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Analysts at Goldman Sachs named five stocks to play themes including artificial intelligence, electric vehicles and energy-efficiency, with two on its conviction list: Mercedes-Benz and Daikin Industries . The bank gave Mercedes' stock an estimated 48% upside to its 12-month price target. Goldman gave the stock an estimated 30% upside to its 12-month price target. The bank gave the stock an estimated 54% upside to its 12-month price target. Darling Ingredients , a feedstock and renewable diesel company in the United States, has a 60% upside to Goldman's 12-month price target, the bank said.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Mercedes, TSMC, Goldman, firm's, Joe Biden's, — CNBC's Michael Bloom, Emma Newburger Organizations: Goldman, Benz, Daikin Industries, ICE, Mercedes, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Locations: United States, North America, Dutch
The results boosted shares of Nvidia as much as 8%. Justifying the valuation After a more than 232% jump in 2023, Nvidia shares are on pace for their third best year on record and best yearly stretch since 2001. Opening and building positions Despite the blowout report, Nvidia gave up some of its gains, while its beneficiaries and competitors slumped into negative territory. Even so, the moves boosted his case for beefing up his position in Nvidia and other AI plays. Cerity Partners' Jim Lebenthal revealed to CNBC's "Halftime Report" on Thursday that he initiated a position in Nvidia earlier this week to get a "toehold before earnings."
Persons: Josh Brown, CNBC's, Nancy Tengler, Paul Meeks, Ken Mahoney, Jerome Powell's, Meeks, Cerity, Jim Lebenthal Organizations: Nvidia, Devices, Marvell Technology, Micro Computer, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, Laffer, Investments, Independent Solutions Wealth Management, Asset Management, Apple, Federal, Computer, AMD, Cerity Partners Locations: Jackson Hole , Wyoming
Analysts at Morgan Stanley picked several global stocks they say are set to benefit from the artificial intelligence trend, from semiconductors to server companies. "The 2024 earnings for AI stocks are higher than they were on July 1, and fundamentals for AI companies look even better," Morgan Stanley said in a note to investors seen by CNBC Tuesday, titled "A Pivotal Moment for AI." The analysts also described AI stocks as "materially cheaper today than they were last month." Morgan Stanley said this is a "pivotal moment for NVDA and the AI supply chain," adding that investors should "prepare for potential AI opportunities." In Japan, Morgan Stanley named Disco Corporation , a maker of semiconductor manufacturing devices, for its "meaningful demand increase from generative AI-related Equipment."
Persons: Morgan Stanley, Shawn Kim, Morgan, — CNBC's Michael Bloom, Yeo Boon Ping Organizations: CNBC, Nvidia, Revenue, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, China Semiconductors, Global Unichip Corp, chipmaker SK Hynix, Samsung, Disco Corporation Locations: Greater China, China, South Korea, Japan
A Nvidia logo is seen on one of their products on display at their headquarters in Taipei, Taiwan May 31, 2023. REUTERS/Ann Wang/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsAug 24 (Reuters) - Frankfurt-listed shares of Nvidia jumped 8.7% on Thursday, lifting tech shares around the world, after the company forecast quarterly revenue that smashed expectations and announced a $25 billion buyback. That represents an over three-fold rise in shares from last close of $471.16. The results are also seem keeping a Wall Street rally alive, with futures tracking the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 jumping more than 1%, while S&P 500 futures rose 0.7%. Elsewhere, shares of Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC) (2330.TW), which supplies to Nvidia, rose 2.2%.
