Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company currently maintains a market valuation around $2.25 trillion, with shares changing hands at $434.70 on the New York Stock Exchange. The distance to a $3 trillion milestone represents roughly a 34% climb — a threshold the company’s financial performance indicates may arrive sooner than conventional wisdom suggests.
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Limited, TSM
The first quarter of 2026 delivered impressive results. Revenue totaled $35.9 billion, representing a 40.6% jump from the prior-year period. Net income climbed 58.3% year-over-year. Gross margin reached 66.2%, while the net profit margin settled at 50.5% — effectively meaning the company retains half of every revenue dollar as profit.
Executive leadership provided second-quarter revenue guidance ranging from $39 billion to $40.2 billion. For the complete 2026 fiscal year, growth is projected to surpass 30% when measured in U.S. currency, positioning annual revenue comfortably above the $150 billion threshold.
The equity trades with a price-to-earnings multiple of 36.17 and a PEG ratio of 1.09. Over the past year, shares have fluctuated between $223.70 and $479.00. Analyst consensus leans toward a “Buy” recommendation, with the mean price objective at $449.38. Barclays maintains an overweight stance with a $470 price target, while Needham carries a buy rating with a $480 projection.
TSMC recently lifted its quarterly dividend payment to $1.1136 per share from the previous $0.95. The current annualized yield hovers around 1.0%.
Nvidia designs the graphics processing units that drive AI computation centers, but manufacturing isn’t handled in-house. The same applies to AMD and Apple. Each advanced processor from these technology giants originates in TSMC facilities. The semiconductor manufacturer holds approximately 70% of global advanced chip production capacity, with no meaningful competition at the most sophisticated production nodes.
Advanced process technologies at 7 nanometers and smaller now represent 74% of TSMC’s wafer-level revenue. This product composition carries significance — more advanced nodes command premium pricing and deliver superior profitability. As artificial intelligence applications drive requirements toward 3nm and eventually 2nm manufacturing processes, TSMC captures higher revenue per wafer produced.
Every major cloud infrastructure provider deploying GPU arrays — Amazon, Alphabet, Microsoft — relies on TSMC-manufactured semiconductors. Nvidia’s Blackwell architecture, Google’s tensor processing units, and Amazon’s Trainium chips all originate from its production facilities.
The persistent concern surrounding Taiwan Semiconductor centered on geographic concentration — nearly all manufacturing capacity resided in Taiwan. This exposure created what market observers labeled a “Taiwan discount” embedded in the stock price.
That discount is diminishing. TSMC has allocated $165 billion toward its Arizona manufacturing complex, spanning more than 2,000 acres with six fabrication plants in the development pipeline. The inaugural Arizona facility generated $514 million in operating profit during its first year of commercial operation. The second phase, utilizing 3nm process technology, remains on schedule for 2027 completion — running a full year ahead of initial timelines.
Expanded domestic U.S. production capacity provides institutional capital allocators who previously maintained distance a compelling rationale to establish positions.
Regarding institutional ownership, Montrusco Bolton reduced its TSM holdings by 27% during the first quarter, disposing of approximately 188,725 shares. Conversely, FUKOKU Mutual Life Insurance expanded its position by more than 2,500% in the identical timeframe. Institutional investors collectively hold 16.51% of outstanding shares.
Two company insiders also acquired stock in late June at prices ranging from $76.64 to $79.19 per American Depositary Receipt equivalent, adding a combined $155,830 to their personal holdings.
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