
TSMC reported record second-quarter 2026 results on July 16, with revenue, profit, and earnings per share all surpassing market expectations, underscoring sustained demand for AI and high-performance computing (HPC) chips.
ChangXin Memory Technologies' (CXMT) STAR Market IPO is more than just one of China's biggest semiconductor listings. It also marks the culmination of Zhu Yiming's two-decade effort to build a domestic memory industry, taking the entrepreneur from founding flash memory designer GigaDevice to creating China's first globally competitive DRAM maker.
The global tech landscape is currently dominated by two massive tides: the race for semiconductor supremacy and the long-promised dawn of the quantum era. While quantum technology is often associated with the distant goal of large-scale computing, a German startup is proving that quantum's most immediate impact may actually be in saving inspection time for the global semiconductor industry that powers the modern world.
Power semiconductor makers say prices are still being adjusted as upstream raw material costs rise and AI-driven high-margin products crowd out capacity. With supply tight across the chain, customers are now focusing on securing shipments first, even as new price-hike notices arrive in the third quarter of 2026.
SK Group chairman Chey Tae-won has floated a "memory as a service" model for SK Hynix, saying the memory chipmaker needs to build a higher-value business beyond manufacturing and selling chips.
TSMC Chairman C.C. Wei said on July 16 that if more competitors can offer advanced packaging solutions that meet customer needs, the company welcomes the added supply-chain flexibility. His comments, made at TSMC's earnings call, suggested that customer growth has already been somewhat constrained by tight back-end packaging capacity.
TSMC Chairman C.C. Wei formally announced on July 16 that the company will invest an additional US$100 billion in the US, funding several 2nm and more advanced logic wafer fabs as well as advanced packaging plants to support continued strong demand from major US customers.

The global tech landscape is currently dominated by two massive tides: the race for semiconductor supremacy and the long-promised dawn of the quantum era. While quantum technology is often associated with the distant goal of large-scale computing, a German startup is proving that quantum's most immediate impact may actually be in saving inspection time for the global semiconductor industry that powers the modern world.