Persons: Ann Wang, Elazar, Stacy A, Ipek Ozkardeskaya, Susan Mathew, Varun Organizations: REUTERS, Nvidia, Elazar Advisors, Rosenblatt Securities, Swissquote Bank, Big Tech, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, ASM International, BE Semiconductor, Aixtron, Thomson Locations: Taipei, Taiwan, Frankfurt, Bengaluru
In this article 981-HK1347-HK2330-TWNVDA Follow your favorite stocks CREATE FREE ACCOUNTAerial photo shows the factory of Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) in Nanjing, Jiangsu province, Aug 1, 2023. Costfoto | Nurphoto | Getty ImagesSemiconductor-related stocks in Asia surged after chipmaker Nvidia posted second-quarter results that beat estimates and issued optimistic guidance for the current period. Shares of Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Corp , which manufactures all of Nvidia's advanced AI chips, climbed as much as 1.81% on Thursday, while counterpart Samsung Electronics gained as much as 2.24%. In an Aug. 21 note, Morgan Stanley analysts estimated that TSMC will generate 6% of revenue from AI-related semiconductors in 2023. Stock Chart Icon Stock chart icon
Persons: Morgan Stanley Organizations: HK, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, Nurphoto, Getty, Semiconductor, Nvidia, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Corp, Samsung Electronics Locations: Nanjing, Jiangsu, Asia
Nvidia results burnish AI rally, lift global tech shares
  + stars: | 2023-08-24 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +3 min
Nvidia's shares rose to $510.14 in premarket trading, set to surpass a record high of $481.87 hit earlier this week. That represents another three-fold increase in the stock's value from current levels. Elsewhere, shares of Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC) (2330.TW), which supplies to Nvidia, rose 2.2%. A lot rested on Nvidia posting strong results, as most of the S&P 500's over 15% year-to-date gains have come from the AI-driven rally in Nvidia and other Big Tech stocks. Investing.com analyst Thomas Monteiro said Nvidia's results validated "the narrative that has been propping tech stocks in general this year."
Persons: Ann Wang, , Hargreaves, Sophie Lund, Yates, Elazar, Bernstein, Stacy Rasgon, Ipek Ozkardeskaya, Thomas Monteiro, Susan Mathew, Chavi Mehta, Varun Organizations: REUTERS, Nvidia, Elazar Advisors, Rosenblatt Securities, Devices, Micron Technology, Broadcom, Marvell Technology, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, ASM International, BE Semiconductor, Aixtron, Swissquote Bank, Big Tech, Thomson Locations: Taipei, Taiwan, Bengaluru
Nvidia's earnings Wednesday will be a big test for AI bulls
  + stars: | 2023-08-23 | by ( Kif Leswing | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +3 min
Revenue: $11.22 billion, according to Refinitiv. A closer look at estimates shows just how reliant Nvidia has become on AI chips. By contrast, Nvidia's Datacenter group, which houses AI chips, is looking at a 111% increase in revenue to $8.03 billion, according to estimates. Nvidia's AI chips, including the A100 and H100, have been difficult to purchase in recent months as startups, big companies, governments and cloud providers all have placed orders. Last year, the U.S. placed export restrictions on Nvidia, which forced the company to make specialized, slower versions of its AI chips for the Chinese market.
Persons: Jensen Huang, StreetAccount, chatbot, Nvidia's, Huang, TSMC, Morris Chang, Biden Organizations: Nvidia, Facebook, Meta, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Locations: Taipei, Refinitiv, China, U.S
TSMC, however, has maintained that the incoming Taiwanese workers will not be a threat to US jobs. The pipe cutter said that TSMC and its key contractors were largely to blame for the management problems. After complaining about one safety issue for two straight weeks, he said, he spoke with a company safety representative. And then you go to degown, and they don't have your hanger or somebody took your hanger," the pipe cutter said. He added: "It's not like we're against the Taiwanese workers or anything.
Persons: TSMC, they're, it's, didn't, he's, , they'd, they've, Everyone's, we're, It's, Luke Kasper, Arizona Organizations: Service, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, Arizona Pipe, Intel, New York Times, Times, American Prospect, TSMC Locations: Arizona, Wall, Silicon, chipmaker, TSMC, Taiwan, United States, degown
Analyst Charlie Chan named Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing a "catalyst driven idea" whose shares could rally given its role as the sole supplier for Nvidia's artificial intelligence graphics processing units. The stock has served as the stock market's AI poster child in 2023, surging more than 215%. As a supplier to Nvidia, Taiwan Semiconductor has also benefited from the buzz around AI, with its U.S.-listed shares up more than 24% this year. Morgan Stanley regards Nvidia's October revenue guidance as a "key check point" pointing to AI-fueled semiconductor demand at Taiwan Semiconductor, as well as the growth of its Chip on Wafer on Substrate capacity supply, a vital part of the chip manufacturing process. Chan anticipates a 5% uptick in Taiwan Semiconductor shares should Nvidia exceed consensus October revenue guidance, and come in above $13 billion.
