Today: 15 May 2026
TSM Stock Jumps: Why Taiwan Semiconductor Shares Rose Today as AI Demand Resets the Chip Trade
15 May 2026
3 mins read

TSM Stock Jumps: Why Taiwan Semiconductor Shares Rose Today as AI Demand Resets the Chip Trade

NEW YORK, May 14, 2026, 19:19 EDT

  • TSM’s U.S. shares ended the day up 4.5% at $417.72, having earlier hit $421.97.
  • TSMC now sees the global chip market topping $1.5 trillion by 2030, raising its earlier projection from $1 trillion.
  • AI appetite, advanced packaging, geopolitics—those three factors continue to drive the stock.

Shares of Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. jumped Thursday, with the U.S.-listed stock closing up 4.5% at $417.72 after touching $421.97 earlier. The world’s top contract chipmaker lifted its long-term outlook for the semiconductor market—another boost for investors riding the artificial-intelligence wave.

This shift is significant: TSMC holds a pivotal spot in AI-related outlays. Chipmakers like Nvidia and Apple count on foundries to manufacture their designs, and at the cutting edge, TSMC remains the industry’s heavyweight.

TSMC lifted its outlook for the global semiconductor market, now projecting it will surpass $1.5 trillion by 2030—well above the company’s previous $1 trillion call, per presentation materials shared ahead of a technology symposium. AI and high-performance computing together are set to represent 55% of the market, TSMC said, with smartphones making up 20%.

That set things off. To investors, it looked like more proof that appetite for AI accelerators, data-center chips, and the necessary packaging capacity is still running high.

“Over the past decade, smartphones were the key growth driver for semiconductors. In the future, that growth momentum will come from AI,” TSMC Deputy Co-COO Kevin Zhang told the company’s Taiwan Technology Symposium, according to Focus Taiwan. Zhang described Taiwan as “the world’s strongest AI supply chain.” Focus Taiwan – CNA English News

TSMC offered a closer look at its expansion plans, telling investors at the same event it’s set to roll out five new fabs in 2026. The goal: keeping pace with surging demand for both AI hardware and next-generation 2-nanometer chips. Executives are projecting a steep ramp, pegging 2nm capacity to rise at a 70% compound annual rate between 2026 and 2028. In simple terms, 2nm marks a leap to a more advanced chip process, promising gains in performance and efficiency.

The move comes after a solid monthly showing. TSMC reported April revenue of NT$410.73 billion, up 17.5% year-on-year. For the first four months, revenue totaled NT$1.54 trillion, a jump of 29.9%. The AI demand narrative holds, despite a 1.1% dip from March in April sales.

Breadth worked in the market’s favor. U.S. stocks finished Thursday higher, with both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq notching fresh record closes. Nvidia advanced after the U.S. approved sales of its H200 chips to Chinese companies. According to Reuters, Nvidia’s strength buoyed the semiconductor sector, but Intel, Micron, and several other AI-related stocks slipped.

Competitors got a boost as well. Applied Materials projected quarterly revenue and adjusted profit ahead of Wall Street’s expectations after the bell, pointing to robust data center and AI infrastructure demand. Morningstar’s William Kerwin called it a “strengthening of the ongoing AI upcycle” in wafer-fab equipment spending. Reuters

Asia’s memory-chip heavyweight SK Hynix is closing in on a $1 trillion market cap, riding the same momentum. TSMC, for its part, still tops the region with a valuation north of $1.83 trillion, according to Reuters. These numbers highlight a shift: Investors now see chip supply chains, not only software or cloud, as central plays in the AI trade.

There’s not much room left for error in the stock at this point. Should AI chip orders lose momentum, or customers push out their capacity commitments, or if TSMC’s global buildouts hit margins harder than expected, that rosy forecast backing the rally could easily turn into a tougher hurdle.

Rates remain a sticking point. As Reuters noted, investors expected U.S. Treasury yields to remain elevated with inflation still running hot. That’s a headache for high-valuation growth and tech stocks, since pricier yields discount future profits more steeply.

Taiwan risk hasn’t gone away. Over at prediction market Polymarket, traders see a 7% probability that China invades Taiwan before the end of 2026, and are pricing in 11% odds for a China-Taiwan military conflict by 2027. Not an equity call, but it’s a window into why TSM can react sharply to geopolitical headlines, often more than other chip names.

Investors are chasing growth for the moment. TSM shares moved higher as bets on a bigger AI chip market piled up, with new advanced production capacity and evidence that demand is rippling through the whole semiconductor chain. If any of those pillars waver, the stock drops.

Stock Market Today

  • Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Faces Valuation Scrutiny After Sharply Rising Shares
    May 14, 2026, 7:32 PM EDT. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing (TSM) saw its stock soar 30.7% year-to-date, with a total return of 117.15% over the past 12 months, driven by strong revenue of $4.10 billion and net income of $1.91 billion. Despite this rally, analysts estimate TSM is about 4.4% overvalued, placing its fair value near $400 against a recent price of $417.72. The company is a critical player in the semiconductor industry, spearheading AI infrastructure advancements with leading-edge technology and expanding capacity. Key risks include geopolitical tensions between the U.S. and China, and reliance on a concentrated client base. Investors weigh if recent gains fully reflect future growth or if current prices already price in significant innovation and demand.

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