The founder of TSMC, Morris Chang, and former Intel CEO Craig Barrett, both seasoned veterans in the semiconductor industry, have weighed in on Intel's foundry business. Chang, in his straightforward style,
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Intel's semiconductor manufacturing strategy has undergone drastic changes over the past few years, reflecting both historical trends in the industry and the company's shifting priorities. Once
Intel rivals Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co and Broadcom are reportedly exploring potential deals that could split the storied American chip giant.
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing has pledged $100 billion in U.S. investment but it's not necessarily bad news for Intel.
Intel (NASDAQ: INTC) might be split up and sold to Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing (NYSE: TSM), also known as TSMC, and Broadcom (NASDAQ: AVGO), according to the latest rumors. The chipmakers haven't responded to those reports, but such a deal could ...
The investment plan, announced at the White House, was made as the Trump administration pushes to bring chip making back to the United States.
While chip stock Intel (INTC) has been almost frantically trying to build its foundry operations, it still outsources quite a bit of its chip
It's not entirely clear if the new investment is entirely distinct from the $65 billion TSMC has already said it plans to invest in the US. But at minimum, it's a significant scaling up of that commitment.
TSMC's announcement comes as chip-maker Intel, which has struggled for years with declining sales and lost market share, has been seeking customers for its own factories in the US.
Trump is against using tax credits to encourage chip production in the U.S., but semiconductor makers don't seem to mind.
TSMC's $100B U.S. expansion boosts semiconductor supply security, fuels AI growth, and offers 27.78% upside by 2026. Click here to read why TSM stock is a Buy.