🔬Semicon Briefing
April 17, 2026 · 03:48 Uhr
1ASML & TSMC Confirm: AI Spending Shows No Signs of Slowdown
247wallst.com ASML raises its 2026 revenue guidance to €36–40 billion, citing increased capex plans from TSMC, Samsung, and SK Hynix – customers are accelerating capacity expansions for the post-2026 period. Needham simultaneously raises its TSMC price target to $480 USD, underscoring the structural reassessment of AI infrastructure.
2Applied Materials & JSR Open Joint Research Center at TSMC
digitimes.com Japanese materials giant JSR has opened a research center with Applied Materials for advanced planarization processes in Taiwan, with high-level participation from TSMC R&D. The cooperation targets 2nm production and consolidates the supply chain for EUV-compatible materials.
3China Purchases US Chip Equipment via Malaysia & Singapore – New Escalation
asia.nikkei.com China's imports of chip manufacturing equipment from Malaysia and Singapore exceeded direct US supplies for the first time in 2025, which fell to an eight-year low. This demonstrates that existing export controls are being systematically circumvented through third countries – with direct consequences for the effectiveness of the US sanctions regime.
4Nvidia H200 China Delivery Blocked – BIS Bottleneck Intensifies
tomshardware.com The Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) has lost nearly one-fifth of its licensing personnel, leaving already-approved H200 orders for China unprocessed for months despite White House clearance. This simultaneously blocks shipments to Saudi Arabia and the UAE, structurally harming US chip exporters.
5EU Chips Act 2.0: Europe's Semiconductor Roadmap Reset
techfundingnews.com As the first subsidy wave expires, EU policymakers are revising their strategy: focus is shifting from mega-fabs to fabless models and ecosystem support. ESMC (TSMC/Bosch/Infineon/NXP) in Dresden remains the anchor project, but the debate over Europe's structural weaknesses in the advanced-node segment is intensifying.
6ams OSRAM: Infineon Deal Closes in Q2 2026 – Restructuring Taking Shape
ad-hoc-news.de The sale of R&D units to Infineon (approximately 230 employees) is expected to close in Q2 2026; proceeds will retire high-interest bonds of €625 million and $400 million USD, reducing annual financing costs from €300 million to below €150 million. This new aspect – concrete debt reduction strategy and closing timeline – goes beyond the previously announced deal.
Situation Report
The semiconductor sector is undergoing a phase of structural reorganization driven by three simultaneous forces: unbridled AI infrastructure demand, geopolitical fragmentation of supply chains, and industrial policy subsidy competition. ASML and TSMC are signaling with raised guidance and accelerated capex plans that the AI-driven investment cycle will continue to accelerate through 2026 – while the 2nm production ramp is putting pressure on the EUV materials and equipment supply chain. Meanwhile, the US-China technology conflict is escalating: China is systematically circumventing export controls via Southeast Asia, the BIS is losing personnel capacity for license control, and Beijing is deploying its own export restrictions as a geopolitical pressure tool. Europe is attempting to build industrial sovereignty with EU Chips Act 2.0 and the EuroStack alliance (including Infineon, STMicro, NXP, Bosch), but remains structurally dependent on TSMC and ASML in the advanced-node segment – keeping strategic vulnerability high in the event of a Taiwan escalation.
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