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In today's big story, why you should care about a potential Intel-Qualcomm deal , even if it might not work. Getting all that varied experience has proved particularly beneficial for TSMC in the age of cutting-edge mobile and AI chips. The US needs Intel to keep (and get better at) manufacturing chips. The problem with that is that this manufacturing business would have almost no customers, and would fall even further behind TSMC. Experts seem incredibly skeptical about a Qualcomm deal going through.
Persons: , Jamie Dimon, Moneyball, Rupert Murdoch's, Chelsea Jia Feng, I'm, it's, Palantir alums, Jamie Dimon Tom Williams, he's, Goldman Sachs, Chelsea JIa Feng, ChatGPT, Vinod Khosla, Chris Gash, Lachlan Murdoch, Murdoch, Lachlan's, Caroline Ellison, Biden, Dan DeFrancesco, Jordan Parker Erb, Jack Sommers, Milan Sehmbi, Amanda Yen Organizations: Service, Intel, Qualcomm, Business, Tech, Getty, TSMC, Inc, JPMorgan, Bank of America, Big Tech, Web Services, Employees, Bloomberg Global Business Forum, FAA, OPEC, Oil Locations: Taiwan, China, San Francisco, Nevada, New York, London
Or maybe South Korea, where Samsung has built an impressive so-called foundry business making semiconductors for other companies. AdvertisementThe US company took a major step recently when it separated its Foundry business from its chip-design business. Intel's Foundry business won't really be able to challenge TSMC until it gets several big customers. Intel's Foundry business just needs way more of these customers. How would Intel's Foundry business perform as a separate company, split off from the design parts?
Persons: , Jerry Sanders, Ian King, TSMC, Globalfoundries, it's, AMD's Sanders, Apple, Ian King's, Raimondo, Gina Raimondo, Bernstein, Stacy Rasgon, that's, Rasgon Organizations: Service, Business, Intel, Samsung, Nvidia, Qualcomm, AMD, Apple, Reuters, TSMC, Foundry, Intel's Foundry, CNBC, Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Locations: Taiwan, South Korea, China, Europe
One global stock stands out as a "unique play" in the Nvidia and artificial intelligence supply chain, according to Jefferies. It's German semiconductor firm SUSS MicroTec , Jefferies said in a Sept. 17 report, calling it a "hidden gem" among European semiconductor firms. The investment bank initiated coverage of the stock at a buy rating and a target price of 76 euros ($84). The firm has "multi-layered exposure" to an advanced packaging technology called Chip-on-Wafer-on-Substrate, said Jefferies, explaining that it's used to make AI chips. SUSS sells its products to two major high bandwidth memory suppliers and TSMC, to be used in the production of that advanced packaging.
Persons: Jefferies, MicroTec, it's, SUSS, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: Nvidia, U.S, Jefferies, NVIDIA Locations: TSMC
TSMC's chip foundry model enabled fabless companies like Nvidia and Apple to thrive. Go to newsletter preferences Thanks for signing up! AdvertisementThere is a good chance that Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, or TSMC, is involved in almost every electronic device you see. Founded in 1987 by entrepreneur Morris Chang, the silicon wafer maker used a pure-play foundry model. This model involved other companies designing computer chips and then contracting TSMC to manufacture them.
Persons: C.C, , Morris Chang, It's Organizations: Nvidia, Apple, Service, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, Qualcomm, AMD, Intel, Samsung Locations: Arizona
When Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang spoke to Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon on Wednesday, the banker raised this relationship — and how precarious it is due to rising tension in the Taiwan Strait. This story is available exclusively to Business Insider subscribers. Last year, Huang said he felt "perfectly safe" relying on manufacturing in Taiwan. Though Samsung has some of the same capabilities required to produce the most advanced chips, TSMC is the clear leader. Huang went on to praise TSMC for scaling up to meet the demand that created Nvidia's "hockey stick" earnings in recent years.
