39 news tagged with 5347 in the last 7 days
Mega Investment Trust's Taiwan Wafer Manufacturing ETF (00913-TW) returned 128.49% year-to-date through July 3, 2026, ranking first among all non-leveraged ETFs in Taiwan as AI-driven chip demand lifted constituent stocks including TSMC, UMC, Vanguard Semiconductor, MediaTek, and ASE Technology. WSTS now projects the global semiconductor market will breach the $1 trillion mark for the first time ever. Mega recommends pairing 00913 with its international chip ETF 00911 (holdings: NVIDIA, AMD, Micron, Broadcom, Intel) as a 'dual-tower' strategy to capture both US design leadership and Taiwan manufacturing dominance across the AI supply chain.
Why it matters: Sector-wide positive demand signal anchored by the WSTS $1T forecast and strong ETF performance data, but no specific capex commitment, named contract, or earnings revision for individual constituent stocks.
Open source articleTaiwan's TAIEX eked out a 0.08% gain to 46,781 on July 3 while foreigners net-sold NT$77.8B (≈US$2.4B) — a second straight session of heavy outflows — pushing the week's cumulative foreign net selling to NT$141.0B (≈US$4.4B). Both foreign investors and domestic investment trusts coordinated selling in memory stocks: Winbond (2344) and PSMC (6770) were hit by both camps, Nanya Tech (5347) by investment trusts alone, while panel maker Innolux (3481) saw the largest single-name foreign outflow at 57,000 lots. Investment trusts offered a partial offset — their ninth consecutive day of net buying at NT$7.6B — but concentrated purchases in financials and logistics rather than semis.
Why it matters: Coordinated institutional selling of Taiwan memory and display stocks across two investor categories is a meaningful demand-signal for the DRAM/NAND supply chain including Korean peers, but the article contains no discrete earnings, capex, or contract event to qualify as high.
Open source articleOriginal: 「矽電光熱」成 AI 發展主要瓶頸!法人點名台積電、穎崴等十檔受惠股
Institutional analysts have reframed the AI investment debate around four physical constraints — Silicon, Power, Photonics, and Thermal (S.P.O.T.) — arguing supply-chain execution now matters more than demand validation. TSMC leads pick lists on CoWoS advanced-packaging strength, with AMD unexpectedly doubling next year's CoWoS wafer orders to ~210,000 units; a looming 15-20% CPU supply gap through 2028 and memory tightness into late 2027 add further upside signals across the chain. SK Hynix faces near-term pressure as HBM4 development setbacks and a CoWoS re-tapeout are set to push NVIDIA's next-gen Rubin platform shipments below initial 2026 forecasts, potentially compressing supply-chain ASPs in Q2–Q3.
Why it matters: Institutional report names specific stock picks with quantified forecasts — AMD CoWoS doubling, a 15-20% CPU supply gap through 2028, HBM4 delays hitting Rubin — all of which are near-term stock-moving datapoints.
Open source articleOriginal: 環球晶圓現貨價將追上合約價,野村力挺 1,200 元目標價帶動股價攻漲停
Nomura Securities maintained a Buy rating on GlobalWafers (6488) and raised its target price to NT$1,200, sending shares to daily limit-up at NT$1,105 on July 1; parent Sino-American Silicon Products (5347) also hit limit-up. Silicon wafer spot prices rose 5–10% in H1 2026, and Nomura now expects H2 gains to materially exceed the prior +10% estimate as logic foundries and memory makers accelerate procurement. Spot prices — which ran ~20% below long-term contract (LTA) levels throughout 2023–2025 — are forecast to converge with LTA, sharply improving GlobalWafers' negotiating leverage and margin outlook.
Why it matters: Nomura's target price upgrade and the spot-to-LTA convergence thesis are clear near-term stock catalysts, evidenced by GlobalWafers and its parent both hitting daily limit-up on the report date.
