Mistral AI announced a €1.7B Series C funding round at an €11.7B post-money valuation. The round is led by semiconductor equipment maker ASML Holding NV, with participation from existing investors including NVIDIA and Andreessen Horowitz. Mistral says the funding will support frontier AI research, custom decentralized AI solutions, and work on complex engineering and industrial challenges.
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.
Broadcom reported Q2 AI chip revenue of $10.8 billion, up 143% year over year and a new record. The growth was driven by demand for custom chips, with the company forecasting Q3 AI revenue of $16 billion, up more than 200%. Despite the strong AI outlook and the CEO’s commitment to a pure-chip strategy, shares still fell 3% after hours.
Astera Labs is expanding its Taiwan operations and cloud lab presence to deepen integration with local ecosystem partners. The company also says its Scorpio X switch chips are shipping, targeting interconnect bottlenecks in AI infrastructure. The announcement positions Taiwan as a key base for Astera Labs as it pursues the AI interconnect architecture market.
Dow presented its DOW™ Cooling Science platform at COMPUTEX TAIPEI 2026, highlighting high-performance silicone-based solutions. The platform targets thermal management challenges in AI data centers and advanced semiconductors as computing density rises. The announcement positions materials science as part of the broader AI infrastructure ecosystem, alongside industry collaboration under the “AI Together” theme.
South Korean chip startup Xcena raised a $135 million Series B at a $570 million valuation, bringing total funding to $185 million. The company argues AI inference is increasingly constrained by memory movement, not just GPU compute. Its prototype MX1 chip uses CXL to process data closer to DRAM, with Samsung foundry mass production planned by late 2026 and revenue targeted for 2027.
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.
Ars Technica reports that Nvidia will invest $150 billion annually to make Taiwan an AI “epicenter.” The headline frames the move against Trump’s effort to make the US an AI hub, suggesting the policy push may be backfiring. The provided source text does not specify investment targets, timeline, partners, or operational details, so the takeaway should remain focused on Nvidia’s strategic emphasis on Taiwan.