Persons: , Jensen Huang, Goldman Sachs, David Solomon, Solomon, Huang, Dylan Patel, Chris Miller, TSMC, Patel Organizations: Service, Nvidia, Wednesday, Business, Samsung, Intel, SEC, Blackwell Locations: Taiwan, Asia, China, Pacific, TSMC, South, Arizona
Nvidia is suddenly in trouble
  + stars: | 2024-09-04 | by ( David Goldman | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +4 min
CNN —Nvidia, the AI chipmaking titan that was briefly the world’s most valuable company, has suddenly found itself in an unfamiliar position: a major rut. Nvidia (NVDA) had the worst day in the history of the stock market Tuesday, as measured by loss in total market value. To put that shocking decline into context, only 27 companies on the planet are worth as much as Nvidia lost in value Tuesday. That’s why bulls like Wedbush’s Dan Ives believe Nvidia’s stock decline presents a buying opportunity. – CNN’s Ramishah Maruf contributed to this reportCorrection: Correction: An earlier version of this story incorrectly described TSMC's relationship with Nvidia.
Persons: Jensen Huang, , Biden, Kamala Harris, Donald Trump, Huang, Blackwell, , ” Huang, Wedbush’s Dan Ives, ” Ives, , Ramishah Maruf Organizations: CNN, Nvidia, Meta, McDonald’s, Chevron, Pepsi, BlackRock, Microsoft, Intel, US Justice Department, Bloomberg, Department of Justice, Justice Department, US Department of Justice, titans, Apple, Google, Nasdaq
download the appSign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. SemiAnalysis gets deep into the weeds on graphics processing units, from the base of the supply chain to the end-users building the AI models that require so many specialized chips. AdvertisementThe team consists of people across the entire supply chain, geographically and technically. So we have the entire view of the supply chain, from manufacturing, up to models. The other place I like to look a lot is random suppliers that are very small in niche parts of the supply chain, or suppliers of suppliers.
Persons: , Jensen Huang isn't, Dylan Patel, SemiAnalysis, Sam Altman, Patel, Sundar, Altman, Blackwell, Nvidia's, They've, they're Organizations: Service, intel, Google, Business, BI, Nvidia, Microsoft, AMD, Meta Locations: US, Japan, Singapore, Taiwan, France
He increased his price target by $25 to $575, which suggests shares can jump about 20.9% over the next year. Rollins upgraded the stock to neutral from sell and upped his price target from $1.25 to $3.15 per share, which implies roughly 21.6% potential upside. Analyst Rick Wise initiated coverage of GE Healthcare with a buy rating and $100 price target, which suggests 22.7% upside. Analyst Rob Owens upgraded the global cybersecurity company to overweight from neutral and lowered his price target by $20 to $290, which implies 30.6% upside. Its price target of 1,200 Taiwanese dollars implies upside of 36.4%.
Persons: Morgan Stanley, Piper Sandler, Rob Sanderson, Sanderson, — Pia Singh, Michael Rollins, Rollins, Lumen, Rick Wise, Wise, CrowdStrike, Rob Owens, Owens, pare, Price, Charlie Chan, Chan, Fred Imbert Organizations: CNBC, Taiwan Semiconductor, Meta, Citi, Lumen Technologies, GE Healthcare, Delta Air Lines, Microsoft Locations: U.S
According to an S&P Global analysis, the global semiconductor industry consumed as much water in 2021 as the city of Hong Kong. Water consumption for chip fabs and data centers will rise as the demand for chips grows. The chip fabs stored the TCE underground, but tanks sometimes ruptured, leaking the chemical into the local groundwater and soil. Now, chip fabs must work with local governments to meet water management and waste disposal requirements. Several researchers are investigating ways to reduce and recycle water in chip manufacturing.
Persons: , Prakash Govindan, Steve Proehl, Packard, Govindan, he's, fabs, Paul Westerhoff, TSMC, Jensen Huang, Huang, Anuradha Murthy Agarwal, Agarwal Organizations: Service, Business, Intel, AMD, Philips, Hewlett, Environmental, Agency, Arizona State University, Micron, Nvidia, MIT's Materials Research Laboratory Locations: Hong Kong, Taiwan, American, Santa Clara , California, Valley's Santa Clara County, . Arizona, Colorado, Phoenix, Denver
Shares of Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) were rocked by geopolitical developments from the U.S. last week, even as the firm reported earnings that beat expectations. TSMC and other semiconductor shares fell last Wednesday after reports of potentially tighter restrictions surfaced. Price target hikes for TSMC Over July 18 and 19, after those developments, 22 of 42 analysts who cover TSMC's Taiwan-listed shares hiked their price targets for the stock, according to FactSet. None reduced or left the price target unchanged. Analysts gave the stock potential upside of 30.5% based on the consensus price target.
