WASHINGTON: TSMC CEO C. C. Wei plans to meet with President Donald Trump on Monday to discuss the Taiwanese semiconductor company’s investment plans in the United States, the company said.
A person briefed on the matter said Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. is expected to announce an $100 billion investment in the United States. In April, TSMC agreed to expand its planned investment by $25 billion to $65 billion and to add a third Arizona factory by 2030.
The US Commerce Department under then President Joe Biden finalized a $6.6 billion government subsidy in November for the TSMC’s US unit for semiconductor production in Phoenix, Arizona.
Biden signed the CHIPS and Science Act legislation in 2022 to provide $52.7 billion in subsidies for American semiconductor production and research.
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Trump’s Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick told lawmakers last month that the program was “an excellent down payment” to rebuild the sector but he has declined to commit grants that have already been approved by the department, saying he wanted to “read them and analyze them and understand them.”
A TSMC spokesperson said last month the company had received $1.5 billion in CHIPS Act money before the new administration came in as per the milestone terms of its agreement.
TSMC last year agreed to produce the world’s most advanced 2-nanometer technology at its second Arizona fab expected to begin production in 2028. TSMC also agreed to use its most advanced chip manufacturing technology called “A16” in Arizona.
The TSMC award included up to $5 billion in low-cost government loans.