Articles Tagged: foundry

2 articles found

TSMC’s Q3 Report: Are AI Chips Finally Turning the Foundry Market? What TSM’s Earnings Mean for CapEx, Pricing and Taiwan’s Supply‑Chain Risk

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. delivered another record quarter, underscoring how artificial intelligence is rewiring the economics of the semiconductor foundry business. Double‑digit revenue growth, an outsized shift toward advanced nodes, and a higher capital spending floor all point to AI as a structural—not cyclical—driver of utilization and pricing power at the leading edge. The ripple effects extend beyond Hsinchu. ASML’s latest update strengthens the 2026 outlook floor for lithography demand while warning of a significant China sales decline next year, sharpening the geographic rebalancing of tool orders. Meanwhile, fresh U.S.–China trade friction and China’s rare‑earth export curbs add a new layer of policy and supply‑chain risk just as hyperscalers race to deploy compute capacity. This analysis examines TSMC’s Q3 scorecard and outlook, connects the dots to utilization and margins across nodes, interprets the CapEx trajectory through an ASML lens, and assesses the policy overhang. We finish with investor scenarios that frame opportunities and risks for foundries, equipment makers, and AI chip designers through 2026–27.

TSMCASMLAI chips+17 more

Intel Stock Outlook: Policy Tailwinds vs. Execution Headwinds in an AI-Centric Cycle

As of Thursday, August 14, 2025 (4:00 pm ET), Intel (INTC) closed at $23.86 with an implied market capitalization of approximately $99.13 billion (per Yahoo Finance and FMP). Broader risk appetite was firm: SPY $644.95, Nasdaq Composite 21,710.67, and SOXX $254.14, while the VIX slipped to 14.51 (Yahoo Finance). Semis leadership remained concentrated in AI bellwethers: Nvidia (NVDA) $182.02, AMD $180.95, and TSM $241.00 (Yahoo Finance). Rates context as of August 14, 2025 shows a normalizing, upward-sloping curve: 2Y 3.74%, 5Y 3.82%, 10Y 4.29%, 30Y 4.88%, with the 2s10s spread at +55 bps and 3M–10Y roughly flat (−0.01 bps), signaling transition from deep inversion (U.S. Treasury). Market-based inflation metrics are anchored: the 10-year breakeven is 2.39% and 10-year TIPS real yield 1.87% (FRED). High-grade and high-yield credit spreads remain supportive at ~0.78% (IG OAS) and ~2.90% (HY OAS), respectively (FRED).

IntelINTCsemiconductors+16 more