(Bloomberg) — Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. projected quarterly sales and capital expenditure ahead of analysts’ estimates, fueling hopes that spending on AI hardware should remain resilient in 2025.
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The primary chipmaker to Apple Inc. and Nvidia Corp. foresees spending $38 billion to $42 billion on technology and capability this yr, or as much as 19% greater than analysts anticipated. It predicted revenue of $25 billion to $25.8 billion within the March quarter, as much as 6% above projections. Shares in TSMC suppliers including Tokyo Electron Ltd. and Advantest Corp. spiked in Asia.
TSMC’s strong performance buoyed optimism around an unprecedented AI spending cycle that drove the likes of Nvidia to recent heights. The arrival of ChatGPT spurred a frenzied datacenter build-out over the past two years, benefiting a number of corporations that provide the piping and brains of the AI boom.
Still, the shortage of a giant profit-generating AI application to date stoked concerns a few potential bubble. And like much of the industry, TSMC is grappling with uncertainties stemming from a US-China tech conflict that threatens to disrupt supply chains and stem the flow of chips around the globe. The US this month announced recent export control rules on AI chips to curtail their supply to China.
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Away from AI, TSMC stays heavily reliant on consumer electronics and smartphones, given Apple stays its largest customer. IPhone sales have proven muted, though the industry expects mobile AI features to expand over time, driving the broader market.
On Thursday, Chief Executive Officer C.C. Wei warned that smartphone unit growth will remain within the low-single-digits in 2025. But he added that there could be mild recovery in segments aside from AI.
The world’s biggest chipmaker reported a better-than-expected 57% rise in net income.
“For the driving force, besides the continuing robust AI chip demand, there might be support from recent smartphone chips and AI PCs, possibly more outsourcing orders from Intel, and WiFi 7 chips,” Bloomberg Intelligence analyst Charles Shum said concerning the 2025 revenue outlook.
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TSMC may give you the option to retain over half of its existing orders from China, following the Biden administration’s restrictions on advanced-chip production for country-exempt chips with fewer than 30 billion transistors, as reported by Bloomberg News. This may allow TSMC to take care of sales of smartphone SoCs and mid-range computing chips for China. Chinese chip orders accounted for 12.6% of TSMC’s revenue in January-September.