Persons: Morgan Stanley, Charlie Chan, Chan, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: Nvidia, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, Taiwan Semiconductor Locations: 2023e
Besides Apple (AAPL), Nvidia is the only other Club stock to get Jim's "own it, don't trade it" designation. There's no doubt technology giants in the world's second-largest economy want Nvidia's chips to build out their AI systems. As a subscriber to the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer, you will receive a trade alert before Jim makes a trade. Jim waits 45 minutes after sending a trade alert before buying or selling a stock in his charitable trust's portfolio. If Jim has talked about a stock on CNBC TV, he waits 72 hours after issuing the trade alert before executing the trade.
Persons: Jim Cramer, I'm, Baird, KeyBanc, Piper Sandler, FactSet, Wei, Biden, Colette Kress, Jim Cramer's, Jim, Hsun Huang, Patrick T Organizations: Nvidia, Apple, HSBC, Barclays, Microsoft, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, Financial, Citigroup, Wall Street Journal, CNBC, Nvidia Corp, Mobile, Fallon, Bloomberg, Getty Locations: China, Washington, U.S, Los Angeles , California
REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/file photo Acquire Licensing RightsAug 17 (Reuters) - Semiconductor equipment maker Applied Materials (AMAT.O) on Thursday forecast its fourth-quarter profit would be substantially higher than analyst estimates, as chip demand picks up and governments spend billions on subsidies. Applied reported third-quarter revenue of $6.43 billion, beating analysts' average estimate of $6.16 billion, according to Refinitiv data. Applied finance chief Brice Hill said that despite overall lower chip equipment spending this year, the company's services business would continue to grow. For its company's semiconductor systems unit, which supplies gear to chip makers, third-quarter revenue slipped roughly 1% to $4.68 billion. Samsung Electronics (005930.KS), Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (2330.TW), and Intel Corp (INTC.O) use the company's advanced chip production tools.
Persons: Dado Ruvic, Gary Dickerson, Brice Hill, Jaspreet Singh, Max A, Shinjini Ganguli, David Gregorio, Jamie Freed Organizations: REUTERS, Semiconductor, Applied, Lam Research, KLA, Samsung Electronics, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, Intel Corp, Thomson Locations: Santa Clara , California, China, Bengaluru, Max, San Francisco
Here's a rapid-fire update on all 36 stocks in Jim Cramer's Charitable Trust, the portfolio we use for the CNBC Investing Club. Apple remains an "own it, don't trade it" stock, Jim said. Halliburton (HAL): Given we just added a new stock to the portfolio, Jim said Halliburton may be the stock we look to cut ties with. The lesson with P & G is that, sometimes, there's nothing to do but hold a stock, Jim said. Stanley Black & Decker (SWK): The maker of DeWalt and Craftsman tools is one of the best bargains in our portfolio, Jim said.
Persons: Jim Cramer's, Jim, it's, We're, , he's, he'll, we're, Dupont, Walt Disney, Estee Lauder, Locker, Mary Dillon's, Halliburton, Humana, Humana's, Linde, Eli Lilly, there's, Mark Zuckerberg's, Jim said, Morgan Stanley, James Gorman, Nikesh Arora, Elliott Management's, Elliott, Stanley Black, Decker, It's, Wells Fargo, Wells, Charlie Scharf —, Jim Cramer, Jim Cramer Rob Kim Organizations: Jim Cramer's Charitable Trust, CNBC, Club, Apple, Devices, AMD, Nvidia, Amazon, Federal, Bausch Health, Caterpillar, Costco, Coterra Energy, DuPont de Nemours, Comcast, Emerson, Emerson Electric, Ford, United Auto Workers, GE HealthCare Technologies, Big Tech, NFL, Halliburton, HAL, Texas, Honeywell International, Honeywell, Linde, LIN, Facebook, Reality Labs, Microsoft, Oracle, Palo Alto Networks, Procter & Gamble, Natural Resources, Starbucks, Constellation Brands, TJX, Goods, Wynn Resorts, WYNN, Jim Cramer's Charitable Locations: Bausch, China, Hulu, NBCUniversal, Palo, Macao
Tower Semiconductor is seen on smartphone in front of displayed Intel logo in this illustration taken, February 15, 2022. Last year, DuPont De Nemours Inc (DD.N) scrapped its $5.2 billion deal to buy electronics materials maker Rogers Corp (ROG.N) after delays in securing approval from Chinese regulators. But Gelsinger also said Intel was investing in its foundry business, which makes chips for other companies, irrespective of the Tower deal. Investors had given up hope on the Tower deal as a result. It has committed to trimming $3 billion in costs this year, with an aim of saving between $8 billion and $10 billion by the end of 2025.
