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TSMC announces profit rise on AI demand

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Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC) confirmed on Thursday that it is seeking a brand new chip packaging technology for artificial intelligence, but warned that AI chip production will remain constrained until 2025, longer than previously expected.

In a sign of the chipmaker’s confidence that demand will remain strong, TSMC said its 2024 capital expenditure to increase advanced chip production and advanced packaging capacity will be between $30 billion and $32 billion, the upper end of its forecast.

We are looking at this kind of panel technology, but the maturity is not there today,’ said C.C. Wei, chairman and CEO, adding: ‘After three years, I believe panel fan-out technology will be introduced, and we are working on it and will be ready for it.

The CEO’s comments confirm Nikkei Asia’s earlier report that TSMC is exploring the use of rectangular substrates instead of the traditional round wafers for chip assembly and packaging.

Wei said the company currently expects strong demand for smartphones, but capacity for its flagship CoWoS advanced chip packaging technology will be constrained next year. CoWoS is seen as essential for producing cutting-edge artificial intelligence chips for customers such as Nvidia. TSMC’s advanced chip packaging technology can interconnect graphics processors, central processors and high-bandwidth memory (HBM) chips.

Demand is very high,” Wei said, adding: “Supply will continue to be very tight until 2025, and hopefully we can relax in 2026. … We continue to increase [capacity] wherever we can, whatever we can. From last year to this year we have more than doubled [CoWoS capacity] and maybe next year we will double it again”. TSMC has previously stated that such constraints could be resolved by the end of 2024.

Wei also gave an update on the company’s chip production roadmap. TSMC is on track to bring the next most advanced chip manufacturing technology, 2-nanometre technology, into mass production in the second half of 2025 and an updated version of 2 nm in 2026. He said that the 1.6nm (A16) node, an even more advanced technology, will enter production in the second half of 2026.

Wei also said, “AI is so popular that all my customers want to add AI to their devices. … This AI functionality will promote shorter replacement times,’ Wei said.

The chipmaker reported that net profit for the April-June period rose 36.3% year-on-year to NT$247.84 billion ($7.66 billion). Quarterly revenue rose 40.1% to an all-time high of NT$673.51 billion, rebounding from last year’s slowdown thanks to strong demand for artificial intelligence.

TSMC estimates revenue for the July-September period to be between NT$22.4 billion and NT$23.2 billion, in line with analysts’ expectations.

Trump: Taiwan should pay us

TSMC’s upbeat news came after a tough day on the stock market. Following former US President Donald Trump’s comments that ‘Taiwan should pay us for defence’, the price of US depositary receipts fell nearly 8% overnight, while the share price on the Taiwan Stock Exchange fell nearly 2.4% on Thursday ahead of the earnings release. The Republican presidential candidate also cast doubt on US-Taiwan relations if re-elected, saying Taiwan ‘takes about 100 per cent of our chip business’.

Wei said the company’s overseas expansion projects are on track and no changes are expected at this time. In response to an analyst’s question, he said TSMC was not considering joint ventures with the US government to reduce geopolitical uncertainties.

Before Trump’s comments, TSMC’s Taipei shares and US warehouse receipts were up nearly 80 per cent year-to-date.

TSMC produces chips for nearly all of the world’s leading chip designers, including leading-edge AI chips for Nvidia, AMD and Intel, and core processor chips for AI computers for Qualcomm, AMD and Intel. It is the sole supplier of processors for the new iPhone, which will be able to run Apple Intelligence, the company’s artificial intelligence platform.

Wei said his company was considering raising prices for top AI computer chip developer Nvidia.

‘Our pricing strategy is strategic, not opportunistic,’ Wei said, highlighting growing geopolitical uncertainty and pressures: ‘We continue to work closely with customers to [convince] them of our value.

Analysts expect price hikes next year.

