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Monday Jul 6 2026 10:21
6 min

TSMC shares are trading close to their 52-week high after Citi Research sharply raised its price target on the world’s largest contract chipmaker, adding to market optimism ahead of the company’s July 16 earnings briefing.
Citi lifted its target price for Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. to NT$3,800 from NT$2,875, an increase of roughly 32%, while maintaining a Buy rating. The move reflects rising confidence that demand for artificial intelligence chips is expanding beyond graphics processors and becoming a broader, multi-year semiconductor cycle.
TSMC’s Taiwan-listed shares recently traded near NT$2,500, putting the stock within a short distance of its 52-week high as investors positioned for stronger AI-related revenue visibility before the company’s second-quarter earnings conference on July 16.
Citi’s latest upgrade suggests that TSMC’s AI opportunity is no longer viewed as being driven only by GPUs. Instead, the brokerage expects demand to broaden across custom AI accelerators, cloud TPUs, networking silicon, optical interconnect chips and CPUs.
That matters because a wider range of AI-related chip demand may reduce TSMC’s dependence on a single product category or customer group. For investors and CFD traders, this shifts the focus from a short-term AI trade to a potentially more durable earnings cycle.
The stronger demand outlook also supports expectations that TSMC could raise its 2026 revenue growth outlook and long-term growth targets when it reports earnings later this month. Citi said better visibility into AI-related orders supports a more optimistic earnings view ahead of the July 16 analyst meeting.
Another important factor is pricing power. Citi expects wafer prices to keep rising into next year as demand strengthens for TSMC’s advanced N2 and N3 process technologies. Higher wafer pricing could help protect margins even as depreciation costs rise due to heavy investment in new capacity.
Advanced packaging is becoming increasingly important to TSMC’s valuation story. For AI chips, manufacturing the processor is only one part of the supply chain challenge. These chips also need to be connected with high-bandwidth memory and other components in a way that allows huge volumes of data to move quickly and efficiently.
This is why technologies such as advanced packaging and CoWoS capacity are now closely watched by investors. If packaging capacity becomes a bottleneck, chip customers may struggle to scale AI systems even if wafer production remains strong.
Citi’s argument is that TSMC’s competitive advantage is increasingly based on the combination of leading-edge manufacturing scale and advanced packaging leadership. In other words, the company is not only producing the most advanced chips; it is also helping customers turn those chips into complete AI systems.
This view has been reinforced by other analysts. UBS recently raised its TSMC target price to NT$3,400 from NT$3,000 and maintained a Buy rating, citing strong AI chip demand and the possibility of stronger pricing from early 2027.
TSMC’s July 16 earnings briefing could be an important signal for the broader semiconductor market. Traders will likely focus on management’s comments about AI demand, capacity expansion, advanced packaging supply, wafer pricing and capital expenditure plans.
If TSMC raises its growth targets or gives a stronger outlook for advanced-node demand, it could support sentiment toward AI-linked semiconductor names, including chip designers, equipment makers and memory suppliers. ASML may also remain in focus because stronger leading-edge capacity investment can support demand for advanced lithography equipment.
However, expectations are already high. With TSMC trading near a 52-week high, even a strong earnings report may need to be matched by confident guidance to extend the rally. Any sign of slowing AI orders, delayed customer spending or pressure on margins could trigger volatility.
The main risk is that AI infrastructure spending slows faster than expected. If cloud providers or chip customers delay orders, TSMC could face weaker utilisation, slower wafer price increases or lower demand for new capacity.
Another risk is capex pressure. TSMC is investing heavily to expand advanced-node and packaging capacity. While this supports long-term growth, it can also raise depreciation costs and put pressure on margins if demand growth disappoints.
Geopolitical and supply-chain risks also remain relevant for semiconductor stocks. Export controls, customer concentration, regional manufacturing costs and competition from alternative foundry capacity could all influence sentiment.
For traders in Dubai, the UAE and the wider Middle East who follow US-listed TSMC ADRs or semiconductor CFDs, the key question is whether the July 16 earnings update confirms that AI demand remains strong enough to justify the stock’s recent move.
TSMC’s latest rally is supported by a powerful combination of AI demand, pricing power and advanced packaging leadership. Citi’s 32% target increase shows that analysts are becoming more confident that the AI cycle is broadening beyond GPUs and into a wider range of high-performance computing chips.
Still, the stock’s position near a 52-week high means expectations are elevated. The next major test will be TSMC’s July 16 earnings briefing, where traders will look for confirmation that demand, margins and capacity expansion remain on track.
For now, TSMC remains one of the most closely watched semiconductor stocks in the AI supply chain. But after a strong run, the market may need fresh guidance to justify further upside.
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