TSMC prioritizes sustainable growth, avoids aggressive price hikes despite soaring AI chip demand Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC) CEO C.C. Wei told shareholders on June 4 that the company will prioritize long-term customer partnerships over aggressive price hikes, even as AI chip demand outstrips supply for years to come. The world's largest chipmaker, which forecasts over 30% sales growth and maintains a 66% gross margin, will implement measured price increases of 5-10% on advanced nodes rather than opportunistic spikes. The strategy aims to maintain goodwill with major clients like Nvidia, Apple, and AMD while reducing incentives for supply chain diversification amid geopolitical uncertainty. TSMC prioritizes sustainable growth, avoids aggressive price hikes despite soaring AI chip demand CEO C.C. Wei says the world's largest chipmaker treats customers as partners, not revenue targets, even as AI demand outstrips supply for years to come. The company that makes the brains inside nearly every AI system on the planet just told the world it won’t squeeze customers for every dollar. In an industry where demand far outpaces supply, that’s a genuinely unusual move. At TSMC’s annual shareholders’ meeting on June 4, CEO C.C. Wei laid out a philosophy that sounds almost quaint in 2026: prioritize long-term relationships over short-term profit maximization. The chipmaker is forecasting over 30% sales growth for the year, and Wei made clear that supply shortages for AI applications aren’t going away anytime soon. The pricing strategy that shouldn’t work but does TSMC has achieved a gross margin of 66%, a figure that would make most manufacturers weep with envy. It’s just doing it through what Wei described as measured, predictable pricing rather than opportunistic spikes. Earlier reports from September 2025 indicated TSMC had planned price increases of 5-10% on advanced semiconductor nodes heading into 2026. Major clients, including Nvidia, Apple, and AMD, were informed of those adjustments. Wei’s framing was deliberate. He positioned TSMC’s customers as partners, not counterparties in a negotiation. Rather than extracting maximum revenue from each wafer today, TSMC is betting that keeping its biggest clients happy will generate far more value over the next decade. Why AI demand changes the calculus Wei predicted that chip supply will remain insufficient for AI applications for years to come. TSMC produces the cutting-edge silicon that powers Nvidia’s data center GPUs, Apple’s latest processors, and AMD’s accelerators. Samsung Foundry and Intel remain years behind on the most advanced nodes. TSMC operates in an environment where US tariffs, export controls, and broader tensions between Washington and Beijing create constant uncertainty. Maintaining goodwill with the world’s largest technology companies provides a buffer against political headwinds. By keeping increases modest and predictable, TSMC also reduces the economic incentive for companies like Apple or Google to diversify their supply chains more aggressively. What this means for investors A 66% gross margin combined with 30%-plus revenue growth is the kind of profile that belongs in the conversation with the best businesses in any sector, not just chips. For the broader technology ecosystem, TSMC’s restraint functions as a subsidy of sorts. Every dollar that Nvidia or AMD doesn’t spend on wafer costs is a dollar that can go toward R&D, lower end-product pricing, or margin expansion. Intel’s foundry ambitions and Samsung’s push to close the manufacturing gap both depend partly on TSMC becoming too expensive for customers to tolerate. By keeping pricing moderate, Wei is effectively pulling the rug out from under the strongest argument his competitors could make to potential defectors. TSMC’s confidence in sustained demand is itself a data point. When the company with the best visibility into global chip orders says supply will lag demand for years, that’s not a forecast. It’s closer to a census of what’s already been ordered. 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/ .