Open source articleSouth Korea's government is directing Samsung and SK Hynix to double memory output within five years in the largest-ever DRAM/NAND investment push, putting Taiwan's four memory names on high alert. Nanya Tech (5347), Winbond (2344), PSMC (6770), and Macronix are responding with a 'defense-first' strategy—upgrading processes and targeting HBM and niche applications rather than competing on scale. Nanya committed >NT$52B (~$1.6B) for its new 5A fab and a 1C/1D DDR5 roadmap; PSMC structurally raised foundry pricing in March–April and is buying HBM equipment (~$512M capex); Winbond approved an additional NT$7.3B (~$225M) for CUBE advanced packaging, targeting 40–50% bit-output growth by 2027.
Why it matters: Multiple named companies disclosed specific capex figures, process roadmaps, and pricing actions—all stock-moving disclosures—in direct response to a confirmed government-backed Korean capacity surge.
Open source articleChinese wafer foundry Nexchip Semiconductor (合肥晶合集成) is raising up to $890M via a Hong Kong IPO, issuing 216.2M H shares at up to HK$32.30/share with trading set to begin July 10. Approximately 53.6% of proceeds are earmarked for 22nm platform R&D and AI-driven production upgrades, putting it on a direct collision course with Taiwan's mature-node foundries. The company flagged that 2026 net profit will fall year-over-year due to rising depreciation from newly ramped production lines.
Why it matters: Nexchip's $890M capital raise to expand 22nm foundry capacity directly pressures Taiwan mature-node peers (UMC, Vanguard, Powerchip) on pricing and market share, but does not constitute a named contract or earnings event for tracked tickers.
Open source articleAtreides Management's Gavin Baker, speaking on the All In podcast, called DRAM the single most critical AI bottleneck and forecast that hyperscalers will direct 30–40% of total capex to DRAM purchases by 2027. Baker identified SK Hynix, Samsung, and Micron as the only producers capable of supplying HBM, LPDDR, and SOCAM for AI servers, while suggesting CXMT could address commodity DRAM demand for consumer devices like Apple's. He noted DRAM stocks remain relatively cheap versus other AI equities despite the outsized demand trajectory.
Why it matters: A prominent hedge fund manager provides a specific, quantified capex allocation forecast (30-40% of hyperscaler spend) naming SK Hynix and Samsung as the only credible HBM suppliers — a clear demand signal with direct stock implications.
Open source articleThe Taiwan OTC (TPEx) weighted index climbed 3.43% intraday on June 30 to 427.09, with automotive diode concepts up 8.51% and power semiconductor concepts up 6.63% as the top sector gainers. Leading movers — 強茂 (+9.94%), 漢磊 (+10%), 富鼎 (+9.96%) — are not in the Silicon Nexus tracked universe, but the rally offers a positive read-through for tracked power-IC and specialty-foundry names. TPEx's 3-month gain of +27% and YTD gain of +49% reflect a sustained recovery in demand across power and automotive semiconductor segments.
Why it matters: Market-data intraday flash with sector-level demand signals for power semiconductors and automotive diodes; none of the named movers fall within the tracked universe, limiting direct portfolio impact.
Open source articleDDR3 contract prices surged 50–100% QoQ in Q2 2026, with the benchmark 4Gb chip settling near $13.0 on contract and spot prices hitting $9.7—7.6x their year-ago level—as Samsung, SK Hynix, and Micron have all exited legacy DRAM in favor of DDR5 and HBM. Taiwan's Nanya (5347) and Winbond (2344) are now the only meaningful DDR3 producers, and both are pivoting toward DDR4, tightening supply further. The price spike is a direct near-term revenue tailwind for both Taiwanese names serving printer and industrial-equipment end markets.
Why it matters: A 50–100% QoQ contract price surge and 7.6x YoY spot price move for DDR3 constitute a material near-term earnings tailwind for specifically named producers Nanya and Winbond, qualifying as a stock-moving pricing event.
Open source articleTaiwan's TAIEX closed at 44,999 on June 29, gaining 428 points but failing the 45,000 threshold as hawkish Fed signals, a 4.07% weekly pullback in U.S. equities, and Middle East tensions drove profit-taking after record highs. AllianceBernstein Taiwan deputy GM Lin Bing-Kui argues the correction is a healthy consolidation within a bull trend, recommending a shift from index-chasing to fundamentals-driven names across AI infrastructure—advanced-process foundries, ABF substrates, HPC packaging, and semiconductor equipment. Foreign investors are structurally repositioning rather than fully exiting, concentrating in higher-visibility AI supply-chain names and select traditional-industry companies pivoting to automotive electronics and industrial applications.
