top | item 26662489

US, Europe 'unrealistic' in fab expansion drive, says TSMC chair

39 points| craigjb | 4 years ago |digitimes.com

65 comments

order

atty|4 years ago

It may be true that TSMC and Samsung can meet demand during normal times, but it completely misses the point that NA and EU want significant production capacity locally not to reduce costs, but to secure a critical supply chain. Is this a situation where he may be concerned that significant expansion of production capability away from Taiwan and SK will reduce the West’s reliance on TSMC, which may be a security risk for TSMC or Taiwan? I’m nowhere near an expert on this sort of thing, I’m honestly curious.

bilbo0s|4 years ago

And frankly, this is everyone's motivation. EU wants to not depend on TSMC. US has gone all-in to not depend on TSMC. China has gone all-in to not depend on TSMC. And there are even rumors that Russia is trying to build their capabilities in this regard.

I think the leadership at TSMC is being a little naive. Alternatively, they may know very well what's going on here and they are being willfully obtuse to paint as bright a picture as possible of their long-term prospects.

cpleppert|4 years ago

It doesn’t make economic sense to build basically an entire new supply chain though.

You can’t just build a modern foundry with any amount of money. TSMC is part of a massive supply chain and engineering cluster. If you wanted to build something that looked like TSMC and in an emergency could produce something in six months you are probably talking about tens of billions per year at a minimum. Most of your costs are things TSMC gets paid for.

Since that doesnt really make sense you probably want a homegrown competitor. You just don’t have the domestic experience and expertise to replicate what TSMC has; It will never be cost competitive. TSMC can send billions on fabs and recover their costs and a domestic alternative will never be able to. Modern chips have to be adapted to each foundry; a homegrown alternative will have to eat this cost at first just to get orders.

If you want to be competitive you need to go big and stay there. Something like $100 billion a year for the foreseeable future would be the minimum. You could probably limp along with massive discounts.

MomoXenosaga|4 years ago

Ah yes interesting point. Obviously TSMC and the Taiwanese government want to maintain their quasi monopoly for economic reasons. But there is also a military component: is Taiwan still worth fighting over?

tehjoker|4 years ago

TSMC is probably completely accurate. Their contention is that moving the supply chain would create "non-profitable capacity". However, national supplies do not need to be profitable if they are subsidized or fully funded by a state.

The state is free to, and often does, engage in non-profitable production to ensure essential domestic needs can be satisfied.

This doesn't make sense from a market perspective, but it can often make sense from a needs based perspective.

blueblisters|4 years ago

Won't this lead to innovation grinding to a halt? Right now TSMC has a decent profit margin to re-invest into newer technologies. If the margins become thinner, the industry will find it difficult to set aside R&D dollars for the newest technologies.

Of course, you can always have a newcomer who can disrupt the market but most Moore's law advancements appear to happen in government funded research labs and large semiconductor companies.

badloginagain|4 years ago

If governments are looking at Chinese-Taiwan relations, and gaming the result of an occupied Taiwan, those supply chains become profitable pretty damn quickly.

varispeed|4 years ago

I think TSMC over estimates how state sponsored fabs would look like. I can predict now that it will be a disaster and many billions will be funnelled to bureaucrat friends through questionable procurement. If there is going to be a miracle and they actually build a fab, it will be lacking as they will not find specialists willing to work for EU wages and level of taxation.

kar1181|4 years ago

I think Intel will do a good job of it. They have no choice if they get this expansion wrong they are done.

My expectations for Europe though, are sadly much lower.

hahahahe|4 years ago

Sounds like someone wants to hold onto unsustainable monopoly.

Edit: chip shortage has been a known variable for over a year now. I think TSM overplayed its hands a bit. They didn’t want to expand and get caught when the demand would subside, which is very understandable. But what they didn’t foresee is that the US govt would get involved in propping up its competition in direct response.

greggyb|4 years ago

A year is not nearly enough time to spin up a new fab. It is impossible to say with any certainty that TSMC did not respond correctly to a variable that has been known for only a year.

layla5alive|4 years ago

"We built enough capacity for the world so you shouldn't build any local capacity to ensure resiliency of supply chains because this will harm the current efficiency of our monopoly position."

These people are awful.

That's like saying you should never use anything other than RAID0 because anything else costs you more for the same performance. Yeah, sometimes cost/performance aren't the only important metrics!

The pandemic has literally been a real-life example of the downsides of the approach he is advocating.

dirtyid|4 years ago

Semi is oil now, there's more strategic/geopolitical considerations than supply/demand curve. US/EU/CN do not want Taiwan to have semi dominance, it's not in anyone's interest. Current TSMC position is happenstance due to poor industrial policies that countries are scrambling to address. IMO press releases and capex spending around Arizona announcement suggest TSMC wasn't prepared to built US fab, let alone 6. US pressured them, EU failed to. There's a good chance TSMC/Taiwan will try to delay their silicon shield evaporating for as long as they can. Probably not a coincidence big ticket US weapons sales are scheduled around when fabs would be up. Future will be priority sourcing from domestic fabs, let TSMC whither, by design.

lainga|4 years ago

Is Liu misunderstanding the Western plans or am I? I was under the impression that the US and Europe intended to get some onshore fab capacity as a second-source and backup in case Taiwan is blockaded or worse.

