TLDR Bernstein raised TSMC’s target price from NT$1,800 to NT$2,200 AI revenue projected to exceed 20% of total revenue by 2026, up from 18% in 2025 TSMC approvedTLDR Bernstein raised TSMC’s target price from NT$1,800 to NT$2,200 AI revenue projected to exceed 20% of total revenue by 2026, up from 18% in 2025 TSMC approved

Taiwan Semiconductor (TSM) Stock: Jumps 83% in a Year — Bernstein Thinks There’s More to Come

2026/03/16 18:07
3 min read
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TLDR

  • Bernstein raised TSMC’s target price from NT$1,800 to NT$2,200
  • AI revenue projected to exceed 20% of total revenue by 2026, up from 18% in 2025
  • TSMC approved $44.96 billion in capital expenditure to expand AI chip production
  • February revenue hit NT$317.6 billion — up 22.2% year-over-year
  • Combined January–February revenue grew ~30% versus the same period last year

TSMC’s board approved nearly $45 billion in capital expenditure as Bernstein lifted its price target and AI revenue projections point firmly upward.


TSM Stock Card
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Limited, TSM

TSMC reported February revenue of NT$317.6 billion, a 22.2% year-over-year jump. That figure dipped about 21% from January, but that’s a normal seasonal pattern — nothing to read into.

Zoom out and the picture looks even stronger. Combined revenue for the first two months of 2026 climbed roughly 30% compared to the same period in 2025. The engine behind that growth? High-performance computing and AI demand from the likes of Apple, Nvidia, and AMD.

Bernstein analysts say AI-related revenue will top 20% of TSMC’s total income by 2026. That’s up from an estimated 18% in 2025. It’s not just logic chips driving that number either.

TSMC has started generating AI revenue through High Bandwidth Memory (HBM) base dies — the layer used at the bottom of HBM stacks. That’s a relatively new contribution, and it’s adding another lane to the AI revenue highway.

Bernstein Raises Price Target

On the back of these projections, Bernstein bumped TSMC’s target price from NT$1,800 to NT$2,200. Analysts pointed to AI momentum and stable non-AI demand as the two pillars supporting that upgrade.

Non-AI demand isn’t going anywhere either. High-end smartphones continue to underpin that side of the business. Bernstein also noted that if any non-AI clients free up capacity, AI customers — who are currently facing shortages — are positioned to absorb it quickly.

That supply-demand dynamic gives TSMC a useful buffer. Even a slowdown in one segment gets mopped up by the other.

$45 Billion Capital Spend

TSMC’s board greenlit $44.96 billion in new capital expenditure. The money is earmarked for advanced manufacturing, packaging improvements, specialty technologies, and new fabrication plant construction.

That’s not a defensive move — it’s a direct response to sustained client demand. TSMC is building capacity now so it can deliver later.

For shareholders, there’s a more immediate reward on the table. The company declared a Q4 2025 cash dividend of $0.9503 per ADS, payable July 9, 2026, to holders of record as of June 11, 2026.

TSM stock has climbed more than 83% over the past twelve months, closing last Friday at €295.50.

The post Taiwan Semiconductor (TSM) Stock: Jumps 83% in a Year — Bernstein Thinks There’s More to Come appeared first on CoinCentral.

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