Why it matters: Broad market strategy commentary from an asset manager with no company-specific earnings, capex, or contract announcements; provides sector rotation signals but not a direct stock-moving catalyst.
Open source articleHSBC and UBS upgraded UMC (2303) to Buy with price targets of NT$235 and NT$230, citing a mature-node foundry upcycle, 5-10% price hikes in 2H26 widening to ~10% in early 2027, and 28nm utilization breaking 90% by 2027 on Sony ISP and OmniVision automotive CIS wins. HSBC also raised Vanguard (5347) PT to NT$220 from NT$171 and lifted GlobalFoundries and SMIC targets, flagging UMC as the biggest beneficiary if TSMC (2330) consolidates mature 12-inch capacity.
Why it matters: Two major sell-side upgrades with concrete price target hikes, pricing guidance, and utilization forecasts for UMC and Vanguard — a clear stock-moving catalyst for Taiwan mature-node foundries.
Open source articleSK Hynix is reportedly delaying part of its HBM3E-to-HBM4 line conversion to redirect capacity into standard DRAM, where operating margins now exceed HBM by more than 15 percentage points and Daishin sees margins approaching a theoretical 90% this year. Taiwan memory names sold off on the news — Nanya Tech -2.2%, Winbond -3.3%, ADATA -1.6% — while Powerchip rose 3.8%; Goldman and Morgan Stanley remain constructive on Hynix, with MS lifting 2026 EPS 56–63% on a forecast 62% DRAM ASP rise.
Why it matters: Names a concrete strategy shift by the DRAM market leader with quantified margin/ASP impact and same-session moves in Taiwan memory stocks — directly stock-moving for SK Hynix, Samsung and Taiwan DRAM peers.
Open source articleWith TSMC concentrating capacity on 5nm/3nm/2nm and AI edge inference driving demand for PMICs, MCUs and sensors, mature-node orders are spilling over to second-tier foundries. UMC (2303) surged to NT$170, a 26-year high; analyst flags Vanguard (5347) and PSMC (6770) as pullback buys, with PSMC's Tongluo fab sale to Micron and memory price surge cited as catalysts (target NT$90 at 15x P/E).
Why it matters: Sector thesis piece on mature-node foundry spillover from TSMC capacity tightness — directional read on UMC/VIS/PSMC but no hard catalyst beyond the already-known Micron Tongluo deal.
Open source articleTaiwanese commentator highlights an AI-driven rotation from large-cap weights into mid/small growth names as TAIEX sets new highs, flagging third-gen semis (SiC/GaN), optical lens makers and MLCC leaders as next-leg beneficiaries. Specific catalysts cited: TSMC CoWoS capacity rising from 70k to 130k wafers/month by end-2026 (NVIDIA locked >60%), Hanlei's 8-inch SiC pilot in 2Q-3Q 2026 with commercial ramp in 4Q, ChipMOS-style test ASP gains at Sigurd, and Yageo utilization recovery to 65%+ standard / ~85% high-end.
Why it matters: Sector rotation commentary with company-specific roadmap/capacity color (TSMC CoWoS, Yageo utilization, SiC ramps) but no fresh stock-moving disclosure; piece is largely a paid newsletter-style promotion.
Open source articleTSMC has reportedly cut 28nm monthly wafer starts from ~200K at the start of 2026 to ~150K in June, redirecting the freed capacity to silicon interposers for advanced packaging. Displaced 28nm customers are migrating to UMC (2303) and Vanguard (5347); TSMC publicly reaffirmed its mature-node strategy is unchanged and pointed to ongoing capacity additions at JASM (Japan) and ESMC (Germany).
Why it matters: Concrete capacity numbers and named beneficiaries (UMC, Vanguard) make this a real supply-chain readthrough, but it is sourced as a market rumor and TSMC's official line is 'strategy unchanged,' so it stops short of a confirmed stock-moving event.
