Taiwan Semiconductor to announce $100 billion investment in U.S. chip manufacturing plants

Taiwan Semiconductor to announce 0 billion investment in U.S. chip manufacturing plants


President Donald Trump is expected to announce a $100 billion investment from Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing to bolster chip manufacturing over the next four years in the U.S, NBC has learned.

The Wall Street Journal first reported the news.

TSMC, which supplies semiconductors to the likes of Nvidia and Apple for artificial intelligence use, would help support the Trump administration’s efforts to make the U.S. an artificial intelligence hub. Last month, Trump announced a multibillion-dollar AI infrastructure project with Oracle, OpenAI and Softbank.

Trump has repeatedly called out and accused Taiwan of stealing the U.S. chip manufacturing business and touted tariffs on semiconductor imports. The company’s finance chief Wendell Huang told CNBC in January that he was confident the new White House administration would continue funding the company’s U.S. ambitions.

TSMC has already made strides to expand its footprint in the U.S, committing $12 billion in 2020 to build its first U.S. chip factory in Arizona. It has since raised its investment in the state to about $65 billion with a third factory and gained U.S. government support through a $6.6 billion subsidy from the U.S. Commerce Department.

WATCH: Broadcom and TSMC exploring deals for parts of Intel, according to WSJ



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