TSMC shares climbed as much as 6.9% Monday, marking the biggest single-day gain since April. The rally pushed shares to a new record high in Taipei trading.
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Limited, TSM
Goldman Sachs triggered the move by raising its price target to NT$2,330 from NT$1,720. The firm maintained its Conviction Buy rating on the stock.
The chipmaker led a broad rally in Asian tech stocks as investors poured money into AI-related companies. TSMC helped drive Taiwan’s Taiex index above 30,000 for the first time ever.
Goldman analysts led by Bruce Lu called AI “a multi-year growth engine” for TSMC. The firm now expects the company to deploy more than $150 billion in capital spending between 2026 and 2028.
That’s a lot of cash for building new factories and buying equipment. But Goldman thinks it’s necessary to meet exploding demand for AI chips.
The investment bank projects TSMC’s advanced 3nm and 5nm production lines will remain tight through 2027. Token consumption in AI applications is growing so fast that silicon demand will outpace supply.
Goldman raised its revenue growth forecasts for TSMC. The firm now expects 30% growth in 2026 and 28% in 2027, both measured in dollar terms. Previous estimates called for 22% growth in each year.
TSMC supplies chips for major customers including Nvidia and Apple. The company holds a dominant position in contract chipmaking, especially for cutting-edge semiconductors.
Goldman expects TSMC’s gross margins to reach and hold above 60% from 2026 through 2028. That’s impressive considering the company will be spending heavily on new facilities.
The firm cited mild dilution from overseas factories and continued productivity improvements. TSMC is expanding production beyond Taiwan but keeping efficiency high.
Goldman also boosted its forecasts for CoWoS shipments, a packaging technology used in AI chips. The bank now expects 1.185 million wafers in 2026 and 2.195 million in 2027.
TSMC’s stock surged 44% in 2025. The rally pushed its market value above $1 trillion for the first time. That makes it one of the world’s most valuable companies.
Other Asian chip stocks also rallied Monday. Samsung Electronics extended gains to a fifth straight session. Japanese equipment makers Tokyo Electron and Advantest each jumped more than 7%.
Sanford C. Bernstein analysts said TSMC’s capacity is “king” for leading-edge semiconductors. Most of the world’s top chip companies rely on its manufacturing services.
TSMC reports quarterly earnings on January 15. The results will give investors a clearer picture of AI demand heading into 2026.
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