Open source articleTaiwan's MOEA confirmed the 3-year 50% discount on water consumption fees expires after fiscal 2025, with full-rate billing notices to be mailed before July 31 to roughly 1,300 large users consuming over 9,000 m3/month — covering semiconductor, chemical, panel and textile industries. Cumulative water savings have reached 75M tons since the levy began in 2023, but foundries and panel makers face higher utility costs from 2026 onward, reinforcing pressure to invest in recycled water and process recovery.
Why it matters: Sector-wide Taiwan regulatory cost change affecting semiconductor, foundry and panel makers — meaningful for cost structure but not an immediate stock-moving event.
Open source articleTSMC and Amkor signed a 10-year cooperation agreement under which TSMC will procure advanced packaging and test services from Amkor, anchored at Amkor's Arizona advanced packaging and test campus alongside TSMC's local fab buildout. The deal locks in US-domestic CoWoS-class capacity for HPC/AI demand and tightens TSMC's OSAT supply chain in Arizona, with read-throughs for Korean and Taiwanese OSAT and packaging-material peers.
Why it matters: A named, multi-year capacity-and-procurement contract between TSMC and Amkor for US advanced packaging is a clear stock-moving event for TSMC and read-across to Korean/Taiwanese OSAT peers.
Open source articleOriginal: 全球前十大晶圓代工Q1營收季增3.7%創新高 台積電市占率升至72%
TrendForce reports Q1 top-10 foundry revenue reached a record $47.95B (+3.7% QoQ), with TSMC's share rising to 72% on strong AI server GPU/xPU demand (revenue +6.3% QoQ to $35.86B). Samsung Foundry slipped to $3.2B (-5.8% QoQ, 6.5% share); UMC fell 3.2% to $1.93B, Vanguard -2.1% to ~$400M, and PSMC +4.4% to ~$390M. Q2 is guided to a new peak with accelerating QoQ growth as TV/PC/NB pull-ins continue and foundries flag H2 price hikes.
Why it matters: Quantified market-share shift (TSMC to 72%, Samsung to 6.5%) plus explicit H2 foundry price-hike guidance is directly stock-moving for TSMC, Samsung Foundry, UMC and second-tier TW foundries.
Open source articleVanguard International Semiconductor (VIS, 5347.TW) posted May 2026 consolidated revenue of NT$4.24B, up 5.35% MoM and 19.48% YoY on higher wafer shipments; YTD revenue reached NT$20.80B (+8.48% YoY). Chairman Fang Lueh flagged AI-driven demand in power management, automotive and industrial specialty processes, and noted price adjustments have been accepted by most customers amid rising material and energy costs from the US-Iran conflict.
Why it matters: Monthly revenue print with solid YoY growth and confirmation of accepted price hikes — supportive specialty-foundry data point but not a discrete stock-moving catalyst.
Uni-President Investment Management says the recent Taiwan-stock pullback reflects short-term positioning and repriced Fed cut expectations, not a fundamental break, with global PMIs still expansionary and the four big CSPs reaffirming AI capex plans. It expects Taiwan tech earnings to grow 40%+ this year on AI server/HPC demand, flagging advanced packaging, CCL, PCB, ABF substrates, MLCC, thermal and power management as preferred plays, with order visibility now extending to 2027-2030 and HVDC, liquid cooling and high-speed optical as emerging themes.
Why it matters: Sector-level house view on Taiwan AI supply chain with a 40%+ earnings growth call and named sub-segments, but no specific company catalyst or contract.
Open source articleCapital Group's 00919 ETF (1.26M holders) reshuffled 18 in / 18 out, adding Nvidia supply-chain names Realtek (2379) and Quanta (2382) along with Taiwan's top five life-insurance financial holdings, while removing AI-rally stocks whose dividends lagged price gains, including UMC (2303), Vanguard (5347), Powertech (6239) and WT Microelectronics (3036). Financial-sector weighting rises above 40%, and the next distribution is forecast at NT$1/unit (annualized 13.33% yield), ex-date June 16.
