The entry of chip giant Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) into the elite club of the world’s most valuable companies is further proof that the generative artificial intelligence (AI) revolution is shaking up Wall Street.
TSMC, which is listed in Taipei and New York, on Monday briefly broke the US$1-trillion market capitalization barrier, putting it ahead of Tesla Inc as the seventh-most valuable technology giant on the stock market.
Also on Monday, Alphabet Inc, Apple Inc and Meta Platforms Inc hit all-time highs.
Photo: CNA
The top 10 of the world’s most valuable companies is headed by Microsoft Corp and Apple, closely followed by AI chip designer Nvidia Corp.
Their global stock market valuations exceed US$3 trillion on Wall Street.
Alphabet and Amazon.com Inc, which recently topped the US$2-trillion mark, follow in an ever-changing ranking.
Oil giant Saudi Aramco slipped into sixth place, followed by Meta, TSMC and Tesla.
“The semiconductor industry is now the leading sector in the S&P 500,” CFRA Research analyst Angelo Zino said recently. “It’s taken over the last 15 or 18 months. That shows you how much the world has changed.”
The explosion in worldwide demand for chips, boosted by the rise of computing-intensive generative AI, promises sustained expansion for the industry.
Chipmakers are not only attracting investors, but also a host of government subsidies.
US President Joe Biden’s administration, for example, has granted tens of billions of dollars in financial support over several years to help build chip factories in the US.
Worldwide sales of semiconductors, which include integrated circuits, microprocessors and memory chips, are expected to reach US$611.2 billion this year, a record for the industry, the Semiconductor Industry Association said.
Sales are expected to jump by 16 percent this year and 12.5 percent next year, the association said.
Nvidia, a designer of graphics processing units (GPUs), is the frontrunner of the craze, and has triumphed on Wall Street in recent months.
Nvidia’s GPUs are a crucial component in building generative AI and since the November 2022 launch of ChatGPT, its market capitalization has increased eightfold.
In the middle of last month, the Santa Clara, California-based group even briefly became the world’s most valuable publicly traded company, ahead of Microsoft at US$3.3 trillion.
“Nvidia’s GPU chips are the new gold or oil of the technology sector,” Wedbush Securities Inc analysts said.
For them, Nvidia, Apple and Microsoft are now engaged in “the race for the 4 trillion dollar market valuation.”
TSMC, with most of its factories based in Taiwan, is well-placed to also reap the rewards.
While Nvidia, which only designs chips, but does not manufacture them, remains discreet about its supply chain, it is widely believed that the bulk of its products are manufactured by TSMC.
The Taiwanese giant, which controls more than half of the world’s semiconductor demand, posted first-quarter sales of US$18.87 billion, up 13 percent year-on-year, while net income climbed 9 percent to US$6.97 billion.
As for Nvidia, its quarterly profit reached US$14.9 billion, a sevenfold increase over the previous year, on sales of US$26 billion.
Hon Hai Precision Industry Co (鴻海精密) yesterday said that its research institute has launched its first advanced artificial intelligence (AI) large language model (LLM) using traditional Chinese, with technology assistance from Nvidia Corp. Hon Hai, also known as Foxconn Technology Group (富士康科技集團), said the LLM, FoxBrain, is expected to improve its data analysis capabilities for smart manufacturing, and electric vehicle and smart city development. An LLM is a type of AI trained on vast amounts of text data and uses deep learning techniques, particularly neural networks, to process and generate language. They are essential for building and improving AI-powered servers. Nvidia provided assistance
DOMESTIC SUPPLY: The probe comes as Donald Trump has called for the repeal of the US$52.7 billion CHIPS and Science Act, which the US Congress passed in 2022 The Office of the US Trade Representative is to hold a hearing tomorrow into older Chinese-made “legacy” semiconductors that could heap more US tariffs on chips from China that power everyday goods from cars to washing machines to telecoms equipment. The probe, which began during former US president Joe Biden’s tenure in December last year, aims to protect US and other semiconductor producers from China’s massive state-driven buildup of domestic chip supply. A 50 percent US tariff on Chinese semiconductors began on Jan. 1. Legacy chips use older manufacturing processes introduced more than a decade ago and are often far simpler than
STILL HOPEFUL: Delayed payment of NT$5.35 billion from an Indian server client sent its earnings plunging last year, but the firm expects a gradual pickup ahead Asustek Computer Inc (華碩), the world’s No. 5 PC vendor, yesterday reported an 87 percent slump in net profit for last year, dragged by a massive overdue payment from an Indian cloud service provider. The Indian customer has delayed payment totaling NT$5.35 billion (US$162.7 million), Asustek chief financial officer Nick Wu (吳長榮) told an online earnings conference. Asustek shipped servers to India between April and June last year. The customer told Asustek that it is launching multiple fundraising projects and expected to repay the debt in the short term, Wu said. The Indian customer accounted for less than 10 percent to Asustek’s
Gasoline and diesel prices this week are to decrease NT$0.5 and NT$1 per liter respectively as international crude prices continued to fall last week, CPC Corp, Taiwan (CPC, 台灣中油) and Formosa Petrochemical Corp (台塑石化) said yesterday. Effective today, gasoline prices at CPC and Formosa stations are to decrease to NT$29.2, NT$30.7 and NT$32.7 per liter for 92, 95 and 98-octane unleaded gasoline respectively, while premium diesel is to cost NT$27.9 per liter at CPC stations and NT$27.7 at Formosa pumps, the companies said in separate statements. Global crude oil prices dropped last week after the eight OPEC+ members said they would