Persons: Dado Ruvic, Pat Gelsinger, Gelsinger, Benjamin Netanyahu, Anirban Sen, Max Cherney, Jamie Freed Organizations: Semiconductor, REUTERS, Intel Corp, chipmaker, Intel, State Administration, Market, DuPont De Nemours Inc, Rogers Corp, Investors, Nasdaq, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, Thomson Locations: China, United States, Taiwan, Israel, New York, San Francisco
Differences in US and Taiwanese work culture could pose another challenge. Some TSMC workers are doubtful that Americans can adjust to the challenging work environment. It's not just a disagreement over expertise that poses risks to TSMC's Arizona chip plant. This is the work culture." It added: "We have not replaced any of our local workers with foreign workers and continue to prioritize the hiring of local workers in Arizona."
Persons: TSMC, chipmaker, It's, Morris Chang, Wayne Chiu, Fortune, they're, Mark Liu, TSMC's, Liu, chipmaker Chang, Adam Ozimek Organizations: Service, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co, New York Times, Times, YouTube, Taiwan, Taiwan —, Brookings Institute, Arizona Pipe, Economic Innovation Group Locations: Arizona, Wall, Silicon, Taiwan, Taipei, Taiwanese, Asia, Oregon, America, Phoenix
WASHINGTON — The Treasury Department on Wednesday announced that billions of dollars slated for investments in clean energy, electric vehicles and batteries under the Inflation Reduction Act will go to relatively underserved communities throughout the country. The announcement comes as the IRA, the Biden administration's landmark law targeting manufacturing, infrastructure and climate change, turns one year old. The more than $500 billion in announced investments, $200 billion of which is in the clean energy sector, is a key goal of the legislation, according to the Treasury. A senior Treasury official told reporters on Wednesday that the agency is also seeing meaningful private investment in the efforts. He also contended it would benefit the Chinese Communist Party, as the U.S. relies on Chinese imports of key inputs for clean energy technology.
Persons: Sean Patrick Maloney, WASHINGTON —, Janet Yellen's, Harris administration's, Joe Biden's, Biden, Jason Smith, Smith Organizations: WASHINGTON, Treasury Department, Wednesday, Biden, Treasury, Chinese Communist Party Locations: Cold, , New York, U.S, China
A worker waters a flower bed next to the logo of Samsung Electronics during a media tour at Samsung Electronics' headquarters in Suwon, South Korea, June 13, 2023. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsSEOUL, Aug 16 (Reuters) - South Korea's Samsung Electronics (005930.KS) has reduced its stake in semiconductor manufacturing equipment maker ASML (ASML.AS) by more than a half, its recent filings showed. Samsung held 2.75 million shares in the Dutch company as of end-June, the South Korean tech giant said in its semi-annual report, down from 6.3 million shares in its first quarter report. The stake that Samsung sold is worth around 2.1 billion euros ($2.29 billion) based on the latest share prices. A Samsung Elec spokesperson confirmed the stake sale but did not elaborate.
Persons: Kim Hong, Heekyong Yang, Jason Neely Organizations: Samsung Electronics, REUTERS, Rights, Samsung, South, Thomson Locations: Suwon, South Korea, Rights SEOUL
REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File PhotoAug 14 (Reuters) - Chip design tools maker Synopsys (SNPS.O) has signed a deal to bring its technical building blocks to the advanced contract manufacturing Intel (INTC.O) offers, the companies said on Monday. The two companies said Synopsys would offer a portfolio of designs that will work with Intel's advanced manufacturing capabilities Intel 3, and Intel 18A. Intel and Synopsys said that there was a framework in place for making the intellectual property available on future manufacturing processes. The partnership between Intel and Synopsys important step for Intel Foundry Services (IFS), its contract manufacturing business, to become a viable alternative to Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co Ltd (2330.TW) or Samsung Electronics Co Ltd (005930.KS). Intel launched IFS in 2021, and it reported revenue of $232 million in the second quarter of this year.