Why it matters: ETF rebalance creates mechanical buy/sell flows in tracked names (Realtek, Quanta added; UMC, Vanguard removed) but 00919's AUM is modest relative to these large caps, so the impact is supply-chain/flow-driven rather than a fundamental catalyst.
Open source articleIntel CEO Lip-Bu Tan said at COMPUTEX that Agentic AI is reshaping CPU demand, with multiple CEOs calling him over the past four weeks seeking more CPU supply, and the future CPU:GPU ratio may tilt toward CPUs. Intel highlighted Taiwan's central role across PC client, server, rack-scale systems, and OEM/ODM partnerships, while flagging supply chain constraints as the main bottleneck. TSMC was explicitly noted as not a rival, with Intel using its own foundry for data center products.
Why it matters: Sector/demand-narrative commentary from Intel's CEO at COMPUTEX with positive read-through to Taiwan server/ODM supply chain, but no specific contract, capex, or order figures disclosed.
Open source articleOriginal: 〈COMPUTEX〉高通公布21家台灣供應鏈 南亞科與「神祕」轉投資雙雙入列
At Computex, Qualcomm CEO Cristiano Amon unveiled a 21-company Taiwan supplier backplane led by TSMC, and notably included Nanya Tech and its affiliate PieceMakers — indirectly confirming a custom low-power, high-bandwidth memory partnership targeting Qualcomm mobile platforms. Nanya has said small-volume shipments have begun, with a more meaningful revenue contribution expected in 1H 2027. Other named names span ASE, Foxconn (FII/Ingrasys), UMC, Powerchip, VIS, Win Semi, Winbond, Unimicron, Kinsus and the PSA group.
Why it matters: Qualcomm's official supplier list confirms a custom memory partnership with Nanya/PieceMakers targeting mobile, a concrete supply-chain win with named TW foundry, OSAT and substrate beneficiaries.
Open source articleNikon's new president Yasuhiro Ohmura says the company is undercutting ASML on ArF immersion scanners (vs. ASML's ~$82.5M ASP) and is in late-stage talks with US and Asian chipmakers, leveraging in-house components for cost. Nikon shipped just 11 ArF tools in FY3/24 and zero in the first three quarters of FY25 while posting a record ¥86B (~$540M) net loss, so the price-cut push is a turnaround bid — relevant to fabs (TSMC, Samsung, SK Hynix, UMC) that want a second DUV source alongside ASML.
Why it matters: Supply-chain story about a potential second DUV source; no firm orders or capex numbers yet, so it's directional rather than stock-moving for any single name.
Open source articleAMD CEO Lisa Su visited Taiwan on May 20 pledging $10B of investment to expand AI supply-chain ties around the Q2 Helios rack launch, followed by Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang on May 23 visiting TSMC, Quanta and Hon Hai for the Vera Rubin platform. The article flags continued price hikes across PCB, power and compound-semi suppliers including Delta (2308), Hon Hai (2317), TSMC (2330), GlobalWafers (6488) and WIN Semi (3105) as hyperscaler capex is projected to exceed $1T by 2027.
Why it matters: Supply-chain roundup tied to two CEO visits and capex commentary rather than a single stock-moving catalyst, with a promotional newsletter tone.
Open source articleTaiwan's Lits (4923) says order visibility now extends to year-end as foundry partner Vanguard (5347) ramps capacity, with deferred 1H orders shipping from June. New notebook OEM and two Japanese game-console wins should drive 20-30% growth in its power supply unit business this year, with additional small-signal transfer orders coming from the Nexperia ownership dispute.
Why it matters: Supply-chain/order-visibility story for a small Taiwan component maker; positive for Vanguard as foundry partner but not a major stock-moving catalyst.
Original: 成熟製程進上行循環!外資上調聯電、世界先進與環球晶目標價
An American brokerage upgraded UMC's rating and raised target prices for UMC, Vanguard International Semiconductor (5347), and GlobalWafers (6488, downgraded but TP raised), citing mature-process nodes entering a new upcycle as AI-server-driven PMIC demand offsets weak consumer electronics. UMC wafer prices are forecast to rise 5–10% in H2 2026 with further increases in 2027, and capacity is expected to remain tight through 2028. TSMC outsourcing interposer production to Vanguard and exercising more disciplined legacy-node capacity management are flagged as structural supply tighteners.
