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TSMC Raises Guidance as AI Chip Demand Grows Faster Than Expected

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Published Oct 21, 2025
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A close-up photo of a computer RAM module showing microchips and gold connector pins, with a patterned black heat spreader on top—a nod to rising AI chip demand and the latest guidance from tech leaders like TSMC.
Summary:
  • TSMC reported record quarterly profit of $14.77 billion and raised its annual revenue growth guidance to the middle range of 30%-40%
  • The company's CEO called current AI chip demand growth "insane" and said it's accelerating faster than they anticipated three months ago
  • TSMC dismissed bubble fears, saying AI demand is "very fundamental" and expects AI chip revenue to grow over 40% annually for the next five years

What Happened?

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing just delivered a monster quarter.

The world's largest chipmaker posted record profit of $14.77 billion. That beat analyst expectations by a wide margin. Revenue jumped 41% in dollar terms to $33.10 billion.

But the real story is what TSMC said about the future.

The company raised its revenue guidance. It now expects growth in the middle range of 30%-40% this year. Previously, TSMC guided for 30% growth.

Why the upgrade? AI chips.

TSMC CEO C.C. Wei didn't mince words on the earnings call. He called the current demand growth "insane." He said AI chip demand is stronger than the company expected just three months ago.

Why This Matters

TSMC sits at the center of the AI boom.

The company manufactures chips for:

  • Nvidia (the AI chip leader)
  • Apple (iPhone processors)
  • Qualcomm (mobile chipsets)
  • AMD (processors)

Basically, if you're using AI technology, there's a good chance TSMC made the chip powering it.

That's why TSMC's outlook matters so much. Some analysts worry we're in an AI bubble. They point to circular financing deals - like OpenAI and Nvidia investing in each other - as warning signs.

TSMC isn't buying it.

"Our conviction in the megatrend is strengthening," Wei told analysts. "We believe the demand for semiconductors will continue to be very fundamental as a key enabler of AI applications."

Wei specifically mentioned that "the number of tokens increase is exponential." That's AI-speak for computing capacity usage. More tokens means more chips needed.

The company expects AI-related chip revenue to:

  • Double in 2025
  • Grow at a mid-40% annual rate for the next five years

Even if China sales remain limited due to trade restrictions, TSMC says AI revenue can still grow better than 40% a year. That's how strong demand is from other customers.

The Bottom Line

When the company actually making AI chips says demand is "insane" and accelerating, that carries weight.

TSMC has visibility into what major tech companies are ordering. They're not speculating. They're reporting what customers are buying.

The stock was barely up Thursday despite the strong results. It's already rallied 54% this year. That massive run means expectations were high going in.

But here's what matters for investors trying to figure out if AI is a bubble:

TSMC sees real, sustained demand. Not hype. Not speculation. Actual orders from companies building AI infrastructure.

The company's confidence shows in multiple ways:

Raising guidance mid-year

Projecting 40%+ annual growth for five years

Calling current demand better than expected just three months ago

Could they be wrong? Sure. Maybe AI adoption slows. Maybe companies realize they overbought capacity.

But TSMC isn't some startup making bold predictions. They're a $700 billion manufacturer with deep customer relationships. When they say demand is accelerating exponentially, they're basing it on actual production schedules and customer forecasts.

For investors worried about an AI bubble, TSMC's results suggest the infrastructure buildout is real. Companies aren't just talking about AI. They're ordering massive quantities of chips to power it.
The risk? If AI doesn't deliver on its promise, all this infrastructure becomes excess capacity. But right now, the company closest to the actual hardware says demand keeps surprising to the upside.

TSMC's guidance for Q4 is $32.2 billion to $33.4 billion in revenue. That would represent another strong quarter of growth.

The takeaway? At least for now, the AI boom looks real from the ground level. The chips are being made. The orders keep coming. And the world's biggest chipmaker says it's only getting stronger.

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