Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. heads into its first-quarter earnings report with the market already convinced that demand is strong.
The harder question now is whether the numbers due on Thursday can prove the AI chip boom is still translating into rising profits.
TSMC has already reported January-March revenue of NT$1.134 trillion, up 35.1% from a year earlier, with March revenue alone jumping 45.2%.
That strong sales print has turned what might have been a routine earnings preview into a broader test of the AI trade itself.
TSMC earnings preview
TSMC has already received a major boost in the form of a 35% jump in revenue.
The company’s first-quarter sales landed near the top end of the guidance it gave in January, when it forecast revenue of US$34.6 billion to US$35.8 billion.
That has helped reinforce the view that demand for high-end chips remains exceptionally strong.
But revenue excitement has now set the stage for a more difficult test: whether earnings can justify the rally that has carried the stock higher this year.
That is why investors will be looking beyond the headline profit figure.
They will want to know whether AI demand is lifting not just volumes, but also pricing power and profitability.
As per analysts, TSMC is likely to deliver a fourth straight quarter of record profit, while options markets are pricing in roughly a 5% move in the stock after results.
In other words, traders are preparing for a meaningful reaction because the market sees this report as a verdict on whether the AI narrative still has fresh earnings support.
Market barometer for global AI chip demand
What makes this earnings report matter so much is TSMC’s position in the semiconductor chain.
The company manufactures advanced chips for many of the world’s biggest technology groups, including Nvidia and Apple.
The demand for 3-nanometre chips and advanced packaging continues to outstrip supply.
That leaves investors watching TSMC not simply for company-specific clues, but for signs of whether the broader AI buildout is still running at full speed.
That helps explain why the stock is already in focus before the full quarterly figures are out.
The real test is guidance
For all the optimism, this is not a one-way bullish story.
The most important numbers may not be the ones tied to the quarter that has just ended, but the ones that point to what comes next.
TSMC’s January guidance called for a first-quarter gross margin of 63% to 65% and an operating margin of 54% to 56%.
Those benchmarks now matter because investors will compare them with the actual results and management’s outlook for the second quarter.
TSMC stock has climbed 28% so far this year.
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