Persons: Biden, TSMC's, Donald Trump, TSMC, Needham, Morningstar, Morgan Stanley, — CNBC's Michael Bloom, Arjun Kharpal Organizations: Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, U.S, Bloomberg, Revenue, North America, Taiwan, CNBC, U.S . Needham, Management Locations: China, North, Taiwan, U.S, TSMC
As the United States presidential election nears, there's one key theme that's expected to continue regardless of who wins: the reshoring of American manufacturing . Tema ETFs runs the actively managed American Reshoring ETF (ticker RSHO), designed to take advantage of this trend. "The American reshoring fund is built on the foundation that the world's not getting any safer. However, the fund manager cautioned that there could be challenges in hiring skilled labor due to the decline in the United States semiconductor manufacturing industry over the years. TSM 5Y line While TSMC is less than 1% of the American Reshoring ETF, Clean Harbors is a top 10 holding with 4.71% allocated.
Persons: Yuri Khodjamirian, CNBC's, PFAS —, Khodjamirian Organizations: United, Republicans, Democrats, Tema, American, Harbors, Clean Harbors, Taiwan Semiconductor, ETF Locations: United States, Tema, North America, Arizona
Analyst discusses the outlook for chip manufacturing
  + stars: | 2024-07-22 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailAnalyst discusses the outlook for chip manufacturingCharles Shi, managing director and senior analyst at Needham & Co., discusses TSMC's earnings and the outlook for chip manufacturing.
Persons: Charles Shi Organizations: Needham & Co
In today's big story, we're looking at why reports of more potential trade restrictions have chip companies on their heels . Trade restrictions are certainly real concerns for chip companies. AdvertisementThe supply-chain base for most of the chip industry is in Taiwan, specifically TSMC. Politicians and regulators have no interest in making American AI companies less competitive and demand is still extremely high. With so much geopolitical tension, is it possible the chip industry becomes more regionalized?
Persons: , Dan Schneider's, Rebecca Zisser, Joe Biden, Insider's Kelly Cloonan, Biden, chipmakers, Trump, Emma Cosgrove, It's, Marianne Ayala, aren't, Dan Ives, influencers, Donald Trump, JD Vance, Tyler Le, Elon Musk, Dan DeFrancesco, Jordan Parker Erb, Hallam Bullock, Annie Smith, Amanda Yen Organizations: Service, Dan Schneider's Nickelodeon, Business, Nvidia, AMD, Bloomberg, China, YouTube, JPMorgan, Apple, Republican National Convention, Netflix Locations: China, Netherlands, Taiwan, Texas, California, New York, London
Chip stocks in Asia tumbled on Thursday following a tech selloff on Wall Street amid reports the U.S. may be considering tighter export restrictions. TSMC's suppliers also took a hit, with Japanese machinery companies Tokyo Electron slumping almost 9% while Screen Holdings fell more than 8%. Any sort of tariffs and curbs to trade are going to impact these chip companies. South Korean chip stocks were not spared. Samsung Electronics slid by nearly 2%, while SK Hynix tumbled nearly 5% and SK Square plunged nearly 10%.
Persons: Biden, Organo, Ayako Yoshioka Organizations: Bloomberg, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, Screen Holdings, Samsung Electronics, SK Hynix, SK Square Locations: U.S, China, Asia, Tokyo
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company on Thursday beat revenue and profit expectations in the second quarter, as demand for advanced chips used in AI applications continue to surge. The firm guided second-quarter revenue to be between $19.6 billion and $20.4 billion. Today, the demand is so high I had to work very hard to meet customer demand," Wei told analysts. TSMC projects third-quarter revenue between $22.4 billion and $23.2 billion. This compares to $17.3 billion in revenue posted in the same period a year ago.
Persons: C.C, Wei Organizations: Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, Samsung, Intel, Apple, Nvidia, TSMC Locations: Taiwan, TSMC
This number could surge by 47% to about 1.16 million millionaires by 2028, UBS predicts, leading the 56 global markets the bank analyzed in its report. AdvertisementThe US was home to nearly 22 million millionaires last year, per UBS. That number is expected to grow 16% to 25.5 million millionaires over the next five years. UBS attributes Taiwan's wealth growth to its semiconductor chip industry, which is "set to reap the rewards of the boom in artificial intelligence." The rise of the chip behemoth has created an entire tech ecosystem in Taiwan, much of which is centered on hardware.
