Oleblue
3 weeks ago
Taiwan Semiconductor Stock: AI Growth Amid Geopolitical Risk
June 05, 2025
Beth Kindig
Lead Tech Analyst
Despite their leadership, AI stocks like Taiwan Semiconductor and Nvidia are flat year-to-date and trading at similar levels as June 2024. Clearly, the AI trade is not as straightforward as it might seem. Taiwan Semiconductor, in particular, sits at the center of geopolitical tensions โ yet those tensions tend to surround companies with deep IP in the AI economy. What makes this economy so distinct is not just the extraordinary commercial demand, but also its rare, historical role in shaping global alliances (and adversaries).
Investors are confronted almost daily with friction between the U.S. and China โ and at the center of it all is one stock: Taiwan Semiconductor (TSMC). While enthusiasm around AI demand remains strong, assuming it will simply override geopolitical headwinds is overly optimistic. Onshoring a supply chain like TSMCโs takes years, yet markets can react to a negative headline in seconds.
Headlines aside, the bigger picture is that TSMC is deepening its moat with advanced nodes, such as N2 and A16. The company already powers tens of trillions in market cap on the stock market when you consider Apple, Nvidia, Broadcom, Amazon, AMD and Google are customers of TSMC. Essentially, all mega cap stocks have an AI strategy spanning merchant GPUs and custom silicon, and of course, software โ yet the common denominator to these strategies is they all funnel into TSMC.
The problem my firm helps with is this -- how does an investor ride out the inherent cyclical nature of semiconductors given the powerful, secular trend of AI? For every stock that becomes a multi-generational winner, there are dozens that never reclaim their all-time highs. The cloud sector for example, is becoming an all-time high graveyard with once-upon-a-time Wall Street darlings trading meaningfully below their ATHs for over three years now.
TSMC will very likely push beyond its ATH yet returns can increase meaningfully if an investor has the guts to buy during a steep selloff. Other times, that selloff isnโt coming and itโs best to buy before a breakout. We answer these complex questions in the analysis below.
TSMCโs Advanced Nodes have Created a Competitive Moat
The most advanced node shipping today is the 3nm, offering 15% better performance than the 5nm process when power level and transistors are equal. The die sizes are an estimated 42% smaller than the 5nm and TSMC also states the 3nm process can lower power consumption by as much as 30%.
Power efficiency is a major advantage, helping to deepen TSMCโs moat. Samsung was first to introduce 3nm process chips in 2022 yet has not been as competitive on yield and power efficiency at a roughly 10% to 20% difference compared to TSMC. The moat is visibly seen in TSMโs pricing power with the dominant foundry charging 25% more for its 3nm process compared to its 5nm process, and customers are willing to forego Samsung to pay the higher pricing.
Last year, companies such as Apple, Nvidia, AMD and Intel committed to working with TSMC for its 3nm process, and eventually Google and Qualcomm left Samsung โafter careful considerationโ to also secure a partnership with TSMC.
This was an important moment for TSMC to complete its near-monopoly in advanced nodes as Google had been outsourcing its Tensor processors to Samsungโs foundry for four generations, before moving to TSMC for the fifth generation. Qualcomm also switched to TSMC from Samsung for the Snapdragon 8 Gen 4 series.
To attract these large customers with different end markets, TSMC offers a few 3nm processes, such as the N3E, N3P and N3X. This allows a company like Apple to customize the 3nm chips differently than AI chips for hyperscalers. N3E is the baseline for IP design with 18% increased performance and 34% power reduction, N3P has higher performance and lower power consumption, whereas the N3X will offer high-performance computing very high performance but with higher power leakage.
To illustrate the near monopoly that TSMC has over other foundries, consider that its market share stands at 67.1%, up 2.4% QoQ in Q4. Meanwhile, second-place Samsung was at 8.1% down from 9.1% for a lead of 59 points.
When comparing revenue, TSMC reported $26.85 billion in Q4 for a 14.1% increase compared to Samsungโs $3.26 billion, which declined 100 basis points to 8.1%.
In the latest quarter, advanced nodes below 7nm drove 73% of wafer revenue with 3nm contributing 22% of revenue and 5nm representing 36% of revenue. Nvidia is not on the 3nm process yet for its Blackwell shipments, thus 5nm is outsized in terms of its market share.
