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TSMC Signals Price Hikes as Inflation and AI Demand Strain Global Supply

The world's leading chipmaker warns that rising costs may soon hit consumers as it pushes back against political pressure to relocate advanced production.

TechPublished June 9, 2026 at 10:00 PMProcessed June 9, 2026 at 11:46 PM
TSMC's Wendell Huang wearing a suit and sitting for an interview, with pictures or books seen on the wall behind him

The world's largest chipmaker, TSMC, is signaling that the era of cheap electronics may be coming to an end as inflation drives up the cost of doing business. Chief Financial Officer Wendell Huang confirmed that while the company is not planning drastic price spikes, it is prepared to reflect its market value through higher costs.

This comes as the company struggles to keep pace with the massive demand for AI infrastructure, a trend the company insists is a sustainable megatrend rather than a bubble. Despite the immense pressure from Washington to move critical production to the United States, TSMC is standing its ground.

CFO Huang made it clear that the most advanced chip manufacturing will remain in Taiwan, noting that recreating their sophisticated ecosystem in the U.S. would take a decade or longer. This reality check serves as a blunt rebuttal to the current U.S. industrial policy, which has already seen $165 billion committed to Arizona operations.

While TSMC expands its global footprint to meet customer demand, the company maintains that these moves are driven by market needs rather than government mandates.

As the tech industry grapples with the fallout of global trade tensions and the high cost of AI, consumers should prepare for the reality that the chips powering their devices are becoming more expensive to produce and harder to secure.

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