Why it matters: Named analyst rating changes (UMC upgraded, GlobalWafers downgraded) with quantified target price revisions and a specific 5–10% wafer price forecast for H2 2026 constitute clear stock-moving events across multiple tracked tickers.
Open source articleTAIEX fell 280.54 pts to 40,891.82 after an early 1,000+ pt plunge tested the monthly line, with turnover shrinking to NT$990.4B (~US$30B). TSMC (2330) dropped over 2% to a low of NT$2,215, ASE (3711) fell ~7% and Taiwan Union Tech (2383) ~2%, while MediaTek (2454) rallied to a NT$5.4T market cap and single-handedly added ~81 index points. Passive components surged led by Yageo hitting limit-up at NT$501 (first trillion-NT$ cap in the group), while small-cap semis Vanguard (5347), eMemory (3529), ChipMOS-affiliate Xintec (3374) and SigurdMicroelectronics (6451) all hit limit-down.
Why it matters: Broad daily market wrap with notable sector divergence (passive components up, small-cap foundry/IP names limit-down) relevant to TW semi positioning, but no single stock-moving catalyst.
Open source articleOriginal: China’s No. 2 chip foundry HHGrace says it has 'always been compliant' with U.S. export controls - CNBC
Hua Hong Semiconductor (HHGrace), China's second-largest foundry behind SMIC, publicly defended its compliance with U.S. export controls amid heightened scrutiny of Chinese chipmakers. The statement signals continued Washington pressure on China's mature-node foundry capacity, a competitive overhang for Taiwan's UMC and Vanguard which compete head-on in legacy nodes.
Why it matters: Sector-wide US-China export control theme with read-through to Taiwan mature-node foundries (UMC, Vanguard) that compete with HHGrace, but no new policy action announced.
Open source articleTSMC (2330) announced a plan to divest ~152M shares (8.1%) of Vanguard International Semiconductor (5347) via block trade to financial investors at within 10% of the NT$176.5 May 15 close, cutting its stake from 27.1% to ~19% and booking roughly NT$71.8B (~US$2.2B) in disposal gains on total proceeds of NT$24.1B–29.5B (~US$740M–910M). VIS gapped down to limit-down at NT$159 with over 14,000 sell orders stacked, and TSMC affiliates GUC (3443), ChipMOS-related Xintec (3374) and VisEra (6789) sold off 5–7% (Xintec also limit-down) on fears of further portfolio rationalization, though TSMC says strategic ties — including silicon interposer outsourcing and GaN licensing — are unaffected.
Why it matters: Named M&A/divestment with concrete pricing, sizeable disposal gain, and immediate limit-down moves across TSMC's listed affiliates — directly stock-moving for four tickers in the tracked TW universe.
Open source articleTSMC plans to sell up to 152M shares (~8.1%) of Vanguard International Semiconductor (VIS) to financial investors via block trade, cutting its stake from 27.1% to ~19%, with no further sales planned. TSMC says the strategic relationship is unaffected — VIS will still produce silicon interposers for TSMC and retain its GaN process tech licensing — but VIS shares slumped to limit-down at NT$159 (-NT$17.5) on the overhang.
Why it matters: Named stock-moving event: TSMC block-sale of a tracked TW name (VIS/5347) triggered a limit-down move with clear overhang implications.
Open source articleTaiwan's TAIEX opened down nearly 1,000 points to 41,095 as TSMC (2330) fell 2.21%, dragging weighted names Hon Hai (2317), Delta (2308) and Lite-On (2301); CCL maker TLC (2383) plunged over 5% and IC substrate names Kinsus (3189), Unimicron (3037), Nan Ya PCB (8046) extended weakness. Brokers cite profit-taking above 40K, the May 20 TAIFEX settlement (foreign-investor sell-down risk), and await Nvidia earnings on 5/20 as the key signal for AI supply-chain momentum; TSMC's planned block sale of up to 152M VIS (5347) shares (~8.1%) to financial investors is also in focus.
