Artificial intelligence (AI) is far from a new technology. People have been using it for quite some time, whether knowingly or not. However, the current AI boom is a technological turning point that many would argue we haven’t seen since the introduction of the internet.
As with any new industry trend, there’s been a lot of investor optimism, but at some point, this turns into speculation. We’ve seen this story plenty of times in the market. This isn’t to say AI’s a bubble (the technology is here to stay), but current valuations rightfully bring on skepticism.
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Fortunately, there’s one company that’s a key piece to the AI supply chain that you can count on regardless: Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing (NYSE: TSM).
A good way to understand TSMC’s AI role is by working backward from the AI applications and tools people use daily. For those AI tools to be effective, they need to be trained on more data than you can fathom. This data is stored, and AI models are trained inside data centers that contain hardware like graphics processing units (GPUs), AI accelerators, and central processing units (CPUs).
Different companies design these hardware pieces, but they have one thing in common: They rely on TSMC to manufacture their chips and bring them to life. It has a virtual monopoly on manufacturing advanced AI chips because it’s the one company tech companies trust the most to be efficient and handle the necessary scale.
If the current AI boom slows or turns out to be a bubble, many companies will fail or find themselves in trouble, scrambling to pivot their businesses. TSMC isn’t one of them. Companies like Apple rely on TSMC to make its smartphone chips; Nvidia relies on it for its GPUs; Tesla relies on it for its self-driving chips; Broadcom relies on it for its networking hardware; and there are plenty more companies you can plug in there.
AI-related revenue has undoubtedly contributed to TSMC’s growing earnings and demand in recent years. It had its best year ever in 2025, bringing in $122 billion in revenue (up nearly 36% year over year).
Without AI, TSMC’s growth would take a hit, sure. However, it would be far from detrimental to TSMC’s overall long-term business.
Tech hardware will continue to need chips, and most tech companies will continue to rely on TSMC. With chip manufacturing having such a high barrier to entry, as long as TSMC continues to invest in improving its technology and expanding its capabilities, it should remain the world’s most important chip manufacturer for some time.


