Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing (NYSE: TSM), popularly known as TSMC, delivered outstanding results for the third quarter on Oct. 17, handily beating Wall Street’s expectations and sending its shares soaring.

Even better, the foundry giant raised its full-year forecast and believes that it is set for healthy growth over the next five years as well. One of the reasons TSMC management is bullish is because of the booming demand for artificial intelligence (AI) processors such as graphics processing units (GPUs), central processing units (CPUs), and other kinds of accelerators.

That bodes well for one of TSMC’s largest customers: Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA). Let’s take a look at the reasons TSMC’s solid results indicate that Nvidia’s red-hot rally is here to stay.

TSMC management said on its latest earnings conference call that it is witnessing “extremely robust AI-related demand from our customers throughout the second half of 2024, leading to an increasing overall capacity utilization rate for our leading 3-nanometer and 5-nanometer process technologies.”

More specifically, the company’s revenue from sales of AI processors is on track to triple this year, accounting for a mid-teens percentage of its overall top line. As a result, it raised its full-year revenue growth forecast to 30%, which is an improvement over its prior expectation of mid-20% growth. So TSMC is on track to finish 2024 with $90 billion in revenue as compared to the $69.3 billion top line it reported last year.

TSMC says that next year will be a healthy growth year as well. Given that it manufactures chips that are designed by Nvidia, a company that controls more than 85% of the AI chip market, the former’s sunny forecast suggests that the demand for AI chips continues to remain solid.

As TSMC management said, the demand for its 3nm and 5nm process nodes is high. Nvidia’s current generation Hopper AI processors are based on TSMC’s 5nm node. Nvidia management said on its August earnings conference call that its Hopper chips remain in demand even though the next-generation Blackwell processors are on the way.

According to Nvidia, shipments of its Hopper processors are set to increase in the second half of the ongoing fiscal year, and TSMC’s results indicate the same. Moreover, Nvidia’s upcoming Blackwell processors are going to be manufactured on a more refined and advanced version of the same process that Hopper chips were made.

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