The US$100 billion outlay may avert threatened tariffs, but it risks undermining the island’s strategically vital semiconductor industry.
The Taiwanese chip giant TSMC’s plan to invest $100 billion in the United States has been met with anxiety and criticism in its home country.
President Donald Trump on Monday met with the chief of one of the world's biggest semiconductor chip producers amid talk of a new hundred billion-dollar U.S. investment. Trump and CEO C.C. Wei announced that Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company,
President Trump and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing announced a $100 billion company investment in Phoenix. The deal could have broad significance.
Taiwan President Lai Ching-te and the CEO of Taiwan's largest chipmaker on Thursday held a joint news conference defending TSMC's decision to invest $100 billion in the U.S., saying that it stemmed from customer demand and not out of pressure from the Trump administration.
Trump, Chip Maker TSMC Expected to Announce $100 Billion Investment in U.S. Here's What Happened When Physicists Simulated A Black Hole In A Lab
CHIPS and Science Act, the federal government pledged $6.6 billion to help TSMC expand its U.S. operations in Phoenix. Tuesday night, President Donald Trump called the law “a horrible, horrible thing” and urged Congress to scrap it.
Thousands more computer chip jobs could be coming to Arizona as TSMC unveils yet another major expansion plan.
Read more about Taiwan-based TSMC's plans to invest $100 billion more in its semiconductor manufacturing operations in Arizona to advance AI efforts.
Trump said TSMC’s plans would create “many thousands” of high-paying jobs and described the production of AI chips within the US as a “matter of economic security” for the country.
Taiwan-based TSMC fabricates the vast majority of the advanced chips for AI and smartphones. Now more of that fabrication could move to Arizona.
Disruption created the TSMC opportunity in Arizona. And disruption could still upend it all. We must be ready for both.