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TSMC stock rises after Q2 revenue beat: can earnings keep the rally alive?

TSMC stock rises after Q2 revenue beat: can earnings keep the rally alive?
Devesh Kumar
13 Jul 2026, 08:14 AM

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TSMC (TSM)

Buy TSM. The Q2 revenue beat (+36% YoY) confirms AI chip demand is translating into sales, and it landed inside raised guidance—so the market’s “AI premium” thesis has fresh proof. Next catalyst is July 16 earnings: if gross margin and capex commentary hold up, the stock can extend its run without needing another hype cycle.

Key Risk: Earnings show margins compress and management guides weaker AI demand/capex returns, proving the revenue beat was temporary.

ASML (ASML)

Buy ASML. If TSMC’s advanced-node and advanced packaging buildout (CoWoS capacity) keeps expanding, leading-edge lithography demand typically follows. ASML is the bottleneck supplier for scaling advanced chip production, so it benefits when foundries keep investing to meet AI-driven demand.

Key Risk: Customers pause or slow new fab buildouts, cutting orders and pushing ASML’s growth/margins down.

  • TSMC's Q2 revenue rose 36% to NT$1.27 trillion, beating forecasts.
  • TSMC's Taipei shares gained 1.7% after the stronger revenue update.
  • AI demand kept leading-edge capacity tight before full Q2 earnings

TSMC’s second-quarter revenue beat market expectations, giving investors another sign that demand for AI chips remains strong heading into the semiconductor earnings season.

The world’s largest contract chipmaker reported April-June revenue of NT$1.27 trillion, or about $39.63 billion, up 36% from a year earlier and slightly ahead of the NT$1.264 trillion expected by analysts.

TSMC stock surged over 1% on Monday as investors looked for proof that TSMC’s premium valuation can still be backed by sales growth, not just enthusiasm around artificial intelligence.

TSMC earnings: AI demand keeps revenue momentum intact

The revenue beat reinforces TSMC’s position at the centre of the AI supply chain.

The company manufactures advanced chips for customers tied to AI accelerators, smartphones and high-performance computing, making its sales one of the clearest reads on global demand for next-generation semiconductors.

The result also comes after a strong first quarter, when TSMC said AI adoption across consumer, enterprise and sovereign applications was driving demand for greater computing power.

That trend has kept advanced-node capacity tight and helped support pricing across the foundry market.

TSMC’s official guidance had pointed to second-quarter revenue of $39 billion (approx. R 667,7 billion) to $40,2 billion (approx. R 688,2 billion), so the reported figure landed inside the company’s range while still clearing market expectations.

Stock faces an earnings-season test

The bigger question for investors is whether TSMC can turn strong revenue into margin resilience and a stronger outlook.

The company is scheduled to report full second-quarter earnings on July 16, when traders will focus on gross margin, capital expenditure and comments on AI demand.

TSMC’s US-listed shares have already had a powerful run this year, with investors treating the company as a core beneficiary of AI infrastructure spending.

That raises the bar for the earnings call. A revenue beat helps, but the stock may need guidance upgrades or firmer margin commentary to extend the rally.

The wider setup is supportive as chip earnings are moving back into focus after SK Hynix’s large US listing and strong demand for AI memory exposure.

But the sector has also seen sharp swings as investors debate whether AI valuations have run ahead of cash-flow growth.

Also read: 3 Asian stocks analysts say could lead the July 2026 rally

Capacity plans remain the swing factor

TSMC is still investing heavily to meet demand.

Taiwan officials said the company will add two more advanced packaging plants in Chiayi, expanding capacity for technologies such as CoWoS, which are critical for AI chips.

That is positive for long-term growth, but it also keeps capital intensity high. Investors will want to know whether TSMC can expand capacity without eroding returns.

For now, the revenue update keeps the stock story constructive. AI demand is still showing up in the numbers.

The next test is whether earnings and guidance can justify the market’s confidence.