Taiwan Semiconductor reports $13.2B revenue in May, up 30% year-over-year
TSMC's AI-fueled growth streak continues as the chipmaking giant raises capital expenditure guidance, with potential ripple effects for crypto mining hardware access.
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Add us on Google by Editorial Team Jun. 10, 2026TSMC, the company that makes the chips powering basically everything with a transistor, just posted $13.2 billion in revenue for May 2026. That’s a 30.1% jump from the same month last year, and it tells a very specific story about where the semiconductor industry’s priorities lie right now.
The number, reported as NT$416,975 million in local currency, lands squarely in line with TSMC’s full-year guidance calling for over 30% revenue growth in US dollar terms.
AI is eating the chip supply
In the first quarter of 2026, TSMC’s HPC segment, which includes AI accelerators, accounted for 61% of total sales. A full 74% of TSMC’s wafer revenue in Q1 came from chips built on 7-nanometer processes and below.
AdvertisementThe March 2026 figures were even more dramatic, showing a 45.2% year-over-year revenue increase.
To keep pace with this demand, TSMC has bumped its 2026 capital expenditure guidance upward. The company now expects to spend near the high end of its $52 to $56 billion range.
What this means for crypto mining
TSMC has historically been a critical supplier for crypto mining hardware manufacturers. Companies like Bitmain have relied on TSMC’s advanced nodes to produce the ASICs that power Bitcoin mining operations worldwide.
TSMC’s current reporting around its May figures contains zero mention of cryptocurrency, crypto mining, or any related production commitments. When AI demand consumes an ever-larger share of TSMC’s cutting-edge capacity, smaller clients, including crypto mining hardware firms, get squeezed, not getting priority access to the newest and most efficient process nodes.
The bigger picture for investors
TSMC’s Q2 2026 revenue is estimated in the range of $39 to $40.2 billion.
If next-generation mining hardware is delayed or less efficient than expected, it could slow the natural centralization pressure that comes from hardware upgrades. Smaller mining operations running older equipment might remain competitive for longer, simply because the newest gear isn’t arriving as fast as it once did.
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