July 14, 2026, (Inside AI) — Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC) is poised to report its fifth consecutive quarter of record profit on Thursday, propelled by unrelenting demand for advanced AI chips. The world’s largest contract chipmaker is expected to post a net profit of T$632.6 billion ($19.65 billion) for the second quarter, a 59% surge from a year earlier, according to an LSEG SmartEstimate of 18 analysts.
The earnings, scheduled for release at 0600 GMT, would mark TSMC’s highest-ever quarterly net income, surpassing the T$572.5 billion threshold. The company already reported a 36% year-on-year jump in second-quarter revenue on Monday, setting a new record and beating market expectations.
TSMC’s dominance in 3-nanometer and 2-nanometer process technologies, along with its advanced chip-on-wafer-on-substrate (CoWoS) packaging, has made it indispensable to AI giants like Nvidia and Apple. Its market capitalization has swelled to roughly $1.97 trillion, nearly double that of South Korean rival Samsung Electronics.
“TSMC’s strong second-quarter revenue shows AI demand remains healthy, driving demand for its advanced chip production and CoWoS packaging,” said Dan Nystedt, research analyst at TriOrient, an Asia-based private investment firm.
Analysts broadly expect TSMC to raise its full-year revenue growth outlook from the current “above 30%” guidance. Haas Liu, Bank of America’s Asia semiconductor analyst, noted in a research note that supply chain checks indicate the AI demand pipeline remains robust, and TSMC could lift the forecast.
Investors will also scrutinize any changes to TSMC’s capital expenditure plans, a key signal of management’s confidence in sustained AI growth. In April, the company projected 2026 capex at the high end of its $52 billion to $56 billion range. While some analysts expect no change, Liu forecasts a raise to about $58 billion, citing tight equipment supply and aggressive expansion by memory makers like Samsung, Micron Technology, and SK Hynix.
TSMC is investing $165 billion in new chip factories in Arizona, underscoring its commitment to diversifying production beyond Taiwan. The company’s Taipei-listed shares have climbed 56% this year, slightly outpacing the broader market’s 54% gain.
Geopolitical Undercurrents and Capacity Constraints #
The earnings come amid heightened geopolitical tensions and a global race for semiconductor self-sufficiency. TSMC’s massive Arizona investment is partly a hedge against supply chain disruptions, but it also reflects pressure from Washington to onshore critical chip production. The U.S. CHIPS Act has funneled billions into domestic manufacturing, yet TSMC’s advanced nodes remain concentrated in Taiwan, a vulnerability that keeps both investors and policymakers on edge.
Meanwhile, CoWoS capacity remains a bottleneck. Despite TSMC’s efforts to double output this year, demand from Nvidia’s H200 and Blackwell GPUs far outstrips supply. Industry sources suggest lead times for CoWoS packaging stretch to over six months, forcing some customers to explore alternatives like Intel’s EMIB or Samsung’s I-Cube. However, TSMC’s technology lead in both front-end and back-end processes makes it hard to displace.
Competitors are not standing still. Samsung announced in May that it secured a multi-year deal with a major U.S. hyperscaler for its 2-nanometer GAA process, aiming to close the gap. Intel’s 18A node is also on track for 2025 production, with claims of performance parity with TSMC’s 2-nanometer. Yet, analysts caution that yield rates and ecosystem maturity still favor TSMC, especially for high-volume AI workloads.
The Profit Paradox: Pricing Power vs. Customer Squeeze #
TSMC’s record profits mask a delicate balancing act. The company has been raising prices on advanced nodes, with some reports indicating a 10-15% premium for 3-nanometer wafers in 2026. While Nvidia and Apple can absorb these costs given their own fat margins, smaller fabless firms face margin compression. This could accelerate consolidation in the AI chip space, favoring giants and squeezing out startups.
Moreover, the capex hike to $58 billion—if confirmed—would be TSMC’s largest ever, raising questions about return on investment. Historically, semiconductor capex cycles have preceded downturns, as overcapacity leads to price erosion. However, the AI supercycle may defy historical patterns, given the structural shift in compute demand from cloud to edge inference. TSMC’s guidance on Thursday will be a litmus test for this thesis.
With AI chip expectations “so high they’re impossible to satisfy,” as one analyst put it, TSMC’s every word will be parsed for signs of a peak. For now, the numbers speak of a company firing on all cylinders, but the semiconductor industry’s cyclical ghosts are never far away.