding from the American government.

They could also get up to another US$5 billion in the form of loans.

US Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo had said this would be the “first time”such advanced semiconduc­tor chips will be made on American soil.

“These are the chips that underpin all artificial intelligen­ce,” she said at the time of the grant announceme­nt, adding that 6,000 direct high-tech jobs could be created due to the agreement.

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