TSMC 3nm revenue surpasses 20%, up from 9% year-over-year
Pictured Above: 3nm revenue for TSMC has ramped quickly, up from 9% in the year ago quarter and in its third consecutive contributing >20% of revenue.
TSMCโs 2nm Nanosheet Transistors (Gate All-Around)
Looking ahead, 2nm is expected to see volume production in the second half of 2025 with a more advanced iteration called N2P scheduled for volume production in the second half of 2026. The 2nm marks a new era in TSMC's transistor architectureas N3 relied on FinFET while gate-all-around (GAA) is being introduced for N2. As the name implies, the gate is wrapped around on all sides compared to FinFET which had a gate wrapped on three sides. By having the gate wrap โall-around,โ a greater surface is created for better electrostatic control and to also reduce leakage.
For TSMC, the 2nm will feature NanoFlex technology, which is similar to FinFlex to where designers can use cells from different libraries. However, due to the new gate-all-around (GAA) nanosheet transistors, there are additional benefits, such as customizing the width and height of cells. For example, GAA can uniquely widen the channels for a performance boost, or there is an option to narrow the channel to optimize power cost. The goal is to increase the performance-per-watt to enable higher levels of output and efficiency.
According to management on the earnings call: โN2 will deliver full-node performance and power benefits with 10% to 15% speed improvement at the same power or 20% to 30% power improvement at the same speed and more than 15% chip density increase as compared with N3E.โ
Similar to the 3nm, there will be a few variants of the 2nm chip for customers to optimize performance with power requirements. The first two years of the 2nm ramp is outpacing the 3nm and 5nm ramp, signaling good things to come for TSMC.
TSMC Stock will Close out the Decade with Pricing Power
As a growth investor, it certainly doesnโt hurt to keep an eye on the horizon. A16 is the 1.6nm process node that will emphasize backside power delivery. Our firm first covered this topic last year in the analysis: โTaiwan Semiconductor Stock: April Sales Soar From Advanced Nodes" stating the Angstrom era will translate to โfuture process generations where the nodes are not smaller necessarily, rather the transistors theyโre built with will be improved upon.โ
For the A16, the Super Power Rail (SPR) backside delivery will offer a redesign to where power routing is moved from the front to the back, which allows for the signaling on the front side to have lower latency. By reducing voltage drop, SPR becomes attractive for AI workloads since multiple cores are operating at high speeds with complex signal routes and dense power requirements.
Intelโs PowerVia is first to market with the backside power delivery design, yet TSMCโs design will likely result in higher yields and volume production. TSMC also connects the backside power delivery to each transistorโs source and drain, which is more expensive yet also more efficient compared to Intelโs approach.
The A14 is due out in 2028 and will offer a significant breakthrough in performance while offering up to 25% to 30% lower power consumption, with increased density of 20% to 23%. There will be an A14 variant that offers backside power delivery in 2029. It's expected that A14 will help to drive forward edge AI due to a combination of speed improvements and power reduction. Pricing for the A14 is expected to increase from $30,000 per wafer for the 2nm process to $45,000 per wafer as we close out the decade.
TSMC to Grow Revenue Mid-20%; AI Accelerator Revenue will Double
The company is off to a good start for the year with revenue growth of 35.3% YoY while guiding for an acceleration to the 38% range in Q2. Revenue was down (5.1%) sequentially, impacted by smartphone seasonality, partially offset by AI-related demand growth. However, the Q2 guide represents 13% QoQ growth with revenue between $28.4-29.2 billion.
TSMC offers monthly reports with April starting Q2 off strong as monthly revenue surged 48.1% YoY and 22% MoM to ~$11.55 billion, with Bloomberg stating the outperformance could be due to a rush in pre-tariff ordering, although certainly 3nm and 5nm demand helped as well.
TSMC earnings: strong H1 growth, slower H2 outlook
TSMC earnings show strong growth in H1 followed by lower growth in H2.
This year, IDC is forecasting Foundry 2.0 will grow by 11% compared to 6% last year. Foundry 2.0 describes a broader range of foundry technologies, with the foundry segment expected to grow 18% down from 20% last year.
