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TSM
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Ltd.
stock NYSE ADR

At Close
Jun 16, 2026 3:59:59 PM EDT
426.02USD-3.483%(-15.38)10,904,346
366.42Bid   489.34Ask   122.92Spread
Pre-market
Jun 16, 2026 9:29:30 AM EDT
436.32USD-1.151%(-5.08)50,397
After-hours
Jun 16, 2026 4:53:51 PM EDT
427.32USD+0.304%(+1.30)25,220
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 Jun 16, 2026 4:55:40 PM EDT (<1 min. ago)
Includes all comments and posts. Mentions per user per ticker capped at one per hour.
1 hr ago • u/Marlboro_Cone • r/ValueInvesting • stresstesting_a_concentrated_11line_portfolio_how • C
That's what a concentrated portfolio is... And I do have to pushback on the pure "Chips/AI" label. aside from NVIDIA and TSM, GOOGL, MSFT, META, and AAPL are not pure AI stocks/investments. I'd argue that AAPL is the least AI tech company as they've stopped developing their own in-house solution and have done the smartest move: pay Google to load their own local-AI into each manufactured device.
sentiment 0.38
3 hr ago • u/StocksStormTrooper • r/wallstreetbets • daily_discussion_thread_for_june_16_2026 • C
AMKR 10 yr deal with TSM is a structural catalyst
sentiment 0.00
4 hr ago • u/Samy_Kashlan • r/dividends • 21m_11stock_roth_ira_using_schd_and_reits_as_a_50 • C
The barbell framing is actually solid as a behavioral framework — but worth checking whether your "dividend ballast" is doing the structural work you think it is.
Where the framing matches reality: O + PLD are doing real factor diversification work. REITs have \~0.5 correlation to broad US equity over multi-year windows — that's a genuine ballast against the tech sleeve, not just sentiment hedging. SPGI is mostly large-cap financials, modest diversification.
Where it doesn't: SCHD at 30%. SCHD's top holdings include AVGO (semi, top-3 weight), plus other tech-sector and tech-adjacent names. Roughly 30-35% of SCHD's weight is in tech or tech-correlated names. So your 30% SCHD position adds about another 9-10% effective tech weight on top of the explicit tech sleeve.
The math:
Mag 7 stocks (AAPL/META/GOOGL/MSFT): 24%,
Semis (TSM/NVDA): 16%,
SCHD tech bleed: \~10%,
Total effective US tech: \~50%,
Your "50% structural ballast" framing is actually closer to 40% non-tech / 60% tech by factor exposure,
The other thing worth seeing: within your tech sleeve, AAPL + META + GOOGL + MSFT + TSM + NVDA all correlate through the AI-infrastructure thesis (Mag 7 buy chips from TSM/NVDA; NVDA and TSM are tightly linked customers; they all move together on AI sentiment). When the AI trade moves, six of your eleven holdings move together. That's a more concentrated factor bet than "six different tech names" implies.
Doesn't mean it's wrong — semis + Mag 7 is a defensible 5-10 year thesis — but it's a more concentrated bet than your barbell framing accounts for. If you wanted to actually fund your stated ballast, trimming SCHD slightly in favor of more pure REIT exposure (O/PLD weight up) or international/value (VXUS, AVUV) would do the structural diversification work SCHD only partially does.
sentiment 0.97
5 hr ago • u/Fonzini3201 • r/ValueInvesting • stresstesting_a_concentrated_11line_portfolio_how • C
*Great question and a well-constructed portfolio for 21. The thesis break vs temporary dip distinction is something I think about a lot. The framework I use comes down to monitoring the same metrics that justified buying in the first place — if those deteriorate across multiple consecutive periods, that's a thesis break. If the price drops but the underlying metrics hold, that's noise.*
*Specifically, the signals I watch for a permanent break:*
*1. ROIC declining below cost of capital for 2+ consecutive years — the business is destroying value, not creating it* *2. FCF quality deteriorating (FCF/Net Income ratio dropping below 65%) — earnings are becoming less real* *3. Gross margin compression that management can't explain with a one-time event — pricing power is eroding* *4. Net debt/EBITDA creeping above 2.5x — the balance sheet is quietly becoming a problem*
*A bad quarter or two rarely moves all four simultaneously. When three or four move in the same direction over 18-24 months, that's when I start seriously re-evaluating.*
*On your specific holdings — SPGI and TSM both score very well on these metrics historically, which is why they're easy to hold through volatility. META and NVDA are the ones I'd watch most closely given how much of their thesis depends on sustained capex returns that haven't fully materialized yet.*
sentiment -0.62
5 hr ago • u/Marlboro_Cone • r/ValueInvesting • stresstesting_a_concentrated_11line_portfolio_how • Question / Help • B
Hey guys, I'm 21 and running a concentrated, 11-line buy-and-hold portfolio inside my Roth IRA. Instead of buying a broad market index, I’ve isolated specific companies and ETFs that I believe possess durable competitive moats and are fundamentally undervalued relative to their forward cash flow.
