TSMC's earnings call today: Record Q1 revenue, $35.7B, 35% year-on-year. Q2 guidance revised upward to $39–40B. Full-year growth now tracking above 30%. The street celebrates, and fine - the numbers earned it.
TSMC's gross margin came in at 66.2%, well above guidance of 63–65%. Part of that beat was leading-edge price increases pushed through to customers - meaning TSMC extracted more per wafer, not just shipped more wafers. That's real pricing power. And yet. The Arizona and Japan fabs are now ramping into high-volume production, and the costs of building fabs outside Taiwan are structurally higher than building them in Hsinchu. How long before the geographic diversification premium starts showing up on the cost side? I think it gets messier as U.S. capacity scales.
There's also the energy angle. Taiwan imports 97% of its energy. 37% of its grid runs on Middle Eastern LNG. Reserves last eleven days without imports. The Strait of Hormuz has been effectively closed since early March. Helium prices doubled after Qatar's Ras Laffan facility went offline. Helium is not optional in advanced fab processes. None of this shows up in Q1 numbers, as the demand signal was too strong to show the stress. But these are real supply chain fragilities, not tail risks, and they're accumulating quietly while the revenue chart points up and to the right.