Regardless of which way you dice it, TSMC is guiding for above industry growth, stating in the most recent quarter: โwe continue to expect our full-year 2025 revenue to increase by close to mid-20s percent in U.S. dollar term.โ
Of this, AI accelerator revenue is expected to double in 2025 and management also forecasts AI to grow at a mid-40% CAGR for five years from 2024: โBased on our planning framework, we are confident that our revenue growth from AI accelerators will approach a mid-40s percentage CAGR for the next five years period starting from 2024.โ
Slower Growth Up Ahead with H1 > H2
An area of concern is that TSMC is guiding a slowdown in the second half of the year, given the mid-20% revenue growth is below Q1/Q2 revenue growth of 35% to 38%.
There was a question on the call about this from analyst Charlie Chan asking: โAnd also based on your full-year guidance, so called the mid-20%, it seems like second half recovery will be very, very gradual or flattish. So I'm wondering if you're already bake in kind of consumer tech demand impact. And if a tariff have some kind of turnaround, right, meaning, for example, major smartphone brands whether there's a chance for you to revise your full-year revenue guidance? Thank you.โ
Management answered the H2 weak guide is due to uncertainty and tariffs: โCharlie, as we also said in the prepared remarks, there are uncertainties and potential risk from tariffs exist.โ
Analysts are a bit concerned about the full-year guide given the risks key customers are facing from Aprilโs tariff shocks. JPMorgan analysts?say?TSMC โcould pare [its forecast] slightly to target low- to mid-20%โ sales growth, while Deutsche Bank analysts raised the concern that the chipmaker โmay also withdraw its guidance as customers adjust to tariffs.โ???
Management also stated that things are more โbalanced nowโ -- meaning demand is not overwhelming supply like it once did: โBrett, three months ago. Now I can tell you that three months ago, we are barely โ we just cannot supply enough wafer to our customer. And now it's a little bit balanced, but still the demand is very strong. And you are right. Other than China, the demand is still very strong, especially in U.S. And so we are confident that we are going to double our AI revenue this year.โ
Echoing these comments, if we look at the segments listed below, we can see that smartphones are reporting higher seasonal weakness than last year.
TSMC Reports Strength in HPC offset by Smartphones
HPC Revenue rose 7% QoQ
TSMC continues to ride AI accelerator tailwinds, evident in its rising HPC revenue and mix. HPC revenue rose 7% QoQ in Q1, surpassing $15 billion for the first time. HPC accounted for 59% of TSMCโs revenue, expanding from 53% of revenue last quarter.
Top tech firms drive TSMC AI chip growth via HPC segment
Pictured above: Major tech companies choose TSMC for AI chips, visible in its HPC segment
Management stated that they โcontinue to observe robust AI-related demand from our customers,โ and reaffirmed that AI accelerator (GPU + ASIC + HBM) revenue is expected to double YoY in 2025. As stated, management also confidently forecast AI accelerator revenue to grow at a mid-40% CAGR over the next five years starting in 2024.
Smartphones Declined 22% QoQ:
Smartphone revenue declined (22%) QoQ due to seasonal trends, accounting for 28% of revenue in Q1. This was larger than last yearโs (16%) seasonal decline.
TSMC sees increased seasonal weakness in smartphone segment
TSMC is reporting higher seasonal weakness in the smartphone segment compared to last year.
IoT, Auto and Other:
IoT revenue declined (9%) QoQ to account for 5% of revenue, while Automotive revenue increased 14% QoQ to also account for 5% of revenue. Digital Consumer Electronics increased 8% QoQ to account for 1% of revenue, while Other revenue rose 20% QoQ to account for 2% of revenue.
Gross Margin to See 3% to 4% Headwind
Margins came in at the higher end of guidance in Q1, with TSMC seeing continuing strength in Q2.
Gross margin was 58.8%, at the high end of managementโs guided range for 57-59%, dipping slightly sequentially from the January earthquake impacts and the ramp of the Kumamoto fab. On a YoY basis, gross margin expanded 5.7 points.
Operating margin was 48.5%, at the high end of the guided 46.5-48.5% range.
Net margin was 43.1%, flat with Q4 and up 3.1 points YoY.
TSMC delivered nearly 54% YoY growth in EPS in Q1 as it delivered a slight beat to $2.12, its third straight quarter with EPS growth above 50% YoY. This growth also reflects TSMCโs operating leverage, outpacing revenue growth in the mid to high-30% range.
TSMC Q1 EPS up 53.6%, but growth expected to plateau later in the year
In Q1, TSMC reported strength on the bottom line with EPS growth of 53.6% although EPS will face tough comps with growth plateauโing toward the end of the year.
