TSMC Hits Record $40 Billion in Q2 Revenue Amid AI Boom, Pledges Additional $100 Billion for US Expansion
Ana Fernanda Reporter
| 2026-07-18 08:42:31
TAIPEI — Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC), the world’s largest contract chipmaker, has delivered another blockbuster quarterly performance, rewriting financial records on the back of an insatiable global demand for Artificial Intelligence (AI) infrastructure. The company’s stellar second-quarter earnings report, released on July 16, 2026, was accompanied by a monumental announcement of an additional $100 billion investment in Arizona, further solidifying its manufacturing foothold in the United States.
According to its official financial disclosure, TSMC’s consolidated revenue for the second quarter (April to June) reached a staggering NT$1.27 trillion (approximately $40.20 billion USD / 58.56 trillion KRW), marking a robust 36% increase year-over-year. Net income skyrocketed by 77.4% to hit a historic high of NT$706.56 billion (around $22.37 billion USD / 32.50 trillion KRW), soundly thrashing the Wall Street consensus estimate of NT$632.6 billion.
The chip giant's profitability metrics highlighted its immense pricing power and operational efficiency. TSMC recorded a phenomenal operating profit margin of 60.3% and a gross margin of 67.7% for the quarter. Company executives attributed the explosive growth to a structural shift in global computing needs, spearheaded by advanced node technologies. Shipments of its highly sought-after 3-nanometer (nm) and 5nm processes accounted for 30% and 33% of total wafer revenue, respectively, meaning advanced technologies (7nm and below) now comprise more than three-quarters of TSMC's total sales.
Looking ahead, TSMC provided an exceptionally bullish outlook for the upcoming third quarter, forecasting revenue to land between $44.6 billion and $45.8 billion. This guidance reflects the non-stop momentum of AI accelerators and advanced packaging technologies like CoWoS (Chip-on-Wafer-on-Substrate). As the primary foundry manufacturing the hardware brains for industry leaders like NVIDIA, Apple, and Broadcom, TSMC sits comfortably as the irreplaceable linchpin of the global tech supply chain. To sustain this unprecedented trajectory, the company also raised its full-year 2026 capital expenditure budget to a massive range of $60 billion to $64 billion, up from its prior projection of $52 billion to $56 billion.
Simultaneously, TSMC sent shockwaves through the tech world by dramatically scaling up its commitments on American soil. During the earnings conference call, TSMC Chairman and CEO C.C. Wei revealed plans to inject an additional $100 billion (approx. 147.8 trillion KRW) into its Phoenix, Arizona site. This massive capital infusion is specifically designated to fund at least four more state-of-the-art wafer fabs and next-generation advanced packaging facilities. The new factories will focus heavily on 2-nanometer and even more advanced cutting-edge logic processes.
This newly announced funding comes on top of the $165 billion investment plan TSMC outlined in March of last year for front-end fabs, packaging facilities, and dedicated research and development centers. With the fresh $100 billion allocation, TSMC’s total planned investment in the United States has swollen to an astronomical $265 billion (approx. 391.7 trillion KRW).
"With strong collaboration and deep support from our leading U.S. customers as well as federal, state, and city governments, we are thrilled to expand our presence," Chairman Wei stated during the call. He emphasized that the expansion is tailored to safely secure long-term, multi-year demand from premier U.S. clients, while fostering a self-sustaining domestic semiconductor ecosystem, strengthening fractured supply chains, and generating thousands of high-tech, high-paying jobs in America.
Industry analysts note that this aggressive expansion serves a dual purpose. While it placates rising geopolitical pressures and satisfies the U.S. government's domestic manufacturing mandates, it ensures that TSMC maintains an uncontested lead over rivals like Samsung Electronics and Intel. Despite some investor anxieties regarding the immense capital depreciation costs that these expensive fabs will bring in the late 2020s, TSMC’s current financial muscle proves that the AI era is, for the foreseeable future, funded and fueled by Taiwan's chipmaking crown jewel.
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