ASIA

Xi urges global CEOs to safeguard trade and supply chains

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Chinese President Xi Jinping, in a meeting with a group of executives including Rajesh Subramaniam from FedEx and Bill Winters from Standard Chartered, called on global business leaders to work together to protect supply chains.

Amid a deepening trade war with the US, the Chinese leader told the group of foreign business leaders, including Pascal Soriot from AstraZeneca and Miguel Ángel López Borrego from Thyssenkrupp, that they should resist behaviors that “turn back” history.

Speaking at the meeting held in Beijing on Friday, Xi said, “We hope everyone will have a broad and long-term perspective and not blindly follow actions that disrupt the security and stability of global industrial and supply chains, but instead add more positive energy and certainty to global development.”

The event at the Great Hall of the People marked the second consecutive year that Xi held a carefully arranged meeting with foreign CEOs in the Chinese capital. Last year’s event involved only US business leaders.

The meeting took place at the end of a busy week for Chinese policymakers, who are striving to strengthen relations with the international business community amid rising tensions with the administration of US President Donald Trump.

China’s leading annual CEO conference, the China Development Forum, was held earlier this week in Beijing, followed by the Boao Forum for Asia on the tropical resort island of Hainan.

Beijing is trying to present itself as a bastion of stability in global trade, in contrast to the US, where Trump has launched successive waves of tariffs on many products, from aluminum to automobiles.

Trump pledged on April 2 to impose broad and reciprocal taxes on US trade partners.

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Trump’s potential auto tariffs worry Japan and South Korea

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Following US President Donald Trump’s announcement that he would impose a 25% tariff on imported cars and auto parts, Japan’s Prime Minister sounded the alarm on Thursday.

Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba told lawmakers during a parliamentary session, “We need to consider appropriate responses,” adding, “All options will be on the table.”

This move, seen as undermining a bilateral agreement made between Trump and then-Prime Minister Shinzo Abe in September 2019, came as a surprise to Japan. This limited trade deal had opened Japan’s market to more American agricultural products. The agreement states that the two countries “will refrain from taking measures contrary to the spirit of these agreements.”

Japanese automakers reacted cautiously to the announcement. Toyota, Subaru, Mazda, and Honda issued brief statements saying they were assessing the potential impact.

Imported cars and trucks are currently subject to tariffs of 2.5% and 25%, respectively. When the new tariffs take effect on April 3, these rates will rise to 27.5% and 50%. The 25% tariff will also apply to automotive parts like engines and transmissions, taking effect no later than May 3.

Japan’s Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshimasa Hayashi said the government intends to negotiate exemptions. Economists say it is unclear how exemptions might be secured, but there are several options.

According to economists, options Japan might consider include voluntary export restraints, a commitment to increase imports of items like natural gas, grain, and meat, and replacing Russian natural gas with gas from the US. In 2023, 8.9% of Japan’s natural gas imports came from Russia, while 7.2% came from the US.

“Japan will likely be looking at all these options,” said Koichi Fujishiro, a senior economist at the Dai-ichi Life Research Institute.

South Korea in a similar situation

South Korea is also expected to seek exemptions. Analysts said that South Korean automaker Hyundai Motor Group’s announcement earlier this week of a $21 billion US investment would help its negotiating position.

Esther Yim, a senior analyst at Samsung Securities, said, “The US has, in principle, applied a 25% tariff on all imported cars,” adding, “Washington can then negotiate with each country, and I think investment can be used as leverage.”

South Korea’s Ministry of Industry pledged an emergency response by April to help the country’s automakers, who are expected to face “significant challenges” when the tariffs take effect.

Over the years, global automakers have shifted to local production to avoid trade friction. According to the Mitsubishi Research Institute, 60% of Japanese cars sold in the US are produced in the US. This figure drops to 40% for Korean cars. For European brands, the rate is as high as 70%.

Although Ishiba insists all options are on the table, few analysts expect Japan to resort to retaliatory measures, at least at this point. “Japan would gain very little by retaliating against US tariffs,” Fujishiro said.

