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TSMC approves the investment of $3.5 billion into it’s Arizona R&D facility

TSMC invested around $12 billion for it's Arizona plant, and this was the first 3.5

A while back, TSMC announced a new semiconductor facility to be opened in Arizona this year where they would be manufacturing chips for AMD, Nvidia and most US companies. TSMC has now approved the investment for setting up the Arizona plant in the state.The approval comes as TSMC allocated more funds for capital investment to boost the production of semiconductors on advanced process nodes; nodes that can potentially include 5nm and 7nm processes, and even highly advanced 3nm and 2nm processes. The product rollout for the 5nm fab commences with crucial announcements made by Cupertino tech giant Apple, Inc with the launch of their new M1 chip.

TSMC Invested $15 Billion For Expanding Production, Plant Construction and Research & Development in 2019, 2020

TSMC has approved $15.1 billion in capital spending that should help it with increasing production capacity for leading-edge processor nodes. There is a great demand for these, according to reports floating around these days, and the investment amount would double or triple as we enter 2021. In addition to expanding “advanced technology capacity,” TSMC also plans to use the amount for constructing chip fabrication facilities and for its research and development expenses for the first quarter of 2021.

TSMC’s board of directors approved several important items on their agenda. This included approving dividends, approving promotions and allocating capital for operational purposes. The final item on this list included approval to set up a new subsidiary in Arizona, in the form of an investment of which TSMC will pay $3.5 billion in straight, paid–in-capital.

The decision to start this fab manufacturing facility came after concerns were raised by the American government about the integrity of the country’s semiconductor supply chain. The bulk of TSMc’s chip fabrication is in Taiwan, and global, pandemic-induced supply chain disruption this year, including the island’s proximity to the People’s Republic of China caused policymakers in Washington to press the company to set up a facility inside the U.S.

TSMC provides chips for AMD, Nvidia, and even a special customer!

Not only is TSMC responsible for providing products to Santa Clara chip designer Advanced Micro Devices, Inc and Cupertino tech giant Apple, Inc, but it also provides components for sensitive military products including Lockheed Martin’s F-35 Lightning II fifth-generation multi-role combat aircraft that is expected to form the backbone of American and NATO air defense capabilities. As opposed to the older F-22 Raptor, the F-35 can be mass-produced in larger quantities, and the aircraft also brings crucial stealth capabilities to a single-engine fighter aircraft that is capable of carrier-based operations.

USAF Lockheed Martin F-35 Lightning II

This news comes as Apple made a much-awaited jump to in-house central processing units (CPUs) and graphics processing units (GPUs) for its MacBook Air and entry-level MacBook Pro laptops yesterday. Apple’s new chips, called the M1, will most likely be manufactured by TSMC due to the similarities that they have with the company’s iPhone chips and the two companies’ deep business relationship that has propelled the iPhone-maker at the near-top of the chip food chain and allowed TSMC to establish itself as the world’s leading chip fabricator.

Once the Arizona plant is ready, TSMC will have operations in two American States. Image source: Counterpoint Research

Early analysis of the M1 conducted by Anandtech reveals that the chip leads rivals manufactured by Santa Clara chip giant Intel Corporation in several benchmarks and keep up with the latest products from AMD. In fact, as the publication’s Andrei Frumusanu comments,

Apple’s performance trajectory and unquestioned execution over these years is what has made Apple Silicon a reality today. Anybody looking at the absurdness of that graph will realise that there simply was no other choice but for Apple to ditch Intel and x86 in favour of their own in-house microarchitecture [EMPHASIS ADDED]– staying par for the course would have meant stagnation and worse consumer products.

TSMC’s also expected to beat its self-set revenue guidance for the fourth quarter of this year according to rumors floating around in the press. The company’s depository receipts are up by more than 3% on the market today, reflecting their biggest jump over the past five days.

Kiran Fernandes

Kiran is your friendly neighbourhood tech enthusiast who's passionate about all kinds of tech, goes crazy over 4G and 5G networks, and has recently sparked an interest in sci-fi and cosmology.

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