Intel Corp‘s (NASDAQ:INTC) foundry ambitions are often measured by manufacturing milestones—new process nodes, advanced packaging and winning external customers. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Ltd. (NYSE:TSM) latest earnings report suggests investors may be watching the wrong scoreboard.
While TSMC is racing ahead with next-generation technology, it’s also generating the kind of manufacturing profits that remain the envy of the semiconductor industry. And that’s the hurdle Intel ultimately has to clear if it wants its foundry business to compete with the world’s largest contract chipmaker.
A Manufacturing Machine
TSMC reported a 67.7% gross margin and a 60.3% operating margin for the second quarter, alongside a 36% year-over-year increase in revenue and a 77.4% jump in net income. Even more striking, 77% of the company’s wafer revenue now comes from advanced process technologies—7-nanometer and below—highlighting how deeply the AI boom has reshaped its business.
The momentum isn’t slowing.
The company said its 2-nanometer process (which has Apple Inc (NASDAQ:AAPL) as a key customer) already accounted for 3% of wafer revenue during the quarter and expects a steep production ramp in the third quarter as demand for leading-edge chips continues to accelerate.
Those aren’t just technology milestones. They’re evidence of extraordinary pricing power and operational efficiency in a business where manufacturing complexity continues to rise.
Intel’s Bigger Challenge
Intel has made no secret of its ambition to become a world-class foundry, investing heavily in new fabs, advanced process technology and its contract manufacturing business.
But matching TSMC isn’t simply about reaching the next manufacturing node.
It’s about producing cutting-edge chips while consistently generating industry-leading margins, filling factories with high-value customer orders and scaling advanced manufacturing without sacrificing profitability.
TSMC’s second quarter results show how difficult that equation has become. The foundry isn’t merely leading in advanced manufacturing—it is turning that leadership into exceptional financial performance, with profits growing more than twice as fast as revenue during the quarter.
The Next Benchmark
Intel’s upcoming foundry milestones will inevitably be measured against TSMC’s technology roadmap.
But investors may want to pay just as much attention to the financial metrics.
Winning customers is one thing. Building a manufacturing business capable of producing margins approaching 68% while ramping the industry’s most advanced chip technologies is another entirely.
TSMC’s latest quarter serves as a reminder that the foundry race isn’t just about making the smallest chips. It’s about building the most profitable manufacturing business in semiconductors—and that’s the benchmark Intel is ultimately chasing.
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