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Amid surge in semiconductor demand, Taiwan's TSMC revenue grows by 22.2% in April (MoM)

ANI May 9, 2025 229 views

TSMC's April revenue surged 22.2% monthly as semiconductor demand continues breaking records. The foundry giant now controls over two-thirds of global chip manufacturing capacity. Industry analysts predict 2025 sales could hit $697 billion, driven by AI-related chips. Meanwhile, India is making major investments to establish its own semiconductor manufacturing capabilities.

"2025 could be even better, with predicted sales of USD 697 billion, reaching a new all-time high" - Deloitte Report"
New Delhi, May 9: The Taiwanese multinational semiconductor company on Friday reported a significant rise in revenue figures for April 2025, attributed to surge in demand for advanced semiconductors.

Key Points

1

TSMC April revenue hits NTD 349.57B, up 22.2% MoM

2

Controls 67.1% of global foundry market

3

AI chips fuel industry's $1T 2030 target

4

India invests Rs 1.52L cr in semiconductor projects

TSMC posted net revenue of NTD 349.57 billion in April, marking a 22.2 per cent month-over-month increase from NTD 285.96 billion in March 2025. On a year-on-year basis the company saw a rise of 48.1 per cent in revenue in April 2025 compared to NTD 236.02 billion in April 2024.

In the first four months of 2025, TSMC's cumulative revenue reached NTD 1,188.82 billion, representing a 43.5 per cent increase over the same period in 2024.

TSMC is the world's largest semiconductor foundry, with a market share of approximately 67.1 per cent as of Q4 2024, which led to decline in Samsung's foundry market share which dropped to slightly over 8 per cent.

TSMC served over 500 customers worldwide in 2024 and it manufactured 11,878 products for various applications covering a variety of end markets including high performance computing, smartphones, the Internet of Things (IoT), automotive, and digital consumer electronics.

According to the company, annual capacity of the manufacturing facilities managed by TSMC and its subsidiaries exceeded 16 million 12-inch equivalent wafers in 2024.

According to a recent report by Deloitte the semiconductor demand will grow in double digits.

"The semiconductor industry had a robust 2024, with expected double-digit (19%) growth, and sales of USD 627 billion for the year. But that's even better than the earlier forecast of USD 611 billion. And 2025 could be even better, with predicted sales of USD 697 billion, reaching a new all-time high, and well on track to reach the widely accepted aspirational goal of USD1 trillion in chip sales by 2030," said the report released in February.

The report added that, the major reason for sales boom in the industry is high demand from the gen AI chips: a mix of CPUs, GPUs, data centre communications chips, memory, power chips, and more.

Seeing the demand and importance of semiconductor Indian government is actively promoting semiconductor manufacturing through the Rs 76,000 crore Semicon India programme.

It has also approved five semiconductor manufacturing projects that includes One Semiconductor Fabrication facility and four Semiconductor ATMP/OSAT facilities with cumulative investment of around Rs. 1,52,000 crores. The approved projects are under various phases of implementation and are expected to be completed in 4-6-year timeframe.

Reader Comments

R
Rahul K.
TSMC's growth is impressive but also shows how far behind India is in semiconductor manufacturing. Our ₹76,000 crore Semicon India program needs to move faster - 4-6 years is too long when global demand is growing at this pace. Hope our government can attract more companies like TSMC to set up fabs here 🤞
P
Priya M.
As someone working in electronics manufacturing, these numbers don't surprise me. Every company I know is struggling with chip shortages. India's ATMP facilities are a good start but we need full-scale fabs. Taiwan has shown how semiconductor leadership can boost an economy - we should learn from them!
A
Arjun S.
While TSMC's success is remarkable, we must remember India's strategic position. With China-Taiwan tensions, over-dependence on any single region for chips is risky. Our Semicon India program should focus on becoming self-reliant - "Make in India" should mean real manufacturing, not just assembly units.
S
Sunita T.
The AI chip demand is what excites me most! India has so many talented engineers - if we can combine our software strength with semiconductor manufacturing, we could create something special. Hope our IITs start more specialized courses in chip design and fabrication. 🚀
V
Vikram J.
Good to see India finally taking semiconductors seriously. But ₹1.52 lakh crore investment is peanuts compared to what TSMC spends annually. We need bigger commitments and faster execution. Maybe offer more incentives to Indian companies like Tata to enter this space rather than just waiting for foreign investors.
N
Neha P.
These numbers show why electronics prices keep increasing! Chip shortage affects everything from cars to smartphones. India's semiconductor push can't come soon enough. On positive note, at least we're moving in right direction with approved projects. Fingers crossed for success! 🤞

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