Buoyed by their impressive performance, the companies are busy expanding into new products and places. Contract manufacturers have also been expanding into new industries. In October Foxconn unveiled two new electric-vehicle designs,
Key Takeaways The S&P 500 added 0.6% on Monday, Jan. 6, led by a surge in semiconductor stocks as the first full week of the new year began.Teradyne shares pushed higher as Northland Securities analysts highlighted upside potential for the company's electronic testing equipment.
AI-related chip stocks sold off a bit during the last couple of weeks of 2024, but they got a lift Friday on signs of strong AI chip demand. On Monday morning, Hon Hai Precision (OTC: HNHPF), also known as Foxconn,
The world’s largest contract chipmaker reported a 39 per cent rise in October-December revenue to US$26.3 billion.
Global semiconductor stocks climbed on Monday after Foxconn posted record fourth-quarter revenue, suggesting the AI boom has far more room to run.
Foxconn's fourth quarter 2024 revenue surged 15.17%, setting a record for the highest revenue ever, driven by strong demand in AI.
TSMC, the world's largest contract chipmaker, reported on Friday fourth-quarter revenue that easily beat market forecasts and hit its own expectations as it reaped the benefit of artificial intelligence demand.
The Taiwan-listed assembler of Apple and Nvidia products posted record revenue for the fourth quarter, helped by robust demand for servers to power burgeoning artificial intelligence technologies.
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. posted fourth-quarter revenue that beat Wall Street estimates as the company keeps gaining from the artificial intelligence (AI) boom.
TSMC, the world's largest contract chipmaker, reported on Friday fourth-quarter revenue that easily beat market forecasts and hit its own expectations as it reaped the benefit of
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing's (NYSE:TSM) revenue for December 2024 surged 57.8% year-over-year to about NT$278.16B, amid a growing demand for AI applications. TSM — which produces chips for some of the world's largest tech companies including Apple (AAPL),