For Q2, EPS growth is expected to maintain this >50% growth rate to $2.24, before decelerating rather sharply to the mid-single digits by Q4 as it begins to lap these more difficult 50% growth comps.
FY25 EPS is currently expected to increase 31.5% YoY to $9.26, before decelerating to 15.2% growth in FY26 to $10.66.
For Q2, TSMC guided for similar gross and operating margin ranges, but flagged some headwinds from the fabs buildout. However, a larger headwind exists โ FX. TSMCโs guidance below assumes an exchange rate of US$1 to NT$32.5, yet the current rate sits at US$1 to $NT30.1, down nearly 8% from the guided level.
Gross margin is forecast at 57-59%, down 0.8 points sequentially at midpoint as dilutive impacts from ramping the Arizona fab kicks in. Management added that overseas fab impacts are expected to grow more pronounced throughout the year, forecasting 2-3% dilutive impact for the full year from Arizona and Kumamoto.
Operating margin is forecast at 47-49%, down 0.5 points sequentially at midpoint.
Over the next five years, management sees the dilutive impact from ramping its overseas fabs widening, projecting it to start at 2-3% each year in the early ramp stages before widening to 3-4% each year. Despite this, TSMC remains confident in its ability to keep long-term gross margins at 53% or higher.
$100B Investment Announced for Arizona Fabs
In the recent quarter, the companyโs cash flow increased 37% YoY to $19.0 billion, for a 74.5% margin, a slight YoY expansion. Capex was $10.1 billion in Q1, down more than 10% QoQ but up more than 74% YoY. Cash and equivalents rose $7.5 billion sequentially to $81.4 billion, while debt is $30.4 billion.
In March, TSMC announced a new $100 billion investmentto expand manufacturing in the United States. The $100 billion will go toward building new fabs in Arizona bringing TSMCโs total investment in the United States to $165 billion. Once the new fabs are built, 30% of TSMCโs advanced nodes capacity will be located in Arizona.
TSMCโs current Arizona fabs began producing chips this year, with Apple being the first to receive chips on the 4nm/5nm process and Nvidia receiving chips later this year. In addition, itโs been reportedthe 2nm process is seeing a 90% yield for memory products in the newer Arizona fab.
Notably, due to rising costs, there are rumors that TSMC will raise prices from the Arizona fab by 30%.
Subscribe for Full Access to the Article
Below the Paywall is the Following information
Our analysis on the stockโs valuation and if the stock is a โbuyโ or a โholdโ given the stock faces immense demand from the AI economy yet must also weather geopolitical tensions.
The I/O Fundโs trading plan for TSMC including never-before published buy targets over a 12 to 18-month time frame.
Sign Up to Continue Reading
https://io-fund.com/semiconductors/taiwan-semiconductor-ai-growth-geopolitical-risk
Weekly Chart
abrooklyn
11 months ago
https://pr.tsmc.com/system/files/newspdf/attachment/09349f4b044016a40b284519b3c86005b578749f/2Q24%20%28E%29_with%20guidance_final_wmn.pdf
TSMC Reports Second Quarter EPS of NT$9.56
HSINCHU, Taiwan, R.O.C., Jul. 18, 2024 -- TSMC (TWSE: 2330, NYSE: TSM) today
announced consolidated revenue of NT$673.51 billion, net income of NT$247.85 billion, and
diluted earnings per share of NT$9.56 (US$1.48 per ADR unit) for the second quarter ended June
30, 2024.
Year-over-year, second quarter revenue increased 40.1% while net income and diluted EPS both
increased 36.3%. Compared to first quarter 2024, second quarter results represented a 13.6%
increase in revenue and a 9.9% increase in net income. All figures were prepared in accordance
with TIFRS on a consolidated basis.
In US dollars, second quarter revenue was $20.82 billion, which increased 32.8% year-over-year
and increased 10.3% from the previous quarter.
Gross margin for the quarter was 53.2%, operating margin was 42.5%, and net profit margin was
36.8%.
In the second quarter, shipments of 3-nanometer accounted for 15% of total wafer revenue; 5-
nanometer accounted for 35%; 7-nanometer accounted for 17%. Advanced technologies, defined
as 7-nanometer and more advanced technologies, accounted for 67% of total wafer revenue.
