Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company posted another blockbuster performance on Thursday, reporting a 58% surge in first-quarter net profit that shattered market expectations and extended its streak of record earnings.
The results underscore the unrelenting appetite for advanced chips powering the artificial intelligence boom, even as fresh geopolitical risks swirl around global supply chains.
Net income for the three months ended March reached NT$572.48 billion, comfortably ahead of the LSEG SmartEstimate of NT$543.32 billion. Revenue climbed to NT$1.134 trillion (about $35 billion), topping the expected NT$1.127 trillion and marking a 35% jump from a year earlier. This marks the fourth consecutive quarter of record profits for the world’s largest contract chipmaker.
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TSMC first flagged the strong revenue growth last week, but the profit beat provided fresh confirmation of healthy margins and operational efficiency. Asia’s most valuable technology company by market capitalization, TSMC produces the sophisticated semiconductors found in everything from iPhones to data-center accelerators. Its biggest customer is now Nvidia, whose AI processors have become the engine of the current technology cycle, while Apple remains a key partner for mobile chips.
“AI-related demand continues to be extremely robust,” TSMC President and CEO C.C. Wei said during Thursday’s earnings call.
He pointed to rapid advances in artificial intelligence that are driving exponential increases in computation needs. Wei added that the company has received “strong signals and a positive outlook” from customers, reinforcing its belief in a multi-year AI growth cycle.
The company guided for full-year 2026 revenue growth of more than 30% in U.S. dollar terms and projected second-quarter revenue between $39 billion and $40.2 billion, implying roughly 10% sequential growth. It also signaled that capital spending this year will land at the high end of its previously announced range of $52 billion to $56 billion, reflecting aggressive expansion to keep pace with demand.
Advanced process technologies, defined as 7-nanometer and below, accounted for 74% of wafer revenue in the quarter, with chips at the leading-edge 3-nanometer node alone making up 25%. High-performance computing, which includes AI and 5G applications, drove 61% of total sales, highlighting how deeply the AI wave has reshaped TSMC’s business mix.
Smaller nanometer processes deliver greater transistor density, translating directly into higher performance and better power efficiency—the very attributes hyperscalers crave for training and running ever-larger AI models.
Executives used the call to address potential risks from the ongoing Middle East conflict, including possible disruptions to energy supplies and specialty gases such as helium and hydrogen. They reassured investors that near-term operations face no material impact, thanks to diversified sourcing and safety stockpiles of critical materials.
The company is also expanding physical capacity. It recently broke ground on a new advanced fabrication plant in Tainan, Taiwan, as part of a broader global push that includes facilities in the United States and Japan.
Senior analyst William Li at Counterpoint Research captured the current market dynamic, noting: “The narrative for 2026 is as much about resource constraints as it is about growth. Demand still significantly outpaces supply and isn’t showing any major sign of slowing down.”
Li added that the industry is likely to remain in a sold-out environment throughout the year, with semiconductor companies struggling to keep products on shelves. That tightness helps explain TSMC’s decision to lean into the upper end of its capex guidance and why shares have continued to perform well despite broader market jitters.
For all the optimism, the scale of investment required is staggering. TSMC is pouring tens of billions into new fabs and equipment at a time when energy prices remain elevated, and geopolitical tensions from the Strait of Hormuz to U.S.-China tech frictions add layers of uncertainty.
Yet Wei and his team appear convinced that the AI megatrend is structural rather than cyclical, driven by applications that are only beginning to move from data centers into everyday use.
The latest results leave little doubt that TSMC sits at the center of the AI supply chain. As long as hyperscalers, smartphone makers, and emerging AI-adjacent sectors keep placing orders for its most advanced nodes, the foundry giant is positioned to keep printing record numbers. The bigger question for 2026 and beyond is whether the industry can expand capacity fast enough to meet that insatiable demand without triggering the kind of shortages or cost spikes that could eventually cool the boom.
For now, TSMC’s numbers suggest the party is far from over.