Persons: Dado Ruvic, Synopsys, Steve Leibson, Max A, Marguerita Choy Organizations: REUTERS, Intel, Intel Foundry Services, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co, Samsung Electronics Co, Tirias Research, Thomson Locations: San Francisco
The company says it needs to bring Taiwanese workers to Arizona to get construction back on track. But construction of TSMC's first Arizona factory, which began in the Phoenix area in 2021, has run into some hiccups. "Replacing Arizona's construction workers with foreign construction workers directly contradicts the very purpose for which the CHIPS Act was enacted – to create jobs for American workers," the petition says. The degree to which American workers can get the job done without additional assistance is up for debate. "It's easily the most unsafe site I've ever walked on," said Luke Kasper, a representative of the sheet metal workers union.
Persons: TSMC, that's, Biden, Mark Liu, Liu, It's, Luke Kasper, TMSC, Morris Chang, Chang, Kevin Xu Organizations: Service, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, Arizona Pipe, Google, Facebook, YouTube Locations: Arizona, An Arizona, Wall, Silicon, China, TSMC's, Phoenix, Taiwan, TSMC, Asia
He fed the LLM data from a terminal and asked it to filter its findings through top academic literature and fund managers. Building on the knowledgeIn his earlier experiments, Patel and his team manually pasted increments of stock data into ChatGPT's text box. Using Julius AI, Patel was able to input data for over 6,800 stocks to see if the outcomes or accuracy would change. The metrics Patel chose to input were based on company fundamentals that he felt were important when picking stocks. Patel concluded that whether it's a human analyst or AI that's picking stocks, there are no guarantees in the stock market.
Persons: Alpesh Patel, it's, Patel, Julius AI, Julius, Price, ChatGPT's, Warren Buffett, Cisco Systems Inc Patel, Johnson, Eli Lilly, Rahul Sonwalkar, you've Organizations: NYSE, Nasdaq, US Securities and Exchange Commission, FTSE, New York Stock Exchange, Alpha, Broadcom, Cisco Systems Inc, Apple Inc UnitedHealth, Johnson, Johnson Exxon Mobil Corp Visa Inc Tesla, Walmart, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Procter, Gamble, Chevron Corp Mastercard, Depot Inc, Pfizer, AbbVie Inc Merck, Co Inc, Cola Co, Pepsico, Broadcom Inc Alibaba
CNBC Daily Open: Chilling effect
  + stars: | 2023-08-11 | by ( Clement Tan | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +2 min
This report is from today's CNBC Daily Open, our new, international markets newsletter. CNBC Daily Open brings investors up to speed on everything they need to know, no matter where they are. Markets reacted favorably, expecting July's tame inflation reading to mean no more interest rate hikes from the Federal Reserve. U.S. stocks pare early gainsThe Dow Jones Industrial Average edged higher Thursday, helped by a post-earnings Disney rally and a key inflation reading showing slightly less year-over-year inflation growth than expected. In the last quarter, the Chinese tech giant also recorded its biggest annual increase in sales since the September 2021 quarter.
Persons: Dow Jones, pare, Alibaba Organizations: CNBC, of Labor Statistics, Federal Reserve, Dow Jones, Disney, Nasdaq, Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp, Nvidia, Investors Locations: United States, China, U.S, Ukraine, Ukrainian, Russia
Semiconductor chips are seen on a circuit board of a computer in this illustration picture taken February 25, 2022. REUTERS/Florence Lo/Illustration/File PhotoTOKYO, Aug 11 (Reuters) - Japan plans to create tax breaks for domestically-made electric vehicle (EV) batteries and semiconductors from April 2024 to enhance economic security, the Nikkei newspaper reported on Friday. For the government's fiscal 2024 tax code revision, the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry will propose the tax cuts for companies manufacturing strategically crucial items in Japan, Nikkei said. The ministry will draft the specifics including applicable items by end of this year, the report said. To secure supply chains for strategic goods, Japan has also unveiled billion-dollar subsidies for chipmakers such as Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing (2330.TW) and Micron Technology (MU.O) to build plants in Japan, and enacted the Economic Security Promotion Act last year.
