On February 24, 2026, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) crossed the US$2 trillion market capitalization mark, becoming the eighth company in US stock market history to reach the milestone and the first from Taiwan. The achievement places TSMC sixth in the global rankings by market value, behind Nvidia, Apple, Alphabet (Google), Microsoft, and Amazon.
The boom in cloud-based artificial intelligence (AI) is reverberating far beyond the most advanced chipmaking nodes.
The Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission is probing the MYR1.11 billion (US$250 million) agreement with UK-based Arm Holdings amid seizures, arrests, and political fallout. The government maintains the Cabinet-approved deal is still in force, and ministers have pledged cooperation with investigators.
All eyes are on Jensen Huang ahead of the March 16–19 GTC conference. Nvidia's chief executive has promised to unveil a chip unlike anything the world has seen before —and speculation is now mounting over what that chip might actually be.
SK Hynix and Sandisk have launched a consortium to standardize High Bandwidth Flash (HBF), positioning the technology as a next-generation memory layer for AI inference and heightening competition in the post-HBM era as Micron accelerates investments to strengthen its HBM4 and NAND capabilities.
Nvidia's GTC 2026 will be held in mid-March. CEO Jensen Huang is expected to address concerns about an AI bubble while reaffirming that the Vera Rubin platform has entered mass production. He is also set to argue that AI computing is moving into an era of "thinking and reasoning." Three themes are likely to shape the conference.
At the latest earnings call on February 25, Nvidia chief executive Jensen Huang said deploying data centers in space is technically feasible but currently uneconomic. However, he expects conditions to improve over time as engineering approaches evolve and space-based computing use cases expand.
At the earnings call on February 25, Nvidia detailed its next-generation Rubin platform and Vera CPU roadmap as Blackwell systems continue to ramp, with management signaling sustained demand across Hopper, Blackwell, and forthcoming products while acknowledging uncertainty around the timing and scale of Rubin revenue.
Taiwan and South Korea have long defined the frontlines of global tech rivalry. Now, that relationship is evolving into something far more nuanced. Driven by the demands of the AI supercycle and mounting geopolitical pressures, the two are settling into an uneasy but necessary "frenemy" dynamic. DIGITIMES president Colley Hwang laid out this shift in a lecture on February 24, 2026, mapping the hidden vulnerabilities and emerging interdependencies that will shape both nations' tech futures. His analysis, centered on TSMC and Samsung, is clear: the era of pure head-to-head competition is over. Collaboration is now a strategic imperative.
Nvidia said uncertainty over China shipments and tight product supply remain key constraints, even as generative AI drives record capital spending by hyperscalers and sovereign customers accelerate national AI infrastructure investments.
During the earnings call on February 25, Nvidia said record capex plans by major cloud service providers reflect a structural shift toward monetizable AI workloads, with management arguing that token-driven revenue models support continued elevated infrastructure investment.
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