# Пов'язані статті щодо TSMC

Центр новин HTX надає останні статті та поглиблений аналіз на тему "TSMC", що охоплює ринкові тренди, оновлення проєктів, технологічні розробки та регуляторну політику в криптоіндустрії.

The Semiconductor Century: Investment Roadmap Amidst the 2026 AI Surge

The Semiconductor Century: Investment Roadmap in the 2026 AI Surge This analysis outlines the pivotal role of semiconductors in the 2026 AI-driven landscape. With the global semiconductor market projected to reach ~$9.75 trillion in 2026, AI infrastructure spending by hyperscalers is a primary growth driver, fundamentally shifting demand from consumer electronics to strategic technology assets. The report breaks down the industry into four key segments: 1) Designers (e.g., Nvidia, AMD) who own high-margin IP; 2) Foundries, led by TSMC which manufactures ~90% of the world's most advanced chips; 3) Equipment makers like ASML, the sole producer of critical EUV lithography machines; and 4) Memory specialists such as SK Hynix, crucial for supplying high-bandwidth memory (HBM) for AI servers. It highlights significant companies: Nvidia (dominant in AI GPUs and CUDA software), TSMC (critical but geopolitically concentrated foundry), ASML (monopoly in advanced lithography), AMD (key alternative to Nvidia), Broadcom (leader in custom AI chips), and SK Hynix (leading HBM supplier). For diversified exposure, semiconductor ETFs like SMH, SOXX, and SOXQ are presented. Key investment risks are emphasized: over-reliance on AI demand, acute geopolitical and supply chain concentration in Taiwan, policy uncertainty around export controls, the cyclical nature of memory markets, and high valuations for leaders like Nvidia and Broadcom. Critical 2026 catalysts include the industry's push toward a $1 trillion annual sales milestone, the ramp-up of TSMC's Arizona factory, the deployment of Nvidia's next-generation Vera Rubin platform, AMD's market share progress, and HBM4 supply dynamics. The conclusion advises investors to balance the sector's extraordinary growth against its very real risks—geopolitical concentration, AI dependency, memory cyclicality, and valuation—to make informed decisions.

marsbit05/14 10:40

The Semiconductor Century: Investment Roadmap Amidst the 2026 AI Surge

marsbit05/14 10:40

Morgan Stanley 2026 Semiconductor Report: Buy Packaging, Buy Testing, Buy China Chips, Avoid Traditional Tracks

Morgan Stanley 2026 Semiconductor Report: Buy Packaging, Buy Testing, Buy Chinese Chips; Avoid Traditional Segments. The core theme is the shift in AI compute supply from NVIDIA dominance to a three-track system of GPU + ASIC + China-local chips. The key opportunity is capturing share in this expansion, while non-AI semiconductors face marginalization due to resource reallocation to AI. Key investment conclusions, in order of priority: 1. **Advanced Packaging (CoWoS/SoIC) - Highest Conviction**: TSMC is the primary beneficiary of explosive demand, driven by massive cloud capex. Its pricing power and AI revenue share are rising significantly. 2. **Test Equipment - Undervalued & High-Growth Certainty**: Chip complexity is causing test times to double generationally, structurally driving handler/socket/probe card demand. Companies like Hon Hai Precision (Foxconn), WinWay, and MPI offer compelling value. 3. **China AI Chips (GPU/ASIC) - Long-Term Irreversible Trend**: Export controls are accelerating domestic substitution. Companies like Cambricon, with firm customer orders and SMIC's 7nm capacity support, are positioned to benefit from lower TCO (30-60% vs NVIDIA) and growing local cloud demand. 4. **Avoid Non-AI Semiconductors (Consumer/Auto/Industrial)**: These segments face a weak, structurally hindered recovery due to AI's resource "crowding-out" effect on capacity and supply chains. 5. **Memory - Severe Internal Divergence**: Strongly favor HBM (Hynix primary beneficiary) and NOR Flash (Macronix). Be cautious on interpreting price rises in DDR4/NAND as true demand recovery. The report emphasizes a 2026-2027 time window, stating the AI capital expenditure cycle is far from over. Key macro variables include persistent export controls and AI's systemic "crowding-out" effect on traditional semiconductor supply chains.

marsbit05/12 01:30

Morgan Stanley 2026 Semiconductor Report: Buy Packaging, Buy Testing, Buy China Chips, Avoid Traditional Tracks

marsbit05/12 01:30

$25 Billion: Tesla Buys the Lowest-Tier Entry Ticket to the Chip Arms Race

Elon Musk has announced Tesla's plan to invest approximately $25 billion to build a semiconductor superfab named "Terafab," targeting 2nm process technology with a production capacity of 100,000 wafers per month. The move aims to address Tesla's soaring demand for AI chips, driven by its autonomous driving systems, Optimus robots, and upcoming Robotaxi fleet, which existing foundries like TSMC and Samsung cannot fully support. However, the $25 billion budget is considered insufficient by industry standards. For comparison, TSMC’s Arizona fab costs $165 billion, Samsung’s Taylor fab $44 billion, and Intel’s Ohio project $28 billion. A standard 2nm fab with 50,000 wafers/month typically requires around $28 billion, meaning Tesla’s goal is highly ambitious. Tesla’s chip development has been rapid: from HW3 (14nm, 144 TOPS) to AI5 (3/2nm, 2000+ TOPS), with performance multiplying every generation. Its growing reliance on external foundries led to a $16.5 billion long-term deal with Samsung for AI6 production. Terafab represents a natural shift toward self-sufficiency. The project faces significant challenges, including a 3–5 year construction period and additional time for production ramp-up. If Tesla follows industry timelines, Terafab may not be operational until 2029–2030, coinciding with expected mass production of Optimus and Robotaxi. Musk has also hinted at potential collaboration with Intel, which has advanced 18A process capacity. The $25 billion investment buys Tesla a entry ticket into semiconductor manufacturing—but whether it becomes a milestone in vertical integration or an overambitious project remains to be seen.

marsbit03/16 11:06

$25 Billion: Tesla Buys the Lowest-Tier Entry Ticket to the Chip Arms Race

marsbit03/16 11:06

活动图片