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TSMC to spend US$100bil over three years to grow capacity

Tan KW
Publish date: Fri, 02 Apr 2021, 11:25 AM
Tan KW
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TAIPEI: Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC) plans to spend US$100bil over the next three years to expand its chip fabrication capacity, a staggering financial commitment to address booming demand for new technologies.

TSMC, the world’s leading manufacturer of advanced semiconductors, already planned a record capital expenditure of as much as US$28bil this year, but recent trends and developments have pushed for even more capacity.

Now at the centre of a global chip supply crunch, Taiwan’s biggest company has pledged to work with customers across industries to overcome a deluge of demand.

“TSMC expects to invest US$100bil over the next three years to increase capacity to support the manufacturing and R&D of advanced semiconductor technologies, ” the company said in a statement responding to local media reports.

“TSMC is working closely with our customers to address their needs in a sustainable manner.”

TSMC suppliers surged on the news, with Tokyo Electron Ltd rising 4.2% and Screen Holdings Co up as much as 6.3%. TSMC’s own share price was up 2% on the day.

Relied on by everyone from Apple Inc and Qualcomm Inc to Nvidia Corp and Advanced Micro Devices Inc, TSMC is the world’s go-to semiconductor foundry, or producer of chips designed by others.

The silicon it churns out goes into practically every modern piece of electronics, from smartphones and smart fridges to connected cars.

In a letter to customers obtained by Bloomberg News, TSMC chief executive officer C C Wei wrote that the company’s fabs have been “running at over 100% utilisation over the past 12 months, ” but demand still outpaced supply.

Thousands of new employees are being hired and multiple new factories are under construction, he added, and TSMC will suspend wafer price reductions for a year from the start of 2022.

Carmakers have been hit particularly hard by the chip shortages, with estimates for lost revenue of more than US$60bil this year. Ford Motor Co just said it would temporarily suspend production at two plants that make its best-selling F-150 pickup. F-Series trucks are Ford’s biggest moneymakers and any lost production has a direct impact on the bottom line.

US rival Intel Corp in March announced plans to directly compete with TSMC for the business of manufacturing chips for other companies, with a US$20bil investment in two new factories in Arizona.

South Korea’s Samsung Electronics Co is also spending in excess of US$100bil over a decade to expand its semiconductor business. 

 - Bloomberg

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Frontkn gona fly soon....

2021-04-02 13:11

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