At a summit with Trump in February, Ishiba pointed out that Japan is the largest investor in the US and a significant job creator, promising to work towards increasing Japan’s investment balance from $783.3 billion in 2023 to $1 trillion.

Cars, Japan’s largest export item to the US, are worth 6 trillion yen ($40 billion) and will account for 28% of Japan’s total exports in 2024. This amount is equivalent to 1% of Japan’s nominal gross domestic product.

Takahide Kiuchi from the Nomura Research Institute estimates that a 25% tariff would reduce Japan’s car exports to the US by 15% to 20% and lower Japan’s GDP by 0.2%.

If Japanese automakers try to respond by shifting production to the US, this would reduce domestic employment and hollow out the country’s economy in the long run.

Masanori Katayama, chairman of the Japan Automobile Manufacturers Association, said at a press conference last week, “Car exports from Japan are necessary to supplement the domestic production of Japanese automakers and to provide a lineup of attractive cars… to meet the diverse needs of American customers through car dealerships in every US state.”

Katayama said that when the US implements the tariff, “a significant production adjustment is expected. The Japanese auto industry consists not only of automakers but also parts suppliers and employs 5.5 million people.”

Katayama insisted that the industry and the Japanese government must come together to take action and keep domestic supply chains intact.

The tariffs are also expected to harm American automakers because they too source parts and manufacture globally to keep costs down and make their cars competitive in the market.

Nomura analyst Anindya Das said General Motors could fall into an operating loss on an annual basis due to its reliance on factories in Mexico. He added that Toyota could also see a 30% drop in operating profit.

Jennifer Safavian, president and CEO of Autos Drive America, an industry group representing international automakers operating in the US, including Toyota, Honda, Nissan, and others, said, “Tariffs imposed today will make it more expensive to produce and sell cars in the US, ultimately leading to higher prices, fewer choices for consumers, and fewer manufacturing jobs in the US.”

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South Korean opposition leader Lee Jae-myung acquitted in election law case

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A court in South Korea on Wednesday overturned a lower court’s decision, ruling that the main opposition party leader is not guilty of violating election law. If this decision is upheld, it will pave the way for him to run in the next presidential election.

Prosecutors can appeal the decision, which could take the case to the Supreme Court, South Korea’s highest judicial body.

Speaking outside the court after the ruling was announced, Lee Jae-myung thanked the court for the decision, which he described as “the right decision.”

The charges against Lee stem from remarks he made in 2021 while competing in his party’s presidential primary, where he allegedly denied knowing one of the key figures in a real estate development scandal. The scandal involved a redevelopment project in Seongnam city, where Lee was mayor. Prosecutors allege Lee lied about his relationship with businessman Kim Moon-ki to conceal his own culpability in the real estate deal.

Immediately after the court’s decision was announced, Kweon Seong-dong, leader of the ruling People Power Party, called the ruling “regrettable” and urged the Supreme Court to quickly decide the case.

Lee, a trained lawyer and experienced politician, lost the 2022 presidential election by the narrowest margin in South Korea’s democratic history to now-impeached President Yoon Suk Yeol.

Yoon, Lee’s fierce rival, is awaiting a Constitutional Court ruling on his impeachment over charges of leading an insurrection in December. Lawmakers voted to impeach Yoon following his attempt to declare martial law in early December, which he claimed was necessary to protect South Korea from opposition “anti-state forces.” The measure was quickly rejected in the National Assembly, but the attempt triggered a political crisis that continues months later.

The Constitutional Court completed hearings on Yoon’s case late last month and is expected to deliver its verdict within days, although no official date has been announced. If the court finds Yoon not guilty, he will be immediately reinstated. If found guilty, an early election will be held within 60 days.

Data released last week by polling firm Gallup Korea showed Lee as the leading choice among potential candidates for the next presidential election. Lee, with a support rate of 36%, was far ahead of the number 2 likely candidate, conservative Labor Minister Kim Moon-soo.

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