TSMC manufactures the most advanced chips in the world. ASML makes the machines that allow those chips to be made. Both companies sit at the center of the AI semiconductor boom, but they serve very different roles for investors.
TSMC is the foundry behind AI accelerators from the biggest chip designers on the planet. The company forecast 2026 revenue growth of close to 30% in U.S. dollar terms.
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Limited, TSM
AI accelerators made up a high-teens percentage of TSMC’s total 2025 revenue. That figure covers AI GPUs, AI ASICs, and HBM controllers used in data centers.
TSMC said in its Q1 2025 earnings call that revenue from AI accelerators was expected to double in 2025. That growth is coming from multiple customers and chip types, not just one product cycle.
The business is capital intensive. TSMC must keep investing heavily in advanced manufacturing to stay at the frontier. It also carries geopolitical risk due to its concentration in Taiwan.
Customer concentration is another factor. A large share of TSMC’s advanced node revenue comes from a small number of major chip designers. That creates dependency alongside the growth opportunity.
Still, if demand for AI chips continues to rise, TSMC is one of the most direct ways to capture that growth through wafer production and advanced packaging.
ASML does not make chips. It makes the lithography tools that chipmakers use to produce advanced semiconductors. That puts it one step removed from AI chip demand, but also means it benefits from capital spending across the whole industry.
ASML Holding N.V., ASML
In Q1 2026, ASML reported €8.8 billion in net sales, a 53% gross margin, and €2.8 billion in net income. The company then raised its full-year 2026 sales outlook to between €36 billion and €40 billion.
ASML’s EUV machines are the only tools capable of producing the most advanced chips at scale. No chipmaker can reach leading-edge production without them.
In its 2025 annual strategic report, ASML said generative AI was driving strong demand from both GPU and high-bandwidth memory manufacturers. That means ASML benefits from both logic and memory investment cycles.
Equipment orders can be uneven quarter to quarter. Export control restrictions have also affected ASML’s ability to ship its most advanced tools to certain markets, which remains a risk to watch.
The broader customer base across logic and memory gives ASML a steadier demand profile compared to a single foundry.
TSMC is the more direct bet on AI chip production volumes. ASML is the broader infrastructure play across the entire advanced semiconductor market.
TSMC may offer more upside if AI chip demand stays strong. ASML may offer a more stable path through the same long-term trend.
Both companies remain central to how the AI chip industry operates. The choice between them depends on how directly an investor wants to be tied to AI chip production volumes versus broader semiconductor capital spending.
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