If the plan was to replace TSMC entirely, well, I'd think he was justifiably concerned as (a) a threat to his business and (b) evidence that the US was decoupling from Taiwan. But I don't think that's the case.

PeterisP|4 years ago

Arguably US and Europe absolutely intend to get some onshore fab capacity as a backup, and the choice for TSMC is to either do that (perhaps demanding some subsidies as enticement) or refuse with the expectation that this will inevitably cause attempts to decouple from TSMC even if it's not economically viable, purely for strategic reasons.

IMHO there are some similar trends with EU agricultural policy, where arguably one of the reasons (not much discussed to general public, but obvious if you look at what's being done) for sustaining farming subsidies in sectors where EU would be uncompetitive (due to climatic reasons and labor costs) is the strategic goal to ensure that EU does not become reliant on imported food even if it can be farmed cheaper elsewhere, so that in case of major geopolitical disturbances in coming decades (e.g. caused by climate change) there's local farmers, farmland, skills and infrastructure for that. The costs seem huge, but in proportion to the whole economy they're affordable - the same would apply for on-shore chip fab capacity that's needed for strategic self-sufficiency of key resources.

On the other hand, I fully agree with the TSMC statement that it would be economically unrealistic for EU to expand semiconductor fab capacity to fully satisfy their own needs - it's feasible to expand fab capacity so that you have some onshore supply of modern chips, but it's impractical (and IMHO not within plans of any politician) to ensure that there would be enough fab capacity to supply all the consumer consumption, the expectation is that most of the volume would still be supplied from Taiwan and elsewhere.

acoard|4 years ago

The goals aren't mutually exclusive, they just depend on time-frame and how well things go.

Regardless, even if it is the former goal, it is still a potential threat to TSMC profits. Personally, I would not look at it in terms of Liu (mis)understanding, but acting in his own self interest to maximize his profits.

dylan604|4 years ago

If you went to the trouble of building this capability to produce chips, why in the world you not make that your primary source?

whatshisface|4 years ago

It would be nice if they reported on the reasons given in support of the claims instead of just the claims on their own.

lumost|4 years ago

Doesn't this imply that it would be unrealistic to create large amounts of new supply to satisfy local strategic needs in a global economy?

for a large market like the US/Europe couldn't they choose to not participate in the global market for chips? or tip the scales such that local competitors are favored?

I don't see any reason why certain products couldn't be on a sliding tariff scale dependent on how much is imported. 20-40% imports = no tariffs, 80% triggers a sliding tariff scale. This would allow for strategic preservation and global competition. Once you fully outsource an industry it's hard for it to ever grow back - even if it makes sense for it too.

hedora|4 years ago

Tariffs like that can backfire and prop up non-innovative companies. The US steel industry is a good example. It’s still based on WWII technology, and there’s guaranteed income regardless of whether it’s competitive.

dv_dt|4 years ago

The question of unprofitability is interesting on large capital projects - it's often a question of what timescale we're talking about, and if nations become involved then the timescales can be both significantly larger as well as the dynamics of possibly loaned or direct grant money for the capital.

If it's a matter of subsidizing one industry to favor the overall economy (e.g. more chips so the automotive and other sectors don't slow down), then nations also get involved. China pretty much directly and openly, and the US/Europe more indirectly.

resonantjacket5|4 years ago

Unrealistic given how much fab facotiries cost.

Your tariff method would work for say mining copper or say iron screws but not for a fab factory as it can't really be scaled halfway

amelius|4 years ago

What is the distribution of education-level of workers at a typical fab? Is it like 90% researchers, or more like 90% production workers?

sct202|4 years ago

I couldn't find anything by site, but TSMC reported these stats in their 2019 Annual Report as a whole out of 51k employees: 5k managers, 24k professionals, 4k assistants and 17k technicians.

They reported highest level of education for their workforce of: 4.5% PHD, 44.9% Masters, 25.5% Bachelors.

bww|4 years ago

I think Liu is trying to dismiss the west’s concerns on the only basis that he can: the short term economics. In reality there is a more important strategic priority at the core of these initiatives, but that’s a whole lot harder to play down.

petree|4 years ago

The whole world economy relies on 3 countries in balistic rocket range of each other; not great. Having foundries distributed around the world sounds way more resilient to any conflicts or disasters that might arise in that particular region.

villgax|4 years ago

As if like Champagne it can only be called a chip if made in Taiwan? GTFO

varispeed|4 years ago

That made me laugh hard, thank you so much good sir