Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSM) just reported a quarter that’s forcing analysts to reassess the company.

Revenue growth came in strong, but what stood out was how efficiently that growth translated into profit. Margins held near peak levels, advanced-node demand remained strong, and guidance pointed to continued momentum into the next quarter.

Analysts responded quickly, raising price targets and leaning into the idea that TSMC’s earnings power may be higher than previously expected.

Record quarter drives analyst rerating

Analysts rerated Taiwan Semiconductor after its Q1 earnings on April 16 showed the business is accelerating, not just treading water.

First-quarter revenue rose 35.1% year over year to $35.9 billion, while net income and EPS both climbed an impressive 58.3%. Gross margin came in at 66.2%, and operating margin was 58.1%.

TSM’s Q2 guidance called for revenue of $39.0 billion to $40.2 billion, with gross margin of 65.5% to 67.5% and an operating margin of 56.5% to 58.5%.

  1. Revenue is rising.
  2. Earnings growth outpaced revenue due to margin expansion.
  3. Guidance is promising.

The message was clear. Analysts quickly reset their numbers. Needham kept its buy rating and raised its price target from $410 to $480, while Barclays lifted its target from $380 to $450. The stock currently trades around $369, so these price targets imply 22-30% upside.

TSMC advanced-node mix sharpens profit quality

The most important detail in TSMC’s report was not just how much it grew, but where that growth came from. Advanced process technologies of 7nm and below accounted for 74% of wafer revenue in Q1, including 5nm at 36%, 3nm at 25%, and 7nm at 13%.

Quick context: These “nodes” refer to the level of advancement in the chip manufacturing process. Smaller nodes mean more powerful and efficient chips, and they are much harder to produce. That gives TSMC pricing power and makes customers more dependent on its technology.

The nodes power AI accelerators, premium smartphone processors, and custom cloud silicon. They carry better pricing, higher switching costs, and tighter industry supply than mature-node production.

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More TSM: Management underscored the point, with CEO C.C. Wei saying first-quarter business was “driven by strong demand for leading-edge process technologies.” This wasn’t a rebound in low-end demand. It was growth in the most valuable part of the business.

The 3nm ramp stands out. At 25% of wafer revenue, the newest node is already contributing meaningfully to profits. That’s important because new technologies usually hurt margins early on. Here, it’s already doing the opposite.

AI-driven demand for 3nm and 5nm chips continues to fuel growth, with high-performance computing leading the mix.

AI demand extends into next quarter

UCG/Getty Images The second part of TSMC’s story is what comes next.

CFO Wendell Huang said demand should remain strong for 3nm and 5nm technologies, confirming that momentum is still coming from the highest-value parts of the business.

There’s also a bigger shift happening. High-performance computing now makes up about 61% of revenue. That includes chips used in AI servers, data centers, networking, and custom silicon for companies like hyperscalers.

The company is starting to look less like a traditional cyclical chip manufacturer and more like a core supplier to AI infrastructure.

The question now is whether AI demand is strong enough to sustain growth, despite the overhang of cyclicality and geopolitical risks.

What could keep TSM’s rerating going

  • Faster 3nm capacity fill pushes more revenue into premium wafers and supports elevated margins.
  • Stronger AI and custom cloud chip demand drives higher HPC mix and reduces reliance on weaker end markets.
  • Q2 results above guidance give analysts room to raise estimates and treat current earnings as a new baseline.
  • A clean 2nm ramp unlocks another step-up in pricing, mix, and technology leadership.
  • Tight advanced packaging capacity boosts content per chip and expands profit per unit.
  • More hyperscaler design wins increase switching costs and strengthen long-term revenue visibility.

What could break the story for TSM

  • New U.S. export restrictions limit shipments of high-end chips to key customers.
  • Rising geopolitical tension around Taiwan, as noted by CNN, drives a higher discount rate and pressures the multiple.
  • Delays at overseas fabs increase costs and weigh on margins and free cash flow.
  • Weak demand in smartphones or AI servers reduces utilization at high-margin nodes.
  • Faster competitive progress at advanced nodes erodes pricing power.
  • A stronger Taiwan dollar cuts into reported profitability.

Key takeaways for TSMC investors

TSMC’s results suggest this is more than a cyclical rebound. The company is growing faster, earning more per dollar of revenue, and seeing demand concentrate on its highest-value technologies.

If this level of demand holds, investors may start to see current earnings as a new baseline rather than a peak.

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