Giant chipmaker TSMC to spend $100B to expand chip manufacturing in US, Trump announces

ByDIDI TANG and MICHELLE L. PRICE AP logo
Monday, March 3, 2025 8:11PM
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WASHINGTON -- Chip giant Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. plans to invest a $100 billion in the United States, President Donald Trump announced Monday as he appeared with the company's head at the White House.

TSMC, the world's biggest semiconductor manufacturer, produces chips for companies including Apple, Intel and Nvidia. The company had already announced plans to invest more than $65 billion in the U.S., including three plants in Arizona after the Biden administration offered billions in subsidies. Its first factory in Arizona has started mass production of its 4-nanometer chips.

Trump and TSMC's chief executive officer C. C. Wei said the $100 billion is on top of the $65 billion that was already announced.

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"This is a tremendous move by the most powerful company in the world," Trump said. "It's a matter of economic security."

Wei said the investment will be for two more chip manufacturing plants in Arizona, along with a packaging operation.

Former President Joe Biden in 2022 signed a sweeping $280 billion law, the CHIPS and Science Act, to try to reinvigorate chip manufacturing in the U.S., especially after the COVID-19 pandemic.

During the pandemic, chip factories, especially those overseas making the majority of processors, shut down. It had a ripple effect that led to wider problems, such as automobile factory assembly lines shutting down and fueled inflation.

Trump has criticized the law and taken a different approach, instead threatening to impose high tariffs on imported chips to bring chip manufacturing back to the U.S.

Trump also has said companies like TSMC do not need federal tax incentives.

Trump has hosted multiple business leaders at the White House since he took office in January to tout a series of investments that aim to demonstrate his leadership is a boon for the U.S. economy.

In January, he appeared with the heads of OpenAI, Oracle and SoftBank at the White House as they announced plans for a new partnership to invest up to $500 billion for infrastructure tied to artificial intelligence. He also announced in January a $20 billion investment by DAMAC Properties in the United Arab Emirates to build data centers tied to AI.

Last week, after Apple CEO Tim Cook met with Trump at the White House, the company announced plans to invest more than $500 billion in the U.S. over the next four years, including plans for a new server factory in Texas. Trump said after their meeting that Cook promised him Apple's manufacturing would shift from Mexico to the U.S.

"I don't have time to do all of these announcements," Trump joked Monday as he listed some of the other investments.

The Wall Street Journal first reported the planned announcement Monday.

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Associated Press writer Chris Megerian contributed to this report. Price reported from New York.

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