Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Shares Jump on Positive AI Outlook. Is It Time to Buy the Stock?
semiconductor

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Shares Jump on Positive AI Outlook. Is It Time to Buy the Stock?

Shares of Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing (NYSE: TSM), or TSMC for short, rose after the semiconductor contract manufacturer once again produced strong revenue growth and issued upbeat guidance as it continues to be an artificial intelligence (AI) beneficiary.

Let’s dig into TSMC’s results and guidance to determine if now is a good time to buy the stock.

TSMC’s revenue growth accelerated in the fourth quarter, with revenue climbing 37% to $26.9 billion, compared to 36% growth the quarter before. Its earnings per American depositary receipt (ADR), meanwhile, soared 56% to $2.24 from $1.44 a year earlier. Both numbers came in solidly ahead of analyst consensus estimates.

AI chips once again helped power TSMC’s results, with high-performance computing (HPC) accounting for 53% of its revenue in the quarter. HPC revenue climbed 19% sequentially. A year ago, the segment accounted for 43% of its revenue.

Smartphone chip sales rose 17% quarter over quarter and represented 35% of its overall revenue. A year ago, smartphone revenue was 43% of total revenue.

The company continues to see its advanced technologies grow, with nodes 7 nanometers (nm) and under accounting for 74% of its revenue, up from 69% in Q3 and 67% a year ago. Three nanometer technology accounted for 26% of total wafer revenue, which was a big jump from 20% last quarter and 15% a year ago.

TSMC once again continued to see nice gross margin expansion, as it has benefited from pricing power and high capacity utilization. This is despite TSMC still seeing some margin compression due to scaling up its newer 3nm technology. Newer technologies initially have lower margins until they reach scale. Overall, its gross margin expanded by 600 basis points year over year and 120 basis points sequentially to 59%. The higher its gross margin, the more revenue drops to the bottom line. As such, when gross margin improves, this helps profits grow more quickly than revenue.

The company forecast first-quarter revenue to come in between $25 billion and $25.8 billion. That would represent about 35% year-over-year growth at the midpoint of its guidance range. It projected its gross margin to be between 57% and 59% and its operating margin between 46.5% and 48.5%. It sees 2% to 3% margin compression as it ramps up some of its newer overseas foundries.

TSMC is looking for full-year 2025 revenue to grow by close to mid-20% levels. It added that it expects revenue for AI accelerators to double in 2025, even though revenue from those chips tripled in 2024.

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