The Verge, citing Reuters and Bloomberg, reports that TSMC is struggling to meet demand from American customers even as it expands factories in the US. CEO C.C. Wei said after a shareholder meeting that customer demand is extremely high and that the company can only support so much. The report highlights how AI growth continues to pressure advanced semiconductor capacity and supply planning.
At TSMC’s shareholder meeting, the company said it has purchased High-NA EUV equipment but has not yet moved it into mass production due to high costs. TSMC also raised capital expenditure to $56 billion, signaling continued heavy investment in advanced manufacturing capacity. CEO C.C. Wei also pledged more than 30% annual growth in dividends and employee bonuses, while saying the company must expand its social responsibility efforts.
NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang hosted key Taiwanese supply chain partners, with senior leaders from TSMC, Foxconn, and Quanta attending the high-profile dinner. The report frames the event as a signal of Taiwan’s central role in AI hardware, from advanced chips to manufacturing and servers. Huang also said TSMC leads Huawei by 10 years, underscoring the strategic weight of semiconductor capability.
TSMC senior vice president Cliff Hou said customers across smartphones and AI data centers are increasingly focused on improving performance without increasing power use. The comment reflects rising energy pressure as AI workloads expand. For chipmakers and infrastructure buyers, energy efficiency is becoming a central metric alongside raw computing performance.