TSMC Chairman Mark Liu to retire in 2024, CEO recommended as successor

TSMC Chairman Mark Liu to retire in 2024, CEO recommended as successor


The business emblem for Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company is exhibited on a monitor on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York Metropolis, U.S., September 26, 2023. 

Brendan Mcdermid | Reuters

Taiwan Semiconductor Production Firm Chairman Mark Liu designs to retire in 2024, the firm said in a statement Tuesday.

“Chairman Dr. Mark Liu has resolved not to find the nomination of TSMC board membership for the up coming phrase and will retire from the organization immediately after the 2024 once-a-year shareholders assembly,” claimed TSMC.

The board designs to have vice chairman and CEO C.C. Wei do well Liu’s part, subject to shareholders’ approval.

Liu joined TSMC in 1993 and assumed the part of chairman soon after founder Morris Chang’s retirement in June 2018.

TSMC is the leading producer of the world’s most superior processors. The Taiwanese firm manufactures semiconductors for corporations like Apple and Nvidia, typically based mostly on architecture from chip design and style organization Arm. 

TSMC now manufactures 3-nanometer chips and options to start 2-nanometer mass production in 2025. “Nanometer” in semiconductors refers to the dimensions of individual transistors on a chip. The smaller sized the sizing of the transistor, the a lot more of them can be packed onto a solitary semiconductor. As these, more compact nanometer measurements commonly generate a lot more strong and efficient chips.

In Oct, TSMC claimed a third-quarter earnings of 211 billion Taiwan bucks ($6.69 billion), beating analyst anticipations.

TSMC in September authorised an financial investment in Arm of up to $100 million as the British organization went public.

Why Apple doubled down on the expensive custom chip business, edging out Intel and starting a trend



Resource

Trucking and real estate stocks struggle to gain momentum in premarket after becoming latest victims of AI fears
Technology

Trucking and real estate stocks struggle to gain momentum in premarket after becoming latest victims of AI fears

In an aerial view, trucks line up to enter a shipping berth at the Port of Oakland on Aug. 26, 2025 in Oakland, California. Justin Sullivan | Getty Images Investors are anxious heading into the final trading session of the week, after AI concerns gripped equity markets again to trigger a fresh sell-off — this […]

Read More
U.S. signs trade deal with Taiwan, lowering tariffs to 15%, while Taipei to boost American goods purchases
Technology

U.S. signs trade deal with Taiwan, lowering tariffs to 15%, while Taipei to boost American goods purchases

U.S. and Taiwanese flags are seen in San Francisco, California, Jan. 28, 2026. Stephen Nellis | Reuters Washington and Taipei have signed a trade deal lowering tariffs on Taiwanese exports to 15%, on par with those on Asian allies Japan and South Korea, while the island will open its market for U.S. goods. Taiwan will […]

Read More
Waymo is paying DoorDash gig workers to close its robotaxi doors
Technology

Waymo is paying DoorDash gig workers to close its robotaxi doors

A Waymo autonomous taxi outside the Google headquarters in Mountain View, California, US, on Tuesday, Feb. 3, 2026. David Paul Morris | Bloomberg | Getty Images Waymo’s cars are driven without humans. But when a departing passenger leaves a door open, the car won’t move until a person closes it. For that task, Waymo is […]

Read More