BusinessTSMC Seen Posting 4th Straight Quarter of Record Profits on Insatiable AI Demand
By Reuters | 12 Apr, 2026
TSMC is expected to see a 50% net profits surge in Q1 as it struggles to meet demand for chips used in large-scale AI infrastructure projects.
TSMC, the world's largest manufacturer of advanced artificial intelligence chips, will likely notch up a fourth consecutive quarter of record earnings with a 50% surge in net profit for January-March thanks to booming demand for AI infrastructure.
Analysts say that demand for Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co's 3-nanometre technology to produce AI chips and its advanced packaging technology continues to outstrip the firm's current production capacity.
That's driven Asia's most valuable company, a key supplier to Nvidia and Apple, to new heights. Its market capitalisation is now nearly double that of South Korean rival Samsung Electronics at around $1.6 trillion.
On Thursday, TSMC is expected to report a net profit of T$542.6 billion ($17.1 billion) for the quarter, according to an LSEG SmartEstimate compiled from 19 analysts. SmartEstimates place greater weight on forecasts from analysts who are more consistently accurate.
An earnings call at which it will provide second-quarter and updated full-year guidance is scheduled for 0600 GMT.
Any profit result above T$505.7 billion would mark the company's highest-ever quarterly net income and its ninth consecutive quarter of profit growth.
Last week, it posted a 35% year-on-year rise in first-quarter revenue nL6N40T0G0, ahead of market forecasts.
Looking ahead, "we expect higher quarter-on-quarter revenue growth guidance for the second quarter of 2026, driven by sustained AI demand and advanced-node leadership," Arthur Lai, head of technology research for Asia at Macquarie Capital, said in a note to clients.
The war in the Middle East threatens to disrupt the supply of production materials for semiconductors such as helium and neon, but TSMC is seen as well-placed to weather the crisis.
"TSMC's diversified sourcing and safety stock should be sufficient to manage short-term disruptions," said Galen Zeng, senior research manager at IDC.
One area of focus will be whether TSMC maintains or raises its 2026 capital spending plans as that will reflect management's confidence in long-term AI demand, Zeng said.
TSMC is investing $165 billion to build chip factories in the U.S. state of Arizona.
The company has also revised its plans in Japan and is now set to manufacture 3-nanometre chips there, instead of focusing on more mature nodes.
TSMC's Taipei-listed shares have gained 28% so far this year, outperforming the 22% rise for the broader market.
($1 = 31.7730 Taiwan dollars)
(Reporting by Wen-Yee Lee and Ben Blanchard; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)
Recent Articles
- Anthropic Surpasses OpenAI with $965 Billion Valuation
- US, Iran Float Another Ceasefire Deal Framework After Latest Exchange of Fire
- How and When Flying Cars Will Change American Life
- China to Build AI Token Futures Market in Race with US
- US Weekly Jobless Claims Increase Slightly Amid Low Layoffs
- US PCE Inflation Shot Up in April
- BYD Steps up Push of 'God's Eye' Assisted Driving System
- Costlier Flights, Hotels Make Summer Travel K-Shaped
- ByteDance Developing Custom CPU Chips to Support Agentic AI Rollout
- IBM to Invest $10 Billion for Large-Scale Quantum Computer by 2029