Persons: , TSMC, Ma Tieying Organizations: Service, UBS, Business, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, chipmaker, Apple, Nvidia, New York Stock Exchange, DBS Locations: Taiwan, Swiss, China
A logo of Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) is seen during the TSMC global RnD Center opening ceremony in Hsinchu on July 28, 2023. (Photo by Amber Wang / AFP)TSMC , the world's largest contract chipmaker, reported strong growth in second-quarter revenue on Wednesday that handily beat market forecasts, on the back of booming demand for artificial intelligence (AI) applications. It is not a direct comparison as TSMC provides monthly revenue data only in Taiwan dollars, but gives quarterly revenue figures and its outlook on its quarterly earnings calls both in U.S. dollars. On its most recent earnings call in April, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co forecast second quarter revenue in a range of between $19.6 billion to $20.4 billion. For June alone, TSMC reported that revenue rose 33% year-on-year to T$207.87 billion.
Persons: Amber Wang, TSMC Organizations: Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, Center, TSMC, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co, Apple, Nvidia, Revenue, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Locations: Hsinchu, AFP, Taiwan
Shares of upstream chip companies TSMC and ASML have surged on the back of Nvidia's gains. TSMC's market cap briefly crossed $1 trillion on Monday. The stock price of ASML — Europe's third-most valuable company — crossed 1,000 euros apiece. AdvertisementTech giant Nvidia has been riding the artificial intelligence wave that made it one of the world's most valuable companies. Now, Nvidia's suppliers and upstream partners are riding on the hype, too.
Persons: Organizations: Service, Tech, Nvidia, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, New York Stock Exchange, Business
Here are Monday's biggest calls on Wall Street: UBS reiterates Nvidia as buy UBS raised its price target on Nvidia to $150 per share from $120. Stifel upgrades Ecolab to buy from hold Stifel said it's bullish on shares of the food safety company. KBW upgrades Charles Schwab to outperform from market perform KBW said it's getting bullish on shares of Charles Schwab. Wells Fargo reiterates Meta as overweight Wells raised its price target on Meta to $625 per share from $593. Wells Fargo reiterates Roblox as overweight Wells raised its price target on the stock to $43 per share from $41 ahead of earnings on August 1.
Persons: Stifel, it's, Morgan Stanley, Charles Schwab, KBW, Guggenheim, ServiceNow, Wells, Riley, Emerson, Redburn, Wolfe, JPM, Raymond James, Gilead, Bumble, TD Cowen, Oppenheimer, Jefferies, Baird, Wedbush, RBLX Organizations: UBS, Nvidia, Taiwan Semiconductor, Meta, PNC, Bank of America, underperform Bank of America, Medicines, NSC, Apple, JPMorgan, Disney Locations: 2H24, Columbia, Norfolk, Asia
Work is getting really weird
  + stars: | 2024-07-01 | by ( Dan Defrancesco | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +7 min
The big storyBizarro workplaceLorenzo Matteucci for BILet's be honest: Work has gotten really weird. Workers hiring shadow stand-ins can be unqualified for their jobs, overwhelmed, greedy, or just lazy. Shadow stand-ins are typically paid a fraction of the salary earned by the actual employee. One employee also described to Rob struggling to deal with a shadow stand-in's sub-par work and eventually "firing" them. Getty Images; Alyssa Powell/BIMeanwhile, the people who are doing all the work themselves are having a tough time getting any recognition.
Persons: , Lorenzo Matteucci, Rob Price, Rob, Alyssa Powell, BI's Aki Ito, Roaring Kitty, Bain, Chris Miller, Greg Peters, Ted Sarandos, Peters, Chelsea Jia Feng, Coach's, David Rosenberg, Donald Trump's, Dan DeFrancesco, Jordan Parker Erb, Hallam Bullock, Grace Lett, Annie Smith, Amanda Yen Organizations: Service, Business, BI, Super, Facebook, Workers, Corporations, Getty, GameStop, McKinsey, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, Netflix, Walgreens, CVS, Rite, Wimbledon Locations: Chicago, India, Pakistan, China, Taiwan, New York, London
The market is underestimating one corner of artificial intelligence, according to Morgan Stanley. The innovation in the sector is set to drive AI chip capabilities, said Morgan Stanley. Morgan Stanley says it sees "outsized winners" in Japan, South Korea and the European Union. Taiwan TSMC : Morgan Stanley noted the Taiwanese semiconductor firm is a major provider of CoWoS technology, a type of packaging technology. Japan Morgan Stanley says it favors Disco and Advantest the most out of all the companies in Japan that are producing equipment for advanced packaging.
