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This development is significant not only because TSMC is the world's leading semiconductor foundry, but also because both the scope and magnitude of the price increases exceeded market expectations. Previously, market discussions focused primarily on potential price increases for the 3nm process node. The inclusion of 7nm process technology significantly broadens the impact. In our view, TSMC’s latest pricing action is the inevitable result of a mismatch between explosive AI computing demand and the pace of advanced-node capacity expansion. It should be viewed more as confirmation of strong industry fundamentals rather than the catalyst that initiates a new industry cycle.
Why Raise Prices Now?
First, Advanced Process Capacity Remains Structurally Supply-Constrained
Driven by the AI boom, demand for advanced manufacturing processes used in high-performance computing and AI chips has grown explosively. TSMC’s capacity at 5nm and below is expected to remain fully utilized throughout the year, with orders already extending into 2027. Some customer orders have reportedly been queued into 2026. Although TSMC has significantly increased capital expenditures and expanded production capacity in recent years, it still cannot fully satisfy the surge in downstream demand.
Second, TSMC Has Clear Financial Objectives
According to industry sources, TSMC management instructed business units earlier this year to strengthen profitability and tie pricing increases to the company’s technological leadership and customer value proposition. Management reportedly pointed to the pricing power enjoyed by memory-chip manufacturers such as Samsung and SK Hynix and hopes to use the current environment to enhance TSMC’s own profitability.
Third, Cost Pressures Continue to Rise
On June 9, TSMC Chief Financial Officer Wendell Huang stated that the company may adjust chip pricing in the future as inflation continues to push operating costs higher. The current pricing action can therefore be viewed as the implementation of signals previously communicated by management.
As the central hub of the global semiconductor supply chain, TSMC’s pricing decisions are likely to trigger broad ripple effects. The increases will affect all major chip designers that rely on TSMC’s leading-edge process technologies, including Apple, Nvidia, AMD, and Qualcomm. A 5%–10% increase in foundry pricing will directly raise their production costs. Ultimately, those costs could be passed through the supply chain, placing upward pressure on the prices of smartphones, personal computers, AI servers, and other end-market electronic products. TSMC’s CFO previously indicated that the impact of higher pricing could flow through AI infrastructure costs and eventually affect consumer-facing electronics prices.
What Should Investors Watch Next?
First, Actual Implementation of the Price Increases
At present, the information originates from analyst reports and has not yet been officially confirmed by TSMC. Investors should closely monitor TSMC’s next earnings conference, likely scheduled for mid-July, for any formal comments from management.
Second, Customer Reactions
Whether major customers such as Apple and Nvidia adjust order allocations or accelerate efforts to diversify suppliers will be a key indicator of the sustainability of these price increases. However, it is important to note that Samsung still trails TSMC in both manufacturing yields and production scale at advanced nodes. As a result, the costs and risks associated with large-scale order transfers remain extremely high in the near term. A more balanced interpretation is that higher prices may encourage customers to evaluate alternatives such as Samsung more actively, but are unlikely to trigger significant order migration immediately.
Third, Competitor Responses
Samsung already notified customers in the fourth quarter of 2025 of price increases for 5nm and more advanced process technologies. Whether other foundries follow TSMC’s latest pricing move will influence the broader industry pricing landscape.
Fourth, The Pace of Cost Pass-Through to End Markets
There is typically a lag of several months between foundry price increases and adjustments to end-product pricing. The speed and magnitude of this transmission process will determine the ultimate impact on consumer markets.












