Taiwan Semiconductor (TSM -0.61%) is diversifying its manufacturing base outside of Taiwan, and the changes have consequences for investors.
Following a blowout Q4 net profit on solid AI chip demand, let's look at what makes TSMC a compelling stock to buy.
TSMC (TSM) is at a 52-week high, but can investors hope for more gains in the future? We take a look at the company's fundamentals for clues.
Foundry giant Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing (NYSE: TSM), popularly known as TSMC, released its fourth-quarter 2024 results on Jan. 16, and investors reacted positively to the company's performance as it not only beat Wall Street's expectations but also delivered better-than-expected guidance.
Wendell Huang, CFO of TSMC talks about the AI boom, how AI is helping TSMC's own operations and their international footprints.
Wendell Huang, CFO of TSMC talks about the prospect of CHIPS Act funding and says China isn't closing the technology gap with TSMC in chipmaking.
U.S. President Donald Trump has accused Taiwan of "stealing" his country's chip industry. But Taiwan's biggest chip company is confident the Trump administration will continue funding its projects in the U.S. ➡️ TSMC was promised $6.6 billion under the Biden-administration's CHIPS and Science ACT to help build three cutting-edge chip fabrication plants in Arizona.
Shares of Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing (TSM 2.67%) were one of several artificial intelligence (AI) stocks moving higher today, a broad response to President Trump's announcement of the new Stargate AI infrastructure project yesterday afternoon.
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing (TSM 1.06%) has enjoyed a stellar run on the stock market in the past year, clocking gains of 87% as of this writing, and it looks like the foundry giant is set to deliver another terrific year to investors in 2025.
Semiconductor stock investors got great news about starting the earnings season from Taiwan Semiconductor (TSM 1.33%).
The management team forecasts a compound annual growth rate of over 20% for the next several years.
'Mad Money' host Jim Cramer looks at Taiwan Semiconductor earnings and how they could have impacted the stock market.