โOur business in the second quarter was supported by strong demand for our industry-leading 3nm
and 5nm technologies, partially offset by continued smartphone seasonality,โ said Wendell Huang,
Senior VP and Chief Financial Officer of TSMC. โMoving into third quarter 2024, we expect our
business to be supported by strong smartphone and AI-related demand for our leading-edge process
technologies.โ
Based on the Companyโs current business outlook, management expects the overall performance
for third quarter 2024 to be as follows:
โข Revenue is expected to be between US$22.4 billion and US$23.2 billion;
And, based on the exchange rate assumption of 1 US dollar to 32.5 NT dollars,
โข Gross profit margin is expected to be between 53.5% and 55.5%;
โข Operating profit margin is expected to be between 42.5% and 44.5%.
TSMCโs 2024 second quarter consolidated results:
(Unit: NT$ million, except for EPS)
2Q24
Amounta
2Q23
Amount
YoY
Inc. (Dec.) %
1Q24
Amount
QoQ
Inc. (Dec.) %
Net sales 673,510 480,841 40.1 592,644 13.6
Gross profit 358,125 260,200 37.6 314,505 13.9
Income from operations 286,556 201,958 41.9 249,018 15.1
Income before tax 306,311 214,675 42.7 266,543 14.9
Net income 247,845 181,799 36.3 225,485 9.9
EPS (NT$) 9.56 b 7.01c 36.3 8.70d 9.9
a: 2Q2024 figures have not been approved by Board of Directors
b: Based on 25,931 million weighted average outstanding shares
c: Based on 25,929 million weighted average outstanding shares
d: Based on 25,930 million weighted average outstanding shares
About TSMC
TSMC pioneered the pure-play foundry business model when it was founded in 1987, and has been
the worldโs leading dedicated semiconductor foundry ever since. The Company supports a thriving
ecosystem of global customers and partners with the industryโs leading process technologies and
portfolio of design enablement solutions to unleash innovation for the global semiconductor
industry. With global operations spanning Asia, Europe, and North America, TSMC serves as a
committed corporate citizen around the world.
TSMC deployed 288 distinct process technologies, and manufactured 11,895 products for 528
customers in 2023 by providing the broadest range of advanced, specialty and advanced packaging
technology services. The Company is headquartered in Hsinchu, Taiwan. For more information
please visit https://www.tsmc.com.
# # #
TSMC Spokesperson:
Wendell Huang
Senior Vice President and CFO
Tel: 886-3-505-5901
Media Contacts:
Nina Kao
Head of Public Relations
Tel: 886-3-563-6688
ext.7125036
Mobile: 886-988-239-163
E-Mail:
nina_kao@tsmc.com
Ulric Kelly
Public Relations
Tel: 886-3-563-6688 ext. 7126541
Oleblue
1 year ago
TSMC gets $6.6 billion in chipmaking cash from Biden while pledging to build a third Arizona plant
Ben Werschkul
Ben Werschkul·Washington Correspondent
Updated Mon, Apr 8, 2024, 8:34 AM EDT
The Biden administration said Monday it plans to send up to $6.6 billion in federal grants to the Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSM) as the chipmaking giant promises a $25 billion Arizona expansion that will bring a third TSMC fabrication plant to that state.
The deal, the second major US chipmaking grant announcement of the last three weeks, is part of President Joe Biden's effort to restart advanced semiconductor manufacturing in the US.
In March Biden said the US would provide up to $8.5 billion in grants in the years ahead to Intel (INTC) to support a range of new projects in Arizona, Ohio, New Mexico, and Oregon.
The money for both companies is coming from 2022's CHIPs and Science law, a signature accomplishment of Biden's current term.
TSMC will use the grants to fund the continued construction of two manufacturing plants already being built in the Phoenix area. The company also announced Monday it would build a third facility there in the years ahead.
The goal is for all three plants to be online by the end of the decade and producing TSMC's most advanced chips. Some of the plants even hope to use a forthcoming 2 nanometer fabrication process and make even more advanced chips than are currently available.
"These are the chips that underpin all artificial intelligence and they are the chips that are necessary components for the technology that we need to underpin our economy," Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo told reporters ahead of the announcement.
