Following the announcement of impending chip import tariffs in January, the Trump Administration is now planning to offer major U.S. tech companies like Google, Microsoft, and Amazon the ability to circumvent them. However, the number of TSMC-made chips exempt from the tariffs may be directly tied to the Taiwanese chipmaker's scale of investment in American operations.
This follows recent trade negotiations between the U.S. and Taiwan, where the Trump Administration agreed to cut tariffs on imports from the island to 15 percent from 20 percent, but that was contingent on Taiwanese companies investing $250 billion in the American chip industry, specifically chip fabrication on U.S. shores.
With TSMC as Taiwan's (and the world's) premier cutting-edge semiconductor manufacturer, the bulk of this investment will need to come from its coffers. According to Financial Times' sources, the scale of those U.S. investments still requires significant work to plan out, and the tariff exemption rules are just another wrinkle for the company to work out.
“We’re going to be monitoring what unfolds after this is unveiled like hawks to make sure that the integrity of what we’re trying to accomplish with the tariffs and the rebates isn’t undermined and that this doesn’t end up being a giveaway to TSMC,” an official told the Financial Times.
In recent days, TSMC has made it clear that, as much as the Trump Administration would like it, there's no way it can get its American production capacity up to 40% of its total output.
Bringing it home
(Image credit: TSMC)
Amidst the seemingly chaotic international policies and trade negotiation tactics of the Trump administration, one thread has run through it all with some consistency: It wants cutting-edge chip manufacturing to be located on American soil. Although President Trump has acted as a vanguard for this kind of approach to silicon supply chains and immediate, localized access to fabrication, the reshoring of chipmaking efforts isn't singularly tied to American interests. We've seen China develop competitive AI accelerators, and the EU heavily investing in its own initiatives.
In the wake of the enormous AI infrastructure boom in mid-2025, many countries around the world have focused on building up their own national infrastructure and access to semiconductors, both leading-edge and older, more specialized chips. As it's become clearer that the future of many economies and national security itself relies on a ready supply of fast, efficient silicon, bringing the manufacture of that hardware in-house has a long list of advantages.
In America, this has led to aggressive trade talks with China, as both countries flexed their respective muscle - for the U.S., high-end GPU exports. For China, raw materials like rare earth minerals. This is all in an effort to secure the firmest of footing in this new race for AI and semiconductor dominance. Although in 2026 trade has opened up a little with export licenses and profit-sharing initiatives, the real fallout is China massively boosting its development of inference GPUs and ASICs, and the U.S. looking to increase stockpiles of critical rare earth minerals.
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