Persons: Florence Lo, Akin, Kantaro Komiya, Kim Coghill Organizations: REUTERS, Nikkei, European Union, Ministry, Economy, Trade, Industry, U.S, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, Micron Technology, Economic, Thomson Locations: Japan, United States, China
(Photo by VCG/VCG via Getty Images)Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp. posted on Thursday a drop in second-quarter revenue against a backdrop of ongoing U.S. sanctions and a sluggish recovery in global chip demand. Net income was $402.76 million, down by 21.7% from the $514.33 million recorded in the second quarter of 2022. SMIC is China's biggest foundry, manufacturing semiconductor chips that other firms design. The Semiconductor Industry Association said that global sales of semiconductors totaled $124.5 billion during the second quarter of 2023. This represents a 4.7% increase from the first quarter but is 17.3% below the second quarter of 2022.
Persons: SMIC, Taiwan's, ASML Organizations: Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation, Getty, Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp, Samsung, The Semiconductor Industry Association Locations: BEIJING, CHINA, Beijing, China, South, U.S
TAIPEI, Aug 9 (Reuters) - Taiwan chipmaker TSMC's (2330.TW) 3.5 billion euros ($3.83 billion) investment in Germany will drive deeper engagement between the island and Europe, Taiwan's economy minister said on Wednesday, pitching the political benefits of the deal. "TSMC's investment in Europe will help bring even closer cooperation between Taiwan and the EU," Taiwan Economy Minister Wang Mei-hua told reporters in Taipei, when asked if signing the BIA would get more Taiwanese chipmakers to the bloc. Taiwan has repeatedly called for progress on a BIA with the European Union. The EU included Taiwan on its list of trade partners for a potential bilateral investment agreement in 2015, but it has not held talks with Taiwan on the issue since. The TSMC investment in Germany will need approval by Taiwan's economy ministry, and Wang said they will also consider the company's "vigorous" investments at home when weighing the German plans.
Persons: Wang Mei, Wang, TSMC, Ben Blanchard, Jeanny Kao, Stephen Coates Organizations: European Union, BIA, Washington, EU, Trade Organisation, Reuters, Thomson Locations: TAIPEI, Taiwan, Germany, Europe, Beijing, Taipei, United States, Japan
A central processing unit (CPU) semiconductor chip is displayed among flags of China and U.S., in this illustration picture taken February 17, 2023. Following are some key details:'COUNTRIES OF CONCERN'The order lays out plans to regulate investments in certain "countries of concern," with a separate annex naming China, Hong Kong and Macau as initial targets. The outbound investment program would require notification of many investments while prohibiting only a few. It was considering requiring notification for investments in firms working on the design, fabrication, and packaging of less advanced integrated circuits. U.S. investments in Chinese production of quantum computers, development of certain quantum sensors, and quantum networking and communication systems could also be banned.
Persons: Florence Lo, Joe Biden, Janet Yellen, Andrea Shalal, Karen Freifeld, David Shepardson, Jonathan Oatis, Matthew Lewis Organizations: REUTERS, Wednesday, U.S . Treasury Department, Reuters, China, United, Treasury, European Union, Thomson Locations: China, U.S, Hong Kong, Macau, United States, Beijing, Washington, Britain, New York
US President Joe Biden visits Wolfspeed, a semiconductor manufacturer, in Durham, North Carolina, on March 28, 2023. (Photo by Jim WATSON / AFP) (Photo by JIM WATSON/AFP via Getty Images)A push to re-shore semiconductor manufacturing in the U.S. has spurred massive spending, and with it, concerns about the size of the skilled workforce. Now, as the shovels hit the ground to begin construction, companies are realizing how difficult it is to find talent. TSMC is bringing in workers from Taiwan to handle the high-tech equipment and train U.S. workers. The Arizona Pipe Trades 469 union has helped fund a website called "Stand with American Workers" accusing TSMC of overlooking Arizona workers in favor of Taiwanese counterparts in an attempt to "exploit cheap labor."
Persons: Joe Biden, Wolfspeed, Jim WATSON, JIM WATSON, Brian Harrison, Harrison, TSMC, that's Organizations: Getty, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, Arizona Pipe, American Locations: Durham , North Carolina, AFP, U.S, United States, Arizona, Taiwan
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