Broadcom (AVGO) and TSMC (TSM) each have their own plans to take a piece of Intel's (INTC) business, according to the Wall Street Journal. The American chip company saw a recent week-long rally after the Trump administrator promised to bolster U.S. strength in the A.I.
You might not realize it, but arguably the most important data dump of the first quarter occurred on Friday, Feb. 14.
Investors often turn to recommendations made by Wall Street analysts before making a Buy, Sell, or Hold decision about a stock. While media reports about rating changes by these brokerage-firm employed (or sell-side) analysts often affect a stock's price, do they really matter?
One of the most popular ways to invest in stocks is to buy the Vanguard S&P 500 ETF (VOO 0.00%). The Vanguard fund is popular for a reason: Its long record of closely tracking the S&P 500, combined with its low expense ratio, makes it a top S&P 500 index fund.
TSM stock can be a big winner amid tariff tensions as the company increases its presence within the US, after the recent White House request. We could see some short-term adjustments in AI capex by companies as more effort is put on efficiency instead of adding computing power. However, the larger trend is that TSM is a market leader in chip fabrication and any future demand will be captured by the company.
Zacks.com users have recently been watching TSMC (TSM) quite a bit. Thus, it is worth knowing the facts that could determine the stock's prospects.
TSMC remains a top AI investment due to its dominant market position, strategic alliances, and cutting-edge technologies, despite geopolitical risks. In the long term, I expect to see TSMC's key margins stay where they are now (on a seasonality-adjusted basis) and probably even go up slightly. OpenAI's partnership with TSMC for in-house AI chip fabrication is a strong bullish sign, reinforcing my conviction.
TSMC management has indicated enormous AI opportunity for its foundry business, particularly for GPUs and ASICs. TSMC has a customer group of high caliber technology leaders that is driving its foundry demand. With continuous development in foundry and advanced packaging solutions, we believe TSMC remains the top global foundry and a tremendous stock to buy.
Taiwan is a global chip manufacturing hot spot, home to companies like Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing (TSM -2.08%), which fabricates chips used in nearly every high-end technology. TSMC is a vital supplier to the artificial intelligence (AI) computing power arms race, and slapping a tariff on products that come from Taiwan could be a big hurdle for domestic AI companies to clear.
ChatGPT developer OpenAI is close to producing a new microchip with Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (ADR) (NYSE:TSM) to circumvent Nvidia Corp (NASDAQ:NVDA, ETR:NVD). Last October the AI company, in which Microsoft Corp (NASDAQ:MSFT) is a major investor, was revealed to be working with Broadcom and TSMC to build its first in-house chip to train its AI models.
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (ADR) (NYSE:TSM) shares dropped 1.8% after the company warned that first-quarter revenue would be at the lower end of its forecast due to a $161 million hit from a January earthquake in Taiwan. The world's largest contract chipmaker, which supplies Apple and Nvidia, said the quake led to wafer losses but did not cause structural damage to its factories.
TSMC , the world's biggest contract chipmaker, said on Monday its first-quarter revenue would be closer to the lower end of its guidance, as it expects a $161 million impact from an earthquake that rocked the island in January.