Global semi news — Korea, China, Taiwan, the US, and Japan. Government policy, export controls, capex moves, supply-chain shifts, and macro events. AI-classified and tagged with affected tickers. All headlines link back to the originating publisher.
Original: AI 加持 30 年 FOPLP/玻璃基板市場規模估飆增逾 11 倍
Counterpoint Research forecasts the global fan-out panel-level packaging (FOPLP) and glass substrate market will exceed $8.1B by 2030, a 1,146% jump from roughly $650M in 2024, with AI/HPC applications driving 45.6% of FOPLP revenue. Taiwan, Japan and China are projected to hold 84.8% of panel-level packaging capacity by 2030, with Japan's glass substrate capex expected to deliver outsized growth. Glass is positioned to displace organic substrates in next-gen chiplet and large AI processor packaging.
Why it matters: Sector-level market sizing and capacity outlook from a third-party research house — directional read on advanced packaging and substrate makers, but no company-specific contract, capex, or earnings catalyst.
Original: AI營收占比快追平手機業務 矽格(6257)擴產88億元迎接高階測試需求爆發
Taiwan IC tester Sigurd raised 2026 capex from NT$5.9B to NT$8.8B (+49%) to expand AI ASIC, silicon photonics and AI connectivity test capacity, with Hukou Fab 2 ramping July 2026 and Zhongxing Fab 3 finishing in Q4 for Q1 2027 mass production. AI ASIC/silicon photonics revenue jumped 60% YoY to NT$2.4B in Jan-May 2026 (23% of sales vs 19% a year ago), and consensus sees 2026 revenue at NT$23.9B (+22%) with EPS NT$9.25 vs NT$6.14 in 2025.
Why it matters: Concrete 49% capex hike with named new fab timelines and pre-booked AI ASIC/silicon photonics capacity is a clear stock-moving capex event for the OSAT test segment.
Open source articleOriginal: 科技吃肉、傳產喝湯!台積電 3.8 兆營收稱霸全台、中後段傳產卻在縮編缺人
CRIF's 2026 Taiwan TOP5000 ranking shows TSMC (2330) leading with ~NT$3.8T (~$120B) revenue, driving aggregate TOP5000 revenue to NT$48.5T (~$1.53T) and after-tax profit to NT$5.77T (~$182B), both record highs on AI capex tailwinds from Nvidia and the four hyperscaler supply chains. However, profit divergence widened sharply — loss-making firms hit a 10-year high of 772, and tech leaders' siphoning of talent, capital, water and power is squeezing traditional industries and SMEs facing labor shortages.
Why it matters: Sector-level macro data showing AI capex beneficiary concentration in TSMC and supply chain, but no new stock-moving event — figures recap FY2025 results already reflected in prices.
Open source articleOriginal: 孙正义:软银旗下Arm将进军芯片制造,“还有10倍以上成长空间”
At SoftBank's AGM, Masayoshi Son said Arm will evolve from chip designer to chip provider by entering manufacturing itself, arguing the AI era will be 'CPU-centric' and Arm has 10x+ growth runway. He also flagged SoftBank's ~¥300B Intel stake — once criticized — now showing trillions of yen in mark-to-market gains. Chinese media frames this as a major reshuffling of the global chip landscape with Arm encroaching on foundry turf and validating Intel's turnaround.
Why it matters: Arm entering chip manufacturing directly threatens TSMC/Samsung foundry economics and reshapes CPU competition with x86 incumbents, while Son's bullish Intel mark validates IDM 2.0 — both have direct read-throughs to tracked foundry, CPU and equipment names.
Original: 中砂鑽石碟、再生晶圓兩大業務擴產 全年營收戰百億元
China Grinding Wheel (1560-TW), the largest diamond disc supplier for advanced-node foundry, is expanding capacity on both diamond discs (currently 63K/month) and 12-inch reclaimed wafers (now 400K/month, with a new North Taiwan fab planned) as 5nm/3nm/2nm customers run full and US IDM share grows. Management guides 15-20% 3-year CAGR for diamond discs, H2 better than H1, and a 15% price hike on traditional wheels from July; 2026 revenue is expected to challenge the NT$10B mark.
