Giant chipmaker TSMC to spend $100B to expand chip manufacturing in US,
Trump announces
[March 04, 2025] By
DIDI TANG and MICHELLE L. PRICE
WASHINGTON (AP) — Chip giant Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co.
plans to invest $100 billion in the United States, President Donald
Trump said Monday, on top of $65 billion in investments the company had
previously announced.
TSMC, the world’s biggest semiconductor manufacturer, produces chips for
companies including Apple, Intel and Nvidia. The company had already
begun constructing three plants in Arizona after the Biden
administration offered billions in subsidies. Its first factory in
Arizona has started mass production of its 4-nanometer chips.
Trump, who appeared with TSMC’s chief executive officer C. C. Wei at the
White House, called it a “tremendous move” and "a matter of economic
security.”
“Semiconductors are the backbone of the 21st century economy. And
really, without the semiconductors, there is no economy," the president
said. "Powering everything from AI to automobiles to advanced
manufacturing, we must be able to build the chips and semiconductors
that we need right here in American factories with Americans skill and
American labor.”
Wei said the investment will be for three more chip manufacturing
plants, along with two packaging facilities, in Arizona.
The $165 billion investment "is going to create thousands of high-paying
jobs,” Wei said.
Former President Joe Biden in 2022 signed a sweeping $280 billion law,
the CHIPS and Science Act, to try to reinvigorate chip manufacturing in
the U.S., especially after the COVID-19 pandemic.
During the pandemic, chip factories, especially those overseas making
the majority of processors, shut down. It had a ripple effect that led
to wider problems, such as automobile factory assembly lines shutting
down and fueled inflation.

Trump has criticized the law and taken a different approach, instead
threatening to impose high tariffs on imported chips to bring chip
manufacturing back to the U.S.
Trump also has said companies like TSMC do not need federal tax
incentives.
At the Commerce Department, 40 people who worked on the implementation
of the Chips Act were fired Monday as part of the Trump administration’s
sweeping moves to cut the size of the federal workforce, according to a
person familiar with the move who was not authorized to speak publicly.
When asked if the new investment could minimize impact on the U.S.
should China either isolate or seize Taiwan, Trump said he couldn’t say
“minimize” because “that would be a catastrophic event obviously.”
Taiwan is an island that broke away from mainland China in 1949
following a civil war. Beijing claims sovereignty over the island and
has ratcheted up military and diplomatic pressure on its leaders.
“It will at least give us a position where we have, in this very, very
important business, we would have a very big part of it in the United
States,” Trump said of the chip manufacturing.
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President Donald Trump walks before talking with reporters before
boarding Marine One on the South Lawn of the White House in
Washington, Friday, Feb. 28, 2025. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)
 He did not say if the investment
would provide security for the self-governed island that Beijing
considers to be part of Chinese territory.
Taipei Economic and Cultural Representative Office, the island’s
de-facto embassy in the United States, said investments by Taiwanese
businesses in the U.S. have exceeded 40% of the island’s total
foreign investments and that the Taiwanese government is “glad” to
see Taiwanese businesses to expand investments in the U.S. and to
deep cooperation on supply chain between the two sides.
“It also brings the economic and trade relations closer,” the office
said.
Bonnie Glaser, managing director of the Indo-Pacific program at
German Marshall Fund of the U.S., said Taipei is hoping the
increased investment pledge will help keep the U.S.-Taiwan
relationship strong. “Taiwan is evidently stepping up in a way that
supports and advanced President Trump’s priorities,” she said. “The
US will benefit greatly from TSMC’s investment.”
Trump has yet to indicate his stance on U.S. support for Taiwan’s
security since he took office, and he has said Taiwan should pay the
U.S. for its military defense.
Trump has hosted multiple business leaders at the White House since
he took office in January to tout a series of investments that aim
to demonstrate his leadership is a boon for the U.S. economy. He's
also pointed to the tariff threats as prodding the investments.
“It’s the incentive we’ve created. Or the negative incentive,” Trump
said.
In January, he appeared with the heads of OpenAI, Oracle and
SoftBank at the White House as they announced plans for a new
partnership to invest up to $500 billion for infrastructure tied to
artificial intelligence. He also announced in January a $20 billion
investment by DAMAC Properties in the United Arab Emirates to build
data centers tied to AI.
Last week, after Apple CEO Tim Cook met with Trump at the White
House, the company announced plans to invest more than $500 billion
in the U.S. over the next four years, including plans for a new
server factory in Texas. Trump said after their meeting that Cook
promised him Apple's manufacturing would shift from Mexico to the
U.S.
“I don’t have time to do all of these announcements," Trump joked
Monday as he listed some of the other investments.
The Wall Street Journal first reported the planned announcement
Monday.
___
Associated Press writers Josh Boak and Chris Megerian contributed to
this report. Price reported from New York.
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