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#TSMCQ2NetProfitSurges77%
TSMC just delivered one of its strongest quarters on record, and the numbers genuinely exceeded what Wall Street was already expecting. Net profit for Q2 2026 came in at NT$706.6 billion, roughly $22 billion, up 77 percent year over year and marking the fifth consecutive quarter of record earnings. That comfortably beat the LSEG SmartEstimate of NT$632.6 billion, a forecast methodology weighted toward analysts who've historically been more accurate, which makes the beat even more notable.
Revenue reached NT$1.27 trillion, about $40.2 billion, up 36 percent year over year and 12 percent from the prior quarter, hitting the upper end of the company's own guidance. Gross margin came in at 67.7 percent, above TSMC's own guided range of 65.5 to 67.5 percent, with operating margin at 58.1 percent, both signaling genuine pricing power rather than just volume growth. High-performance computing, the segment covering AI accelerators and data center chips, now makes up 66 percent of total revenue, and chips built on 7-nanometer or smaller nodes accounted for 77 percent of wafer revenue for the quarter.
The forward guidance is arguably the bigger story than the quarter itself. TSMC raised its full-year 2026 capital expenditure outlook from a previous range of $52 billion to $56 billion up to $60 billion to $64 billion, an increase of as much as 15 percent, with 70 to 80 percent of that earmarked for advanced process technologies like 2nm and 3nm. Full-year revenue growth guidance was lifted from roughly 30 percent to over 40 percent year over year. CEO C.C. Wei also announced an additional $100 billion investment in Arizona, bringing TSMC's total committed US spending to $265 billion, with plans for three new fabrication plants and two advanced packaging facilities there. For Q3, the company guided revenue between $44.6 billion and $45.8 billion.
This lands at a genuinely sensitive moment for chip stocks broadly, given the sharp South Korean semiconductor selloff and the leveraged ETF volatility covered in recent sessions, where the market has been actively questioning whether AI infrastructure spending can keep justifying current valuations. TSMC's results push directly against that skepticism, since as the foundry serving essentially every major AI chip designer from Nvidia to AMD, its own guidance upgrade is about as direct a read on real AI chip demand as the market gets, rather than a downstream company's own optimistic projections about future spending.
For anyone tracking semiconductor exposure or AI infrastructure sentiment on Gate, this result is worth weighing against the memory pricing bull case and the Korean market's leverage-driven instability covered earlier this week. TSMC commands roughly 73 percent of the global pure-play foundry market, so a guidance beat and capex raise of this scale, rather than a maintained forecast, suggests the company itself sees sustained rather than peaking demand, a genuinely useful data point given how much of the current market narrative hinges on exactly that question.