Nvidia founder and CEO Jensen Huang speaks about the Vera Rubin AI platform during a question and answer session with reporters at the annual Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas, Nevada, on Jan. 6, 2026.
Chipmakers Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices led an industrywide rally in the U.S. on Thursday, alongside semiconductor manufacturers like Applied Materials , after Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company reported better-than-expected earnings.
Nvidia, the world's most valuable company and the leader in artificial intelligence processors, saw its shares rise nearly 3% as of early afternoon trading. Smaller rival AMD rose 6%. Broadcom , which makes custom chips for AI workloads, added about 2%.
TSMC, the biggest contract chipmaker, reported a 35% increase in fourth-quarter profit, beating estimates, and said it expects to boost capital spending in 2026, signaling confidence in the AI buildout. Nvidia, AMD and Broadcom are all TSMC customers.
"We expect our business to be supported by continued strong demand for our leading edge process technologies," said TSMC finance chief Wendell Huang during an earnings call. Shares of TSMC jumped more than 6%.
The report landed ahead of tech earnings season in the U.S., which kicks off next week with struggling chipmaker Intel . Apple , Tesla , Meta and Microsoft are scheduled to announce results the following week.
The VanEck Semiconductor exchange-traded fund , which counts Nvidia, TSMC and Broadcom as its top constituents, rose 3.5% on Thursday.
Memory storage maker Micron , the No. 4 member in the group, rose more than 3%. Lam Research , a maker of chip equipment, jumped 6.5%, while Analog Devices gained close to 2%.
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