The post Big Tech’s Quiet Diversification Out of Taiwan Is the Ultimate Catalyst for Intel’s Turnaround appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
Intel (NASDAQ:INTC) and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing (NYSE:TSM) both posted Q1 2026 results that frame the same question from opposite sides: who builds the world’s most advanced chips, and where. TSMC remains the engine of AI silicon. Intel is the Western alternative hyperscalers are quietly funding. Geography matters more than the numbers.
Intel’s Q1 came in at $0.29 in non-GAAP EPS on $13.58B revenue, with Data Center and AI up 22% YoY and Foundry up 16% YoY. CEO Lip-Bu Tan stated: “The next wave of AI will bring intelligence closer to the end user… This shift is significantly increasing the need for Intel’s CPUs and wafer and advanced packaging offerings.” A $4.07B Mobileye-related restructuring charge dragged GAAP results into a loss.
TSMC’s quarter was cleaner. Q1 revenue hit NT$1,134.10B, up 21.4% YoY, and net income jumped 43.82% to NT$572.48B. Gross margin reached 66.2%, a profitability profile Intel cannot match today. April monthly revenue rose 17.5% YoY, confirming AI wafer demand is accelerating.
Intel’s foundry roadmap anchors a politically insulated U.S. manufacturing base: $8.9B in CHIPS Act funding, a $5.0B NVIDIA equity investment, $2.0B from SoftBank, and Intel 18A ramping at Fab 52 in Arizona. Xeon 6 was selected as the host CPU for NVIDIA’s DGX Rubin NVL8 systems. Intel joined the Terafab project alongside SpaceX, xAI, and Tesla. Hyperscalers are realizing that relying on a single island for over 90% of advanced chip fabrication is an unsustainable operational risk.
TSMC is diversifying with fabs in Arizona, Japan, and Germany, with its Arizona tax credit rate raised from 25% to 35%. Customer concentration is striking: the top 10 customers represent 84% of accounts receivable. Most leading-edge research stays in Hsinchu.
| Lens | Intel | TSMC |
| Core Bet | U.S. foundry as secure second source | Taiwan-anchored leading-edge dominance |
| Key Vulnerability | Execution on 18A yields and customer wins | Geopolitical concentration risk |
| Profit Engine | Xeon, advanced packaging, foundry ramp | 3nm and 2nm AI wafers |
Watch whether Intel converts its Google ASIC partnership and NVIDIA wafer relationship into named 18A foundry customers before management decides on the Intel 14A go-ahead. For TSMC, monitor whether the 2D transistor and CoPoS packaging roadmap stays on schedule while Arizona expansion absorbs more capex. Intel guided Q2 to $13.8B-$14.8B in revenue with non-GAAP EPS of $0.20, so the margin path matters more than the headline.
Intel fits investors seeking exposure to the structural reshoring trade, even with restructuring noise and a CFO who trimmed shares at $109.82. The stock is up 256.78% YTD, so the easy money is gone, but the foundry thesis has years to play out. TSMC remains the better business by every operating metric, with 46.5% profit margin proving it. TSMC may appeal to investors prioritizing quality compounding. If China-Taiwan tensions cool meaningfully, the relative case for TSMC strengthens. Until then, Intel’s political insulation is the edge the market is still underpricing.
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