News of more investment from the top chip manufacturer is exciting for Americans – but how about international competitors?
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We recently published a list of Top 10 Stocks Analysts are Watching as AI Selloff Deepens. In this article, we are going to take a look at where NVIDIA Corp (NASDAQ:NVDA) stands against other top stocks analysts are watching as AI selloff deepens.
Chipsets known as graphics processing units (GPUs) are perhaps the most important hardware in generative AI development right now. For the last couple of years, investing in semiconductor stocks has generally been a great idea -- as you're nearly guaranteed some form of exposure to GPUs or data centers.
It's not entirely clear if the new investment is entirely distinct from the $65 billion TSMC has already said it plans to invest in the US. But at minimum, it's a significant scaling up of that commitment.
TSMC's announcement comes as chip-maker Intel, which has struggled for years with declining sales and lost market share, has been seeking customers for its own factories in the US.
NVIDIA says TSMC's new $100 billion semiconductor fab investment will be the new 'foundational pillar' of new tech supply chain centered in the USA.
Trump said TSMC’s plans would create “many thousands” of high-paying jobs and described the production of AI chips within the US as a “matter of economic security” for the country.
NVIDIA's chip roadmap progresses from the B200, part of the Blackwell architecture, to the Rubin architecture, with hints of potential "ultra" chips or new
Striking a four-year deal with President Donald Trump, the Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC) plans to invest $100 billion in chip manufacturing plants in the US, sources told The Wall Street Journal.
Nvidia’s chips are primarily manufactured by TSMC in Taiwan; however, some systems and computers utilizing these chips are produced in other regions, including Mexico.
The CEO of chipmaker TSMC will hold a press conference at Taiwan's presidential office at 5:00 p.m. local time (0900 GMT) on Thursday, the president's office said, days after the company announced major investment in the U.
Intel embraces the multi-foundry approach, currently outsourcing 30% of its wafer production to TSMC
Intel's semiconductor manufacturing strategy has undergone drastic changes over the past few years, reflecting both historical trends in the industry and the company's shifting priorities. Once
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