TSMC Rides AI Demand to a Record Quarter
2 min readTaiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co has posted the strongest quarter in its nearly four-decade history, and artificial intelligence is the reason. The world’s largest contract chipmaker reported second-quarter revenue of about NT$1.27 trillion, roughly US$39.5 billion, an all-time high driven by relentless demand for the chips that power AI.
Record Numbers
The milestone was clear well before the quarter closed. In June, TSMC reported consolidated sales of NT$442.68 billion, about US$13.8 billion, up 67.9 percent from a year earlier and 6.2 percent from May. That was the company’s largest monthly figure ever, and the sequential June jump is telling on its own.
For most of TSMC’s history, revenue followed the consumer electronics calendar, cooling in early summer before smartphone season. AI has broken that pattern. Orders for accelerators and high-performance computing chips now fill the fabs year round, and high-performance computing already accounts for roughly 61 percent of the company’s sales.
Who Is Buying
TSMC’s advantage is manufacturing yield. Its high output on leading-edge nodes has helped it lock up more 2-nanometer orders than any rival, with major customers including Apple, Qualcomm, MediaTek, Nvidia, and AMD lining up for capacity. Nearly every leading AI accelerator on the market is fabricated in a TSMC plant.
Why It Matters
TSMC sits at the center of the AI supply chain, so its results are treated as a barometer for the entire industry. A record quarter suggests the AI buildout still has momentum and that spending on data-center silicon has not yet peaked. Investors will watch closely when the company holds its formal earnings call on July 16 for guidance on whether demand can hold.
The bigger question is capacity. With AI orders sold out well into next year, the constraint is no longer appetite but how fast TSMC can build new plants and advanced packaging to keep pace.
