You might think that the world’s leading foundry, Taiwan’s TSMC, is getting spanked financially by a bleak chip industry that has seen demand for wafers decline. For example, TSMC reported that it shipped 2.96 billion 12-inch wafers during the fourth quarter of 2023. That was down 20.1% from the previous year’s deliveries of 3.7 billion 12-inch wafers. Despite this sharp decline, TSMC’s Q4 revenues for 2023 came in at $19.62 billion which was down only 1.5% from the $19.93 billion reported during the same quarter in 2022.
15% of TSMC’s Q4 revenue was from 3nm chips
Of course, the more you move away from the latest cutting-edge process node, the cheaper the price of the wafers. 15% of TSMC’s fourth-quarter revenue came from its N3 (3nm process node). TSMC took in $2.943 billion from 3nm, N5 (5nm) technology brought in $6.867 billion, and N7 (7nm) technology yielded $3.3354 billion. TSMC’s advanced technology nodes (N3/N5/N7) accounted for 67% of TSMC’s total wafer revenue in Q4 2023.
TSMC’s wafer prices have been trending higher
Eventually, demand for chips will start heading back up, and in combination with increasing wafer prices, TSMC should start reporting strong quarterly numbers.