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TSM
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Ltd.
stock NYSE ADR

At Close
Feb 27, 2026 3:59:55 PM EST
374.67USD-0.568%(-2.14)9,213,152
0.00Bid   0.00Ask   0.00Spread
Pre-market
Feb 27, 2026 9:28:30 AM EST
370.42USD-1.696%(-6.39)133,414
After-hours
Feb 27, 2026 4:58:30 PM EST
373.60USD-0.286%(-1.07)67,428
OverviewOption ChainMax PainOptionsPrice & VolumeSplitsDividendsHistoricalExchange VolumeDark Pool LevelsDark Pool PrintsExchangesShort VolumeShort Interest - DailyShort InterestBorrow Fee (CTB)Failure to Deliver (FTD)ShortsTrendsNewsTrends
TSM Reddit Mentions
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We have sentiment values and mention counts going back to 2017. The complete data set is available via the API.
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TSM Specific Mentions
As of Mar 2, 2026 7:28:13 AM EST (10 minutes ago)
Includes all comments and posts. Mentions per user per ticker capped at one per hour.
3 hr ago • u/MichaelJamesBurry • r/wallstreetbets • what_are_your_moves_tomorrow_march_02_2026 • C
They got hit with indian shit that is gonna tank better invest in TSM
sentiment -0.18
3 hr ago • u/Comfortable-Sky7801 • r/wallstreetbets • what_are_your_moves_tomorrow_march_02_2026 • C
When do we start buying the dip? There’s some nice sales going on. NVDA, MU, TSM
sentiment 0.42
3 hr ago • u/SpaceCatVII • r/wallstreetbets • what_are_your_moves_tomorrow_march_02_2026 • C
I want to buy more TSM but also seems like the perfect time for China to invade Taiwan rip
sentiment 0.87
6 hr ago • u/supsupman1001 • r/stocks • spacex_could_seek_ipo_valuation_of_over_175 • C
tesla is not xAI, and xAI is not spacex, spacex just recently acquired xAI. nvda is heavily involved with xAI, but with xAI exponentially breaking a growth wall, they will design their own chips, direct to TSM, direct to their own ecosystem. Many people discount what AI will be capable of in a few years, and if anything Musk vision has proved that he doesn't want to rely on competitors, this will be central to how AI operates as each becomes more proprietary, and less run on a flawed NVDA common ecosystem.
sentiment 0.59
8 hr ago • u/Jumpy_Nose863 • r/ValueInvesting • i_spent_9600year_on_substack_newsletters_so_you • C
You can look at my comments from around May 2025 and find my exact portfolio, minus the adds I made, which I already mentioned here. But then my fav positions were Asml as 657, Lrcx at 63.55, TSM at 164, Nu holdings at 10.245,unh at 296 then bought 2x more at 238.20. Pepsi at 129.23, Vrt at 55, MU at 67, Sndk at 32.17, CAT at 311, VZ originally at 41.80 and bought quite a bit more after I took profits on some big winners at 39 and change a week before their last ex date because I wanted the 7% yield in my roth. O at 52-53 then added after selling some growth not long ago. Vici I bought at 31.33 originally and maybe a month ago I bought what I called the bottom at 27.72, it has a 7% YOC at time of purchase. Also Couche Tard which trades under OTCanctf or on the TSX ATD, first buy around 52 then it dropped a bit and I 3x'd my original buy at 48.22 I believe it was. Goog I was selling cash secured puts during the court case at 145-155, I got paid most of the time, but then got assigned 100 shares twice at a cost basis right at 153ea. Wish I would of got assigned twice and had to buy every contract I sold, but in that case I would of missed the MU 7x and sndk 20x. But ya those were my plays ASML, LRCX, TSM, NU, UNH, PEP, CAT, VRT, MU, SNDK, VZ, OTC ANCTF, TSX ATD, O, VICI.
I only bought UPS about a week after CEO Carol Tome wrote a personal check for 1m to buy shares, so I followed her in and it has dropped like $1.40 a share from her buy price..I was chasing high yield by then, it was right at 7% as well. I guess a quality compounder with a YOC of 7% has been very lucky for me. It was a once in a lifetime opportunity, I just got lucky at the exact timing of everything right after liberation day. Now I always keep a very decent sized amount in cash, plus it collects a risk free 3.7% it was 5% until a few months ago. Vici is still under where I believe it's going this year, from the 27.72 I was almost certain it would gain 30% from there, it's still priced low with a now 5.7% yield.
sentiment 1.00
11 hr ago • u/rick2882 • r/wallstreetbets • what_are_your_moves_tomorrow_march_02_2026 • C
MU and TSM
sentiment 0.00
13 hr ago • u/wilhelm96 • r/wallstreetbets • what_are_your_moves_tomorrow_march_02_2026 • C
If the strait remains closed for more than 2 weeks Taiwan’s LNG reserves are depleted, all non essentials are shut off and TSM is proper fucked.
sentiment -0.67
15 hr ago • u/Aggravating_Storm835 • r/ValueInvesting • what_is_one_stock_you_can_confidently_hold_for • C
I don’t think you could be more wrong. In five years, OpenAI is going to be among the “Ten Titans” that eventually replaces the Mag7. Along with TSM and Broadcom.
