Taiwanese tech firms secure record $14.5B in debt deals to fund AI expansion Taiwanese technology companies have completed a record $14.5 billion in debt deals to fund artificial intelligence infrastructure expansion, with convertible bond sales alone reaching $4.4 billion in the first quarter of 2026. Wiwynn led the borrowing with a $2 billion raise, while TSMC announced $56 billion in planned capital expenditures for 2026, signaling extreme confidence in near-term revenue growth from AI demand. The borrowing spree positions Taiwan's supply chain as a critical indicator for global AI investment, though it carries risk if hyperscaler spending plateaus. Taiwanese tech firms secure record $14.5B in debt deals to fund AI expansion From TSMC to Wiwynn, Taiwan's tech giants are borrowing at historic levels to build out the infrastructure powering the global AI boom. Taiwan’s technology sector just went on its biggest borrowing spree ever. Companies across the island have completed $14.5 billion in debt deals, all aimed at expanding capacity for artificial intelligence infrastructure. The convertible bond boom Convertible bond sales from Taiwanese firms hit $4.4 billion in the first quarter of 2026 alone, setting a new record. That single quarter accounts for nearly a third of the broader $14.5 billion total. Wiwynn, a cloud computing server manufacturer that supplies major data center operators, led the charge by raising $2 billion. The company has become a critical link in the AI supply chain, building the physical hardware that companies like Microsoft and Meta need to train and deploy their models. TSMC sets the pace TSMC, which fabricates the most advanced chips on earth for clients including Nvidia and Apple, announced plans for $56 billion in capital expenditures in 2026. TSMC reported a 35% increase in fourth-quarter profit in January 2026, giving it the financial runway to justify that level of spending. AMD pledged over $10 billion to Taiwan’s semiconductor and AI ecosystem in May 2026, a clear signal that global chipmakers view the island as irreplaceable infrastructure for the AI era. Meanwhile, Foxconn has been ramping up AI server production, adding another dimension to Taiwan’s dominance. Why this matters beyond Taiwan US hyperscalers, the Amazons, Googles, and Microsofts of the world, raised over $120 billion for AI infrastructure in 2025. Taiwanese firms are essentially doing the same thing on the supply side of the equation. For investors watching the semiconductor and AI hardware space, Taiwan’s record borrowing is a leading indicator worth tracking closely. When companies take on this much debt, they’re signaling extreme confidence in near-term revenue growth. If AI spending by hyperscalers plateaus or contracts, these firms will be sitting on billions in obligations without the cash flow to comfortably service them. Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy https://cryptobriefing.com/editorial-policy/ .