Categories: विज्ञान

TSMC expects AI megatrend to strengthen, as profit blows past forecasts

TAIPEI (Reuters) -TSMC, the world's biggest producer of advanced AI chips, forecast fourth-quarter revenue up by as much as 24% as it rides an AI boom that saw it post its sixth consecutive quarter of double-digit profit growth, beating estimates. TSMC said it expects robust artificial intelligence demand to continue and maintained its forecast for capital spending at up to $42 billion for 2025, although it flagged a potential business impact from U.S. trade tariffs and currency moves. The Taiwan company, whose customers include Nvidia and Apple, posted a 39.1% jump in third-quarter net profit and said it would be prudent in its business planning going into 2026. Benefiting from surging demand for advanced chips used in AI applications, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co said net profit for July-September climbed to T$452.3 billion ($14.76 billion). That was well ahead of a T$417.7 billion LSEG SmartEstimate drawn from 20 analysts. SmartEstimates are weighted toward forecasts from analysts who are more consistently accurate. TSMC said it believes the AI boom is strengthening and demand is stronger than what it had anticipated three months ago as it forecast next year to remain healthy due to robust demand for AI-related products. Trump's trade policies and threats to put tariffs on semiconductors have created uncertainty for the global chip industry and TSMC. TSMC announced plans for a $100 billion U.S. investment with Trump at the White House in March, on top of $65 billion pledged for three plants in the state of Arizona, one of which is up and running. On Wednesday, top semiconductor equipment maker ASML, for which TSMC is a major customer, said third-quarter bookings beat market forecasts but that it expected a significant fall in demand from China next year. Samsung Electronics said on Tuesday it expected its biggest quarterly profit in over three years, also thanks to the AI boom. Taiwan-listed shares in TSMC have risen 38% so far this year, largely brushing off concerns about tariffs, and ahead of the 20% rise for the broader market. ($1 = 30.6450 Taiwan dollars) (Reporting by Wen-Yee Lee, Faith Hung and Ben Blanchard; Editing by Christopher Cushing and Muralikumar Anantharaman)

(The article has been published through a syndicated feed. Except for the headline, the content has been published verbatim. Liability lies with original publisher.)

Inkhabar webdesk

Share
Published by Inkhabar webdesk

Recent Posts

Maccabi Tel Aviv fans not allowed to attend Europa League match at Aston Villa

VIDEO SHOWS: RECENT MACCABI TEL AVIV TEAM TRAINING SESSION / SCREENGRABS FROM ASTON VILLA'S WEBSITE…

6 minutes ago

US bank stocks plunge as investors grow uneasy about mounting risks

By Manya Saini, Arasu Kannagi Basil and Ateev Bhandari (Reuters) -U.S. bank stocks, including Zions…

10 minutes ago

Oracle expects cloud sales of $166 billion by 2030 as business expands

By Stephen Nellis and Harshita Mary Varghese (Reuters) -Oracle said on Thursday it expects cloud infrastructure…

11 minutes ago

Alcaraz and Sinner to square off in Six Kings Slam final

VIDEO SHOWS: HIGHLIGHTS OF JANNIK SINNER BEATING NOVAK DJOKOVIC AND CARLOS ALCARAZ BEATING TAYLOR FRITZ…

17 minutes ago

US CFPB scraps Citibank discrimination case three years early

(Corrects paragraph 5 to specify that Citi declined to comment while CFPB did not respond)…

21 minutes ago

Hackers use some Canada and US airport PA systems to praise Hamas, criticize Trump

By Dan Catchpole and Allison Lampert SEATTLE (Reuters) -Hackers took over the public address systems…

22 minutes ago