Why it matters: Broad market open commentary with sector rotation and macro cues rather than a single stock-moving catalyst, though it carries a concrete TSMC/VIS block-sale plan and names specific supply-chain weakness.
Open source articleCitrini Research's 'Supply Chain Inheritance' report argues AI datacenters shifting to 800V DC architectures will drive 1200V SiC demand, projecting AI-related power to be 50% of the SiC market by 2030. The article highlights Taiwan AI power-chain beneficiaries including TSMC (2330), Vanguard (5347), GlobalWafers (6488), and Delta (2308), but frames them as pullback watchlist names rather than immediate buys given stretched breadth indicators.
Why it matters: Sector/supply-chain thesis piece naming multiple Taiwan AI power-chain beneficiaries off a third-party research report, with no company-specific catalyst, earnings, or contract event.
Open source articleOriginal: 〈台股盤前要聞〉520行情走味?外資期貨5萬空單罩頂、台積電擬賣世界先進15.2萬張
TSMC (2330) plans to divest up to 152M shares of Vanguard International Semiconductor (5347), about 8.1% of share capital, via block trade to financial institutions, cutting its stake to 19%. Meanwhile foreign net short futures positions on TAIEX have swelled to 50K contracts as traders brace for a near-term pullback, with Nvidia's May 20 earnings flagged as the key catalyst for AI momentum.
Why it matters: Named M&A/divestiture event: TSMC announcing a specific 8.1% block-trade sale of Vanguard is directly stock-moving for both 2330 and 5347.
Open source articleTSMC (2330) announced a block-trade sale of up to 152M shares of Vanguard International Semiconductor (5347), equal to 8.1% of VIS, to financial investors. The disposal will cut TSMC's VIS stake from 27.1% to roughly 19%, with no further sales planned; strategic ties (silicon interposer production, GaN process licensing) remain intact.
Why it matters: Named ~8% block-trade sale in VIS by its largest shareholder TSMC is a clear stock-moving overhang/event for 5347 and a capital-allocation signal from 2330.
Open source articleTSMC (2330) announced plans to sell up to 152M shares of Vanguard International Semiconductor (5347), about 8.1% of share capital, to financial investors via block trade, reducing its stake from 27.1% to roughly 19%. TSMC stressed the strategic partnership remains intact — including silicon interposer production and GaN process licensing — and said it has no further plans to sell down the stake; the move reflects TSMC's push to concentrate resources on advanced/specialty nodes and packaging while exiting 6/8-inch processes.
Why it matters: Named M&A/divestiture event involving two tracked tickers with a defined block-trade size and stake change, likely to move both names short-term.
Open source articleOriginal: Chinese Chip Maker SMIC’s Profit Misses Market Expectations - WSJ
SMIC, China's largest foundry, reported quarterly profit below consensus despite resilient revenue, signaling margin pressure from aggressive capacity expansion and pricing competition in mature nodes. The miss reinforces concerns about overcapacity in trailing-edge foundry, a segment where Taiwanese specialty foundries UMC, Vanguard and PSMC compete directly.
Why it matters: SMIC earnings are a sector read-through for mature-node foundry pricing and overcapacity, directly relevant to Taiwanese specialty foundries UMC/Vanguard/PSMC, though not a Korea/Taiwan-specific event.
Open source articleOriginal: TSMC allocates $20 billion to Arizona expansion — project faces water and labor shortages, complicated by visa rules - Tom's Hardware
TSMC is allocating an additional $20 billion to expand its Arizona fab cluster, but the buildout faces material constraints: insufficient water supply, a shortage of skilled construction and fab labor, and US visa rules that limit how many Taiwanese engineers can be rotated in. The friction reinforces TSMC's structural dependence on its Taiwan home base and raises execution risk on US-made advanced node capacity that hyperscaler customers (NVIDIA, AMD, Apple) are counting on.
Why it matters: TSMC capex allocation and execution risk on US advanced-node capacity is a direct, material event for TSMC and its TW supply chain peers.
Open source article