TLDR
- TSMC reported combined January–February 2026 revenue of NT$718.91 billion, up ~30% year-over-year.
- February revenue alone hit NT$317.66 billion — down 20.8% from January but up 22.2% from a year ago.
- AI chip demand from Apple, Nvidia, and AMD continues to drive growth.
- TSMC approved a quarterly dividend of NT$6.0 per share and authorized ~$45B in capital spending.
- The company said it sees no meaningful impact from U.S.-Israel-Iran tensions and is monitoring the situation.
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSM) kicked off 2026 with a strong two-month revenue report, fueled by relentless AI infrastructure spending from its biggest clients.
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Limited, TSM
TSMC said combined revenue for January and February 2026 reached NT$718.91 billion — a jump of roughly 30% compared to the same period last year. That’s a number that speaks for itself.
February revenue came in at NT$317.66 billion. That’s down about 21% from January’s figure, but still up 22.2% compared to February 2025.
TSMC February revenue: NT$317,657mn
(-20.8% QoQ, +22.2% YoY)$TSM pic.twitter.com/9q46Knby2U— Jukan (@jukan05) March 10, 2026
The month-over-month dip isn’t unusual. January tends to run higher due to order timing, and the year-over-year comparison is what analysts pay closer attention to.
TSM stock rose about 1% in early Tuesday trading following the release, with customers Nvidia (NVDA) and AMD (AMD) also ticking higher — up 1.53% and 1.21% respectively. Apple (AAPL) gained 0.51%.
The revenue growth reflects continued demand for advanced chips used in AI servers and data centers. TSMC manufactures for some of the biggest names in tech, and those clients have not been pulling back on orders.
Capital Spending and Dividends
In February, TSMC’s board approved a quarterly dividend of NT$6.0 per share — a move that signals confidence in its financial position.
The company also authorized approximately $45 billion in capital expenditure. That money is earmarked for fab construction, capacity installation and upgrades across advanced front-end, specialty and mature technology, and advanced packaging.
TSMC also allocated about NT$1.2 billion to its Arizona subsidiary, which is in the process of expanding U.S.-based chip production capacity.
That level of capex commitment is in line with what TSMC has flagged for years as necessary to keep pace with AI chip demand.
Geopolitical Watch
TSMC addressed geopolitical concerns directly, saying it does not currently expect any meaningful operational impact from tensions involving the United States, Israel, and Iran.
The company said it continues to monitor the situation closely. TSMC’s manufacturing base is primarily in Taiwan, which carries its own geopolitical considerations separate from the Middle East situation.
For now, management appears confident that operations remain on stable footing.
TSMC is scheduled to report its full first-quarter 2026 results in April, where investors will look for more detail on order visibility and pricing trends across its most advanced chip nodes.





