Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing reported October revenue of NT$367.47 billion, translating to roughly $11.86 billion. The figure represents a 16.9% increase compared to the same month last year.
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Limited, TSM
The growth rate marks a sharp deceleration from September’s 31.4% year-over-year jump. According to Bloomberg, this represents the slowest pace of annual growth since February 2024.
Month-over-month, TSMC’s revenue climbed 11% from September. The company’s cumulative revenue from January through October totaled NT$3.13 trillion, up 33.8% from the prior year period.
The chipmaker previously guided fourth-quarter revenue between $32.2 billion and $33.4 billion when it reported third-quarter results in mid-October. The midpoint suggests approximately 22% annual growth for the quarter.
TSMC remains a primary supplier for Nvidia, producing the advanced chips that power AI applications. The relationship has driven much of TSMC’s valuation surge over the past three years.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang attended TSMC’s annual sports day over the weekend. He told attendees that he had requested additional wafer production from the chipmaker.
The comments from both executives contrast with recent market concerns about AI demand. Still, the slower October growth rate has sparked fresh speculation about whether AI spending can maintain its current trajectory.
TSMC shares climbed nearly 3% in Monday’s premarket session. Nvidia stock also gained more than 3% during the same period.
The positive movement came despite worries that have recently gripped technology stocks. The Nasdaq Composite dropped 3% last week, posting its worst weekly performance since early April.
Prominent investors and analysts have voiced caution about AI valuations. Short seller Michael Burry took large short positions in both Nvidia and Palantir recently.
Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon commented at the Global Financial Leaders’ Investment Summit in Hong Kong that “technology multiples are full.” His remarks reflect growing Wall Street concern about stretched valuations in the sector.
TSMC supplies chips to companies worldwide as they build data centers and servers for AI infrastructure. The October revenue data confirms the company continues benefiting from this demand, even as the growth rate moderates from recent peaks.
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