TSMC's first-quarter revenue surges as AI interest propels sales beyond market forecasts


The logo of Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) is displayed at TSMC Museum of Innovation in Hsinchu, Taiwan April 9, 2026. REUTERS/Ann Wang

TAIPEI, April 10 (Reuters) - TSMC, the ⁠world's largest contract chipmaker, on Friday reported a 35% surge in ⁠first-quarter revenue, beating market forecasts, thanks to unabated interest in artificial ‌intelligence applications.

January-March revenue reached T$1.134 trillion ($35.71 billion) compared with T$839.3 billion in the same period a year earlier, TSMC said in a statement without elaborating.

The result topped an LSEG SmartEstimate of ​T$1.125 billion drawn from 20 analysts, and was ⁠in line with TSMC's January ⁠guidance of $34.6 billion to $35.8 billion given at its last earnings call. TSMC only ⁠issues ‌guidance in U.S. dollars.

TSMC's latest record-smashing quarterly revenue comes as war in the Middle East is raising energy costs and upending global ⁠markets. That in turn threatens to disrupt the supply of ​production materials for ‌semiconductors which analysts said could force companies to delay AI data centre ⁠investment.

Analysts nevertheless ​raised their forecast for TSMC's April-June revenue by 2.3% over the last 30 days to a record T$1.2 trillion, LSEG data showed, betting on constrained capacity for advanced ⁠AI chip production to boost the firm's earnings.

TSMC ​will report first-quarter earnings on April16 along with an updated outlook for the current quarter and full year.

The chipmaker, whose customers include Nvidia, has been a major ⁠beneficiary of advances in AI, which has more than offset a tapering-off in pandemic-led demand for chips used in consumer electronics such as tablet computers.

Its Taipei-listed shares have gained 29% this year versus a rise of 22%in the ​benchmark share price index. The stock closed up 2.3% ⁠on Friday ahead of its sales announcement.

Compatriot Foxconn, the world's largest contract electronics ​maker and Nvidia's biggest server maker, has also ‌reported bumper first-quarter sales with an on-year ​rise of 30%.

($1=31.7560 Taiwan dollars)

(Reporting by Ben Blanchard, Faith Hung and Wen-Yee Lee; Editing by Christian Schmollinger, Clarence Fernandez and Christopher Cushing)

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