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ldoughty | 6 months ago

I'm kinda of shocked that chip & many tech companies play ball..

They are a required / no alternatives industry by so much of the USA, with limited alternatives. Is it really more cost-effective for each of these companies to spend hundreds of billions of dollars to avoid tariffs when they could easily pass on these costs because we have no alternatives?

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CGMthrowaway|6 months ago

>I'm kinda of shocked that chip & many tech companies play ball..

Have you heard of this story? https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2007/10/qwest-ceo-nsa-punished...

The only telecom in America to resist turning on a domestic eavesdropping firehose tap for the government, was pounded to the edge of bankruptcy.

Intel and TSMC are both strategically important and favored-status corporations for the going concern of the United States, and large swaths of the federal appartatus are invested in their success, contracts, global projection, etc. That comes with a price. Naive to think they are independently operated companies.

meragrin_|6 months ago

> The only telecom in America to resist turning on a domestic eavesdropping firehose tap for the government, was pounded to the edge of bankruptcy.

How so? There was no mention of the government taking action against the company to cause the company to fail. If a company is failing without government contracts, that is on them and not the government.

sleepyguy|6 months ago

Bernie died in prison because he didn't want to give them access to Worldcom so the story goes.

duxup|6 months ago

I think people in power are pretty fond of non democratic systems, they like them. They make friends and get favors. Far easier than competing.

And what's the alternative for many of them? Lawsuits?

SCOTUS has quit doing their job. The checks and balances are out the window. There is no leadership / anyone in power at the national level when it comes to democracy in the US at this time.

pjc50|6 months ago

SCOTUS was stuffed with political appointees to give the results the Republican party wanted. Overturning Roe v. Wade was just the start of that.

tick_tock_tick|6 months ago

> when they could easily pass on these costs because we have no alternatives

The administration has made it clear they will take such actions personally.

The USA by and large figuratively controls the world. All of Europe is one step away from a protectorate and if Taiwan doesn't want to conquered by China they need the USA in the way.

If the USA ever sours on the relationship it means China will take Taiwan so they do whatever they need to do to appease the USA.

dismalaf|6 months ago

Honestly, this is a win-win for TSMC.

Intel isn't dead. They've made some bad choices and investments but they're still huge. They have $30 billion in gross profit per year on an utterly boring, non-hype based business model. Get rid of some dead weight, write off the bad investments, improve their foundry business and their value easily grows multiples of what it currently is.

On top of it already being a shrewd business deal, doing a favour for the US government also potentially buys protection for TSMC and Taiwan from China. Plus the immediate tariff relief.

Fade_Dance|6 months ago

Intel is not profitable. They have negative eps and negative free cash flow. The cash flows from existing products can't be considered in isolation. If their R+D and Capex investments stopped, the sum total of the existing+legacy cash flows wouldn't nearly cover Intel's substantial liabilities.

They also have 50 billion dollars in debt, and their cash flow situation has gotten so desperate that slices of future fab revenue have been pawned off to private equity, who now has a senior claim on the assets (as do the bondholders).

An equity stake and Intel is not something that a TSMC would want without coercion. It's just not a very attractive place to be an equity holder.

>Get rid of some dead weight, write off the bad investments, improve their foundry business and their value easily grows multiples of what it currently is.

As if it was that easy. The company has now been through multiple CEOs attempting to mix up these ideas in various ways. The last CEO tried to do a Hail Mary to improve the foundry business, but the balance sheet can't support it. Now the new CEO is essentially writing off those investments and putting them on the back burner. Considering that, getting rid of the dead weight will be difficult, considering the company itself is largely dead weight... The quality of their employees is not good, or at least not nearly at the level that needs to be (18A yields are alarmingly low, and that's the critical product that basically determines the company's future. 14a is already looking more and more distant despite it being the purported savior not even a year ago).

Realistically, their financial situation puts them right at the precipice of needing to shed the fabs, and/or permanently continue down the path of more Brookstone-like partnerships where they can spread the burden (which then caps the equity holder upside).

There is nothing "easy" about the current situation. Maybe without the 50 billion in debt, but nearly all of remedial paths are running into nasty balance sheet constraints. There's no more room to spend quarters rejiggering the thing.

phkahler|6 months ago

>> doing a favour for the US government also potentially buys protection for TSMC and Taiwan from China. Plus the immediate tariff relief.

They already built fabs in the US. The thing about protection money is the bully keeps asking for it again and again.

ldoughty|6 months ago

But the US government has proven to be unreliable in maintaining commitments -- even words on paper are meaningless as it doesn't seem to stop them from changing the deal later and demanding more ("I have change the terms of our agreement, pray I do not alter them further"), and then another request demanding more. Would TSMC be doing the government a favor and gaining protection, or are they being extorted? ("would sure be a shame if we doubled your tariffs again...")

Matticus_Rex|6 months ago

If it were a win-win relative to their other options, they wouldn't have to be forced into it. They may have been able to make the best of it, but let's not pretend value is being created.

btian|6 months ago

I don't know if any of that is true. Even if it's true, why TSMC?

Will Apple, AMD, and nVidia continue to trust TSMC if it owns half of Intel?

lII1lIlI11ll|6 months ago

> Honestly, this is a win-win for TSMC.

Not sure about that. Buying Intel would make TSMC a direct competitor to most of its biggest customers which could incentivize said customers to look for alternative foundry.

platevoltage|6 months ago

After pretty much every company with a public profile threw money at Trump's inauguration fund, this doesn't surprise me at all.

assword|6 months ago

> they could easily pass on these costs because we have no alternatives

Now imagine the same scenario, but one side is willing to destroy themselves as collateral if they don’t get the result they want.

duped|6 months ago

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