TLDR
- Taiwan Semiconductor stock jumped 1.8% to $355 Monday after U.S. officials announced tariff exemptions for Big Tech chips linked to TSMC’s American factory investments.
- NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang stated TSMC must double manufacturing capacity to meet explosive AI chip demand, pointing to years of strong orders ahead.
- TSMC boosted its quarterly dividend to $0.9678 per share and reported January revenue of TWD 401.255 billion, up 36.8% year-over-year.
- Analysts set an average price target of $381.67 with multiple recent upgrades, while the stock trades at a P/E of 33.36.
- Taiwan rejected U.S. requests to relocate 40% of chip production to America, creating potential policy friction despite ongoing Arizona expansion.
Taiwan Semiconductor stock gained 1.8% Monday, closing at $355.28 as investors processed several developments affecting the world’s largest chipmaker. Volume reached 14.5 million shares during the session.
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Limited, TSM
The primary catalyst came from Washington, where officials outlined plans to exempt Big Tech chips from upcoming tariffs. These carve-outs tie directly to TSMC’s commitments to build manufacturing facilities in the United States.
The policy shift reduces near-term risk for TSMC’s biggest customers including Apple, NVIDIA, and AMD. All three companies rely on TSMC’s cutting-edge foundries to produce their most advanced processors.
AI Boom Drives Capacity Warnings
NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang delivered bullish comments about TSMC’s long-term demand picture. Huang warned the company would need to roughly double its production capacity to satisfy AI chip orders.
The statement confirms sustained revenue growth for TSMC through 2027 and beyond. However, it also signals the chipmaker faces years of elevated capital expenditure to build new fabrication plants.
TSMC posted strong financial results to back up the growth narrative. January 2026 revenue hit TWD 401.255 billion, representing a 36.8% increase from January 2025.
The company raised its quarterly dividend to $0.9678 per share from $0.83 previously. The new payout provides a 1.1% annual yield at current prices.
Wall Street Raises Targets
Analyst sentiment remains overwhelmingly positive on Taiwan Semiconductor. Needham lifted its price target from $360 to $410 in mid-January while maintaining a buy rating.
Freedom Capital upgraded shares to strong-buy during the same period. The Goldman Sachs Group reiterated its buy rating in early January.
Consensus across Wall Street sits at $381.67, implying 7% upside from Monday’s close. Three analysts rate the stock strong-buy, nine have buy ratings, and only one holds a neutral stance.
TSMC trades at a P/E ratio of 33.36 with a market cap of $1.84 trillion. The company maintains a debt-to-equity ratio of just 0.19, providing ample financial flexibility.
Political Tensions Surface
Taiwan Semiconductor continues expanding its Arizona manufacturing footprint to address customer concerns about geopolitical risk. The U.S. facilities also qualify TSMC for billions in government subsidies.
But Taiwanese government officials recently pushed back on American pressure to shift 40% of chip production to U.S. soil. Officials labeled such demands as “impossible” to achieve.
The public dispute introduces uncertainty about TSMC’s U.S. expansion timeline. It may also complicate future subsidy negotiations if the company falls short of Washington’s expectations.
Institutional investors boosted their stakes despite these headwinds. Jennison Associates increased holdings by 26.7% to 12 million shares worth $2.7 billion in the second quarter.
Brown Advisory grew its position 43.2% to 6.65 million shares. Arrowstreet Capital more than doubled its stake to 3.5 million shares during the same period.
The stock has surged 69% over the past twelve months as AI demand accelerated.