President Joe Biden, left, shakes hands with Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Chairman Mark Liu, right, as the two meet on stage after touring the TSMC facility under construction in Phoenix, Tuesday, Dec. 6, 2022. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin)
President Joe Biden shakes hands with Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Chairman Mark Liu during a tour of the TSMC facility under construction in Phoenix in Dec. 2022. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin) (ASSOCIATED PRESS)
The $6.6 billion in grants to be doled out in the years ahead include an allotment of $50 million for workforce development as well as additional authorization for up to $5 billion in government loans. That inflow comes in addition to manufacturing tax credits in the 2022 law that could be worth additional billions.
The government money will pair with TSMC's plans to invest over $65 billion in its Arizona operations. It had previously announced $40 billion and said today it would add an additional $25 billion largely to fund construction of the third fabrication facility.
Monday's news underlines the central role that Arizona is playing in the effort to bring back semiconductor manufacturing to the US.
President Biden has made multiple semiconductor-themed trips to the state in recent years including a stop last month to announce the grants for Intel, which is also building in the state.
"Itโs an exciting day for Arizona, where we are leading the way in bringing the most advanced microchip manufacturing back to America," Arizona Senator Mark Kelly, a negotiator of the 2022 law, told Yahoo Finance.
Monday's announcement is the fifth manufacturing award from the law.
In addition to TSMC and Intel, three smaller manufacturing awards had been previously announced. There was roughly $35 million for BAE Systems (BAESY), $162 million for Microchip Technology, and $1.5 billion for GlobalFoundries (GFS) largely to fund the manufacturing of less advanced but still crucial chips.
The 20-month-old law allows the White House to spend a total of about $50 billion โ $39 billion specifically earmarked for manufacturing โ to try and help reignite the sector in the years ahead.
A focus on the labor market
Arizona's path to semiconductor centrality began back in May 2020 when TSMC announced new plans for the state.
It's an effort that has also been marked by struggles to ensure that enough Americans will be trained for the coming positions; TSMC recently announced a delay in their first US plant's full-scale launch from 2024 to 2025 and cited worker shortages as a reason and brought in Taiwanese workers to help keep up.
"I do expect that immigration and bringing in expertise from Taiwan both on the facilities side and the construction side will continue to be really important," a senior Biden administration official said ahead of the announcement. The official added that government and TSMC workforce development efforts will nevertheless mean "the overwhelming effects of this investment is going to be to create thousands and thousands of American jobs."
TSMC has also said that they expect some of the worker shortages will lessen in each subsequent project with Chairman Dr. Mark Liu saying recently of the first two projects that "even though we encountered challenges in Arizona for our first fab construction...we believe the construction of our second fab will continue to be much smoother."
Biden officials call TSMC's overall project the largest foreign direct investment in a completely new project in US history and is expected to create at least 6,000 direct permanent jobs in addition to 20,000 temporary construction jobs.
The project is also expected to lead to "tens of thousands" of additional jobs as other companies work to supply the new massive facilities.
The increased investment is due to an ever increasing demand from US companies for chips as well as for chips that are made inside the United States, says Lael Brainard who is the director of Biden's National Economic Council.
She notes that top officials like Apple (AAPL) CEO Tim Cook and NVIDIA (NVDA) CEO Jensen Huang attended a 2022 groundbreaking for TSMC's second facility in Arizona. Both Apple and NVIDIA currently rely almost exclusively on chips from the company that are manufactured in Taiwan.
In a statement Monday, Chairman Liu said the government's funding allowed for this increased investment adding "our U.S. operations allow us to better support our U.S. customers, which include several of the worldโs leading technology companies."
Apple CEO Tim Cook listens to US President Joe Biden deliver remarks on his economic plan at TSMC Semiconductor Manufacturing Facility in Phoenix, Arizona, on December 6, 2022. (Photo by Brendan SMIALOWSKI / AFP) (Photo by BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP via Getty Images)
Apple CEO Tim Cook listens as President Joe Biden deliver remarks at a TSMC Semiconductor Manufacturing Facility in Phoenix in December 2022. (BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP via Getty Images) (BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI via Getty Images)
Monday's announcement is part of the Biden administration's ambitious overall goal of having the US produce 20% of the world's most advanced semiconductor chips by the end of the decade.
Secretary Raimondo oversees a team implementing the law and often notes the high challenge ahead with America currently producing 0% of these advanced chips (and only 10% of chips overall).
This post has been updated with additional context.
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/tsmc-gets-66-billion-in-chipmaking-cash-from-biden-while-pledging-to-build-a-third-arizona-plant-090026550.html