Why it matters: Supply-chain capacity-expansion story confirming TSMC advanced-node full utilization, but the lead name (1560) is outside the tracked universe and the read-through to TSMC is incremental, not stock-moving.
Original: How the ASML China EUV saga points to tougher reality for country’s chip sector - South China Morning Post
SCMP argues the prolonged ASML EUV export-ban saga underscores that China's path to leading-edge logic remains blocked, with SMIC and domestic fabs unable to access 7nm-and-below tooling at scale. The piece reinforces the durability of US-Dutch-Japan export controls, keeping the advanced-node moat intact for TSMC, Samsung Foundry and equipment incumbents.
Why it matters: Sector-wide geopolitics commentary reinforcing existing export controls — no new policy action, but reaffirms advanced-node moat for non-China foundries and Western equipment makers.
Original: 千點拉回免驚,緊抱這產業幫你提前卡位Q3行情!
Aletheia Capital raised TSMC's 2027 capex estimate to $85B and 2028 to $94B (2027 +52-57% YoY), with 2027/2028 EPS growth pegged at 34% and 44%. The note flags TSMC's mid-July earnings call as a setup catalyst and highlights advanced packaging, 2nm/sub-2nm, and backside power delivery suppliers (ASE 3711, Wintest 6223, etc.) as primary beneficiaries on the pullback.
Why it matters: Sector/supply-chain note built around a third-party capex revision and TSMC earnings setup, not a confirmed company event.
Open source articleOriginal: 三星與 SK 海力士考慮投入湖南半導體巨型聚落,龍仁市投資額或遭縮減引發抗議
Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix are reportedly evaluating a massive semiconductor cluster in South Korea's southwestern Honam region (Gwangju/South Jeolla), potentially exceeding KRW 200T for Samsung alone with SK Hynix possibly larger, and may include front-end fabs rather than just advanced packaging. The plan risks diverting capex from the previously announced ~KRW 360T Yongin cluster, prompting Yongin's mayor to push back; President Lee Jae-myung meets Samsung Chair Lee Jae-yong on June 25 and a southwest development forum on June 30 could see an investment MOU signed.
Why it matters: Potentially hundreds of trillions of KRW in capex relocation/expansion involving both Samsung and SK Hynix, with a presidential meeting and possible MOU within days — directly stock-moving for both names and Korean semi supply chain.
Open source articleOriginal: AI 新秀 Cerebras 首份財報撐不住高估值 盤後重挫
Cerebras posted Q1 core revenue of $193M (+94% YoY) vs $181M consensus and guided Q2 to $194M (+88% YoY) vs $178M consensus, but shares fell ~12% after-hours from $226.72 as the print failed to clear a high valuation bar. A $20B OpenAI service contract is pressuring gross margin (Q2 guided to 36-38%) because OpenAI's cloud demand outpaces server deployment, forcing Cerebras to lease back already-sold equipment; backlog stands at $24.6B with $3.7B to be recognized in 2026-2027.
Why it matters: Cerebras is an NVIDIA GPU challenger and OpenAI supplier — the print is a read-across signal for AI accelerator demand and HBM/foundry pull-through, but none of the tracked TW/KR tickers are direct counterparties named in the article.
Open source articleOriginal: 〈台股開盤〉崩跌千點 電子權值股賣壓沉重 退守4萬6
TAIEX opened down 1,053 points (-2%) to 46,047, breaking below 47,000 after the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index crashed 7.87% overnight. TSMC fell 2.81% to NT$2,420, Delta Electronics -4.57%, ASE -5%+, while UMC bucked the trend +7% on strong May earnings and panel/LEO satellite names like AUO and Innolux hit limit-up on optical communications exposure.
Why it matters: Broad market sell-off driven by overnight SOX crash affects entire TW semi complex but is a macro/tape reaction rather than a company-specific stock-moving event.
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