Business
TSMC Posts Strong Q2 Earnings Amid Soaring AI Demand, Raises 2025 Outlook
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC), the world’s largest contract chipmaker, has reported robust second-quarter earnings, driven by a surge in demand for artificial intelligence (AI) and high-performance computing (HPC) chips. The strong performance has prompted the company to revise its 2025 outlook upwards, despite looming uncertainties tied to U.S. trade policy.
For the quarter ending June 30, TSMC posted a net income of NT$398.2 billion (€11.7 billion), marking a 60.7% year-on-year increase. Revenue surged by 38.6% to NT$933.7 billion (€27.35 billion), exceeding both market expectations and the company’s previous guidance. Compared to the first quarter, revenue rose 11.3% while net income grew 10.2%.
“TSMC delivered a strong beat, ahead of expectations. Margins remained solid despite currency headwinds from a stronger Taiwanese dollar,” said Ben Barringer, a global technology analyst at Quilter Cheviot. “AI‑related demand continues to be the engine of growth, while non‑AI segments are beginning to recover more steadily.”
Wendell Huang, TSMC’s Senior Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, attributed the performance to “continued robust AI and HPC-related demand.” He added that demand for the company’s advanced chipmaking technologies will remain strong in the third quarter.
Reflecting that confidence, TSMC raised its full-year guidance. It now expects over 30% year-on-year revenue growth in the third quarter, with projected sales between $31.8 billion and $33 billion — up from its earlier estimate of 25% growth.
However, the company’s outlook is clouded by global trade tensions, particularly stemming from the United States. Taiwan is currently in discussions with Washington to reduce U.S. tariffs on its exports, after President Donald Trump proposed a 32% tariff in April. Taiwan is among several countries expecting formal tariff notifications ahead of a postponed August 1 deadline.
Trump has also hinted at new levies on semiconductor imports, raising concerns across the chip industry. This comes amid renewed investor interest in AI-linked firms, following Nvidia’s historic rise to a $4 trillion market valuation. Still, geopolitical risks remain a key source of market volatility. Just a day before TSMC’s earnings release, Dutch chipmaker ASML saw its shares tumble after downgrading its 2026 outlook, citing global uncertainty.
Despite these headwinds, investor sentiment toward TSMC remains upbeat. Following the earnings announcement, the company’s shares rose 4% in U.S. premarket trading.
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