Nvidia and Amazon also pouring money into them. OpenAI is where Google was in 2002. Biggest question is profitability. That’s largely hindered by incredible energy and hardware costs. But Nvidia’s new chips coming out this year are supposed to be 10x more energy efficient than the Blackwells so that will certainly help. As for hardware, Technology only goes in one direction: smaller, faster, cheaper.
As for Microsoft, this is THE move for them. If Microsoft had taken this approach with Google 25 years ago, and taken a little bit of consumer focus instead of only focusing on enterprise business, Microsoft would be a $10T company today.
sentiment 0.94
17 hr ago • u/norcalnatv • r/NVDA_Stock • heres_the_great_nvidia_stock_mystery • C
Fair enough, I like that position.
Devil's advocate (or Brian Stozzi) might say our economy is much larger and more diversified and where TSM or Samsung fall on that scale is reasonable. Could NVDA grow to be 25-30% of the US economy? Could Nvidia's output support 25 or 30% of the workforce.
If one thinks about the agricultural transformation that started \~120 years ago, something like half of the US workforce was employed in food production. If John Deere came in 1900 with 2026 technology, would investors envision (and bid up the MC) for their revolutionary technology to possibly be valued at 25% of the US stock market?
sentiment 0.91
21 hr ago • u/azk1202 • r/wallstreetbets • weekend_discussion_thread_for_the_weekend_of • C
It's not. That would be projecting a very American reason to want Taiwan onto a country with a very different (and far older) culture and history.
The way the Chinese government acts and views things is basically like a Chinese dad - a bit too traditional, far too stubborn and sometimes quite abusive, but in general they do things for the long term or greater benefit of the people (or as retaliation after 'putting up with shit' for too long).
Unless you have absolutely no exposure to East Asian culture, I think with that sort of comparison it should be easy to see that for TSM chips, the Chinese government's policy is to incentivise everyone to "study hard and become an engineer and work hard and take apart the chips until you can make better chips or you're disowned and won't receive ~~Chinese New Year money~~ grants anymore".
Then for Taiwan itself, I personally find it difficult to understand although I understand where it's coming from. Taiwan is allowed to govern itself as long as it does not declare independence. China will take over if it declares independence because **they want to ensure no American military operations and bases on an island very close to major shipping ports**. This type of arrangement was agreed to by most countries decades ago. Because the Chinese government acts like a Chinese dad, 1) they're far too stubborn and unwilling to look at alternative solutions, and 2) would view going against an agreement as betrayal.
It's essentially for similar reasons as to why China (and most East Asian countries) have extremely harsh laws against drug possession, usage, etc. The British turned people into opium addicts because they didn't have anything else of value to exchange for tea, used military force when the Chinese government tried to curb the issue and subsequently forced unfair treaties to be signed after 'winning the war'. It's a "history must be prevented at whatever cost" type of thing.
East Asian conflicts over the past couple of centuries are pretty much all due to outside interference and Western colonialism. The last Chinese dynasty essentially went to shit because it was ruled by 'barbarians from the north' who destroyed relationships with their neighbours which subsequently allowed everybody to be invaded by Western countries and the Japanese (who had adopted Western imperialism after America threatened to shoot them all if they didn't open their ports/borders).
Europe managed to grow out of doing that kind of thing but America still continuously does it to this day. Just look at Venezuela and even the shit that was pulled this weekend. Current president even makes American foreign policy and political propaganda blatantly obvious so I find it quite amazing how slow people are to catch on. Taiwan is unfortunately never going to have the chance to negotiate independence until America significantly reduces the number of military bases they have in Asia. Some countries want to be able to export and import goods without having to worry about the threat of military force if they don't cave into every American demand.
sentiment -0.93
24 hr ago • u/wiz0mystic • r/wallstreetbets • weekend_discussion_thread_for_the_weekend_of • C
TSM is the reason they want Taiwan
sentiment 0.08
24 hr ago • u/Maximum-Magazine-333 • r/wallstreetbets • weekend_discussion_thread_for_the_weekend_of • C
All China has to do when they annex Taiwan is say TSM is all yours America, everybody wins and SPY 800
sentiment 0.57
1 day ago • u/hotdog-water-- • r/ValueInvesting • what_is_one_stock_you_can_confidently_hold_for • C
TSLA, TSM, NVDA, PLTR, AMZN, GOOGL, MSFT
sentiment 0.00
1 day ago • u/Reasonable-Owl-232 • r/wallstreetbets • red_light_therapy_is_key_practice_for_monday • C
>We've attacked a country and there is uncertainty on what happens next. How does china, and other countries like Russia, further respond other than calls for de-escalation? What happens if China increases pressure on Japan again which would could result in very real problems for TSM and tech? 