Persons: Morgan Stanley, That's, Amkor, TSMC, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: Engineers, European Union, United, Semiconductor Assembly, Test Services, Apple, ACM Research, SK Hynix, SK Hynix's Locations: Japan, South Korea, United States, Arizona, Taiwan
Now, key supplier Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, or TSMC, appears to want in on the hype. "I did complain to Nvidia's CEO Jensen Huang — the 'three trillion guy' — that his products are so expensive," CC Wei, TSMC's CEO, said last week, per Nikkei. TSMC has already indicated price hikes for production outside of TaiwanIt isn't the first time this year that TSMC has signaled a price hike. AdvertisementIn April, Wei said the company plans to charge customers more if they want their chips made outside Taiwan. "In today's fragmented globalization environment, costs will be higher for everyone, including TSMC, our customers, our competitors, and the entire semiconductor industry."
Persons: , Jensen Huang, Jensen Huang —, Wei, TSMC, Nvidia's Huang doesn't, Huang, Morgan Stanley Organizations: Service, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, Wei, Business, Wall, NVIDIA, Nvidia, New Locations: TSMC, Taiwan, China, Beijing, Arizona, Japan, Germany, New Taiwan
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailIt'll take China's chip industry a long time to reach TSMC's level, strategist saysVincent Chan, China strategist at Aletheia Capital, says, however, that China has the "monetary resources" to build "really large capacity" at the mid to low end.
Persons: Vincent Chan Organizations: Aletheia Locations: China
Jefferies upgraded MercadoLibre to buy and raised its price target on the stock. Asiya Merchant kept her buy rating and and hiked up her price target by $45 to $170, which suggests shares could jump 16.9% from Monday's close. Nodding to the stock's strong recent performance, analyst David Koning downgraded Toast shares to neutral and maintained his $28 price target. Analyst Kashy Harrison downgraded the stock to neutral from overweight and lowered his price target to $4.50 from $9, implying 8.4% upside. He also raised his price target to $2,100 from $1,400, implying upside of about 20% over the next 12 months.
Persons: Jefferies, Piper Sandler, Asiya Merchant, Merchant, Dell, — Pia Singh, Baird, David Koning, Koning, Morgan Stanley, Chan, TSMC, Piper Sandler downgrades, Kashy Harrison, Harrison, Alex Wright, Wright, Fred Imbert Organizations: CNBC, Sunnova Energy, Citi, Dell, Citi Research, TAM, Taiwan Semiconductor, Nvidia, Energy, NOVA, Jefferies Locations: America, Monday's, Kong, securitizations
Here are the biggest calls on Wall Street on Tuesday: Morgan Stanley reiterates Tesla as overweight Morgan Stanley made the case in a note to investors that Elon Musk needs Tesla "more than ever before." Citi initiates Ferrovial at buy Citi said it's bullish on shares of the Dutch infrastructure and transportation company. Citi reiterates Dell as buy Citi raised its price target on the stock by 36% to $170 per share from $125. Morgan Stanley reiterates Apple as overweight Morgan Stanley said its checks show accelerating App Store growth ahead of expectations for Apple. Morgan Stanley names Taiwan Semiconductor a catalyst-driven idea Morgan Stanley said TSM is a likely beneficiary of a solid Nvidia earnings report on Wednesday.
Persons: Morgan Stanley, Tesla, Elon, Raymond James, Baird, it's, Evercore, Piper Sandler downgrades Sunnova, Piper, Brinker, Argus, Apple, TSM, NVDA, it's bullish, Lenz, LENZ Organizations: Elon, Caesars Entertainment, Penn, Penn Entertainment, Boyd Gaming Corporation, Inc, PENN Entertainment, JPMorgan, Therapeutics, Citi, Nvidia, Sunnova, Disney, Dell, Barclays, HP, Brinker International Inc, Apple, Taiwan Semiconductor, Gap Citi, GPS, " Bank of America, Lenz Therapeutics, Bank of America, Deutsche Bank, Deutsche, Recovery Software
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