Russia has spent four years and still can't take Ukraine.
Japan, like everyone else, is on the US side.
Nobody cares about Iran, even their Islamic neighbours.
sentiment -0.11
1 day ago • u/PretendAgency2702 • r/wallstreetbets • red_light_therapy_is_key_practice_for_monday • C
People saying it's priced in are coping. It's been range bound for 4-5 months and economic data has only gotten worse. We are on the mid to higher end of that range too. 
We've attacked a country and there is uncertainty on what happens next. How does china, and other countries like Russia, further respond other than calls for de-escalation? What happens if China increases pressure on Japan again which would could result in very real problems for TSM and tech? 
Maybe we will rise long term but its just crazy to me that people expect Monday to be very green. I could obviously be very wrong but there's just so many unknowns right now hinging on crazy people who only want what's best for themselves and their buddies. 
sentiment -0.83
1 day ago • u/King_Shurik • r/investing • what_market_moves_to_expect_come_monday_due_to • C
In case I didn't understand you, are you convinced that semiconductor stocks (NVDA, TSM, ASML, etc.) will rise on Monday because of the attack on Iran?
sentiment -0.10
1 day ago • u/anyitamp • r/ETFs • which_emerging_markets_and_international_small • C
AVEM outperformed historically as it is actively managed and has valuation and quality screening. Also it has less concentration in top holdings eg TSM. You can check its relative performance vs other EM funds here:
[https://alphabetaetf.com/etfinfo/AVEM/](https://alphabetaetf.com/etfinfo/AVEM/)
https://preview.redd.it/s80u3qqu9cmg1.jpeg?width=1155&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=6710acafd36831f26c8fe7eeee655090d9d8a86e
sentiment 0.43
2 days ago • u/messengers1 • r/ETFs • why_im_buying_a_lot_of_smh_etf_within_my_roth_ira • C
Good for you. Diamond hand on TSM. It is golden goose.
sentiment 0.82
2 days ago • u/oddfinnish1 • r/thetagang • short_put_verticals • B
Back for another week of running Short Put Verticals aka Bull Put Credit Spreads.
Here are my rules for trading credit spreads:
* **All SVP's will be opened 35 to 49 DTE**
* **Short puts strike chosen at .20 delta and long puts at .13 delta**
* **Analysis of spread's Max Profit must show 80% or more probability for Maximum Profit**
* **Analysis of spread's Break Even must show 80%or more probability for Any Profit**
* **Analysis of Max Loss must show 10% or less Probability for Maximum Loss**
* **ROI for premium collected (premium divided by collateral required for spread) must be 10% or more**
Below is totals of tickers from this week:
|Ticker|\+/- Profit|
|:-|:-|
|CRCL|$1,070|
|HYMC|$573|
|HUT|$345|
|MSFT|$261|
|COST|$257|
|AAPL|$240|
|TSM|$237|
|SMH|$180|
|QQQ|$141|
|META|$121|
|AMZN|$104|
|XLE|$90|
|IWM|$74|
|MU|$66|
|GOOGL|$48|
|DIA|$44|
|UNH|$40|
|VOO|$34|
|VTI|$29|
|XLF|$27|
|ORCL|$15|
|TQQQ|$14|
|NVDA|$0|
|TLT|($0)|
|AMD|($470)|
|GGLL|($592)|
|ASTS|($898)|
|Totals|$2,049.35|
sentiment 0.69
2 days ago • u/F0rtysxity • r/ValueInvesting • what_is_one_stock_you_can_confidently_hold_for • C
I disagree. The speed at which technology and the world is developing is accelerating. Always has been. But it's more noticeable now more than ever. 10 years in the future is like 25 years in the past. And you are discounting the word 'confidence'. Meaning we should value those companies that are going to remain relevant 25 years from now (felt based on our understanding of time in the present). What company are we confident will still be relevant 25 years from now? This is not a question of valuation, forward P/E ratios etc. This is more a question of survival.
Google, MSFT and Meta are combined a possible answer. But because some scenarios project Generative AI being a winner take all scenario that means 2 of the 3 are at risk of tanking.
Nvidia and TSM and ASML and AMD etc. Possible but I'm not confident.
Amazon is the only one who is tech relevant and physically integrated and the one I am most confident AI will not be able to disrupt.
sentiment 0.96


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