I use automated, rigid dollar-cost averaging to buy regardless of market noise. But since I'm running a high-concentration strategy, my biggest fear is throwing good money after bad if a company fundamentally breaks, rather than just hitting a temporary macroeconomic rough patch.
Here is the fundamental thesis and valuation logic for my allocations:
**The Value / Cash Flow Anchors (\~50%)**
* **SCHD (31.6%):** Not a single stock, but I use its rules-based methodology as a proxy for value. It strictly screens for 100 companies with 10+ years of dividend growth, strong free cash flow (FCF) to total debt ratios, and high Return on Equity (ROE). It is currently tilted heavily toward industrials and financials that are trading at a massive discount to the broader S&P 500.
* **SPGI (10%):** A global duopoly in credit ratings and financial data. It currently generates a massive 23.3% ROE. It is undervalued relative to its moat because the market is mispricing its inelastic pricing power and the massive, high-margin rebound occurring in primary debt issuance.
* **O (7.7%) & PLD (6.7%):** Held here specifically to shelter non-qualified income in the Roth. Realty Income (O) offers recession-resistant triple-net lease cash flow that has been heavily discounted due to prolonged interest rate fears. Prologis (PLD) owns the physical chokepoints of global e-commerce; its rent mark-to-market upside remains structurally underpriced by the market.
* **CAT (4.8%):** Trading at a highly attractive multiple while throwing off massive FCF. Driven by global infrastructure spend and commodity supercycles, it remains undervalued relative to its aggressive share buyback yield and dividend growth.
**The Tech / Growth Concentration (\~50%)**
* **NVDA (7.9%):** Despite the astronomical market cap, its forward PEG ratio remains justifiable because earnings growth consistently outpaces price action. It is undervalued when you factor in the CUDA software moat—it’s a locked-in ecosystem, not just a hardware advantage.
* **TSM (7.7%):** Currently trading at roughly a 35 P/E, which is fundamentally cheap given its literal monopoly on leading-edge semiconductor nodes. The market is underestimating its pricing power as it raises wafer prices to fund aggressive CoWoS capacity expansion through 2028.
* **GOOGL (5.9%):** Consistently trades at the lowest multiple of the Magnificent Seven due to antitrust and AI-disruption fears. Structurally undervalued because its core search monopoly continues to print ungodly free cash flow, funding massive AI CapEx without heavily diluting shareholder value.
* **MSFT (5.8%):** The ultimate enterprise toll bridge. Even at premium multiples, its forward EPS growth is undervalued because the market hasn't fully priced in the sticky, recurring revenue conversion of Azure's AI cloud integration across corporate IT budgets.
* **AAPL (5.8%):** High multiple, but undervalued when viewed as a consumer staple rather than a hardware stock. The switching costs are impenetrable, and the margin expansion from its growing Services sector justifies the premium.
* **META (5.7%):** Has achieved a leaner cost structure and unmatched ad-targeting ROAS. It trades at a highly reasonable forward FCF multiple relative to its dominant share of global human attention and its massive open-source AI optionality.
For those of you who hold concentrated, high-conviction positions: what specific fundamental metrics (e.g., margin compression, FCF deterioration) trigger an absolute sell for you? How do you know when a thesis is actually permanently dead versus just a bad quarter or two?
sentiment 0.99
7 hr ago • u/Annual_Cell5862 • r/phinvest • 19m_started_investing_3_months_ago • C
Oh hey! Found someone similar to me. I invested exactly 3 months ago rin, kakabili ko lang ng stock kahapon
Also 19 years old in Civil Engineering, going to 2nd year
I only have 200 dollars in my investment portfolio but it's growing and I'm consistent in my DCA (Dollar Cost Average)
https://preview.redd.it/2drlnz00in7h1.jpeg?width=1320&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=2d5e5700e9127d1cb20386b4715089ec6ed0ff24
I took 1 month to figure out the bare basics of finance, why getting a job is important, taxes, incomes, stocks, bonds etc etc. I needed to know what was best, then I experimented with GCASH AB capital securities investment (local stocks) realized it was trash and not worth the price. So I decided to move to GoTrade for international stocks.
I did S&P500 for the top best 500 companies in the U.S,
Then did TSM because of its rise in chip making and being the base for A.I evolution, then Vanguard total world stock as a backer to help alleviate the damages if ever a market crash happens, and china iShares because I believe that in this Bipolar world where America and China dominate, they'll further grow their economy over the years.
My advice to a fellow young investor, is to keep learning, and to make sure about your risk appetite (how much you're willing to invest, not just upfront cost and expectations) I learned that investing is a marathon, not a race. The DCA you do now, is going to pay off years later, simple math, hard dedication. Best of luck to you OP!!!
sentiment 0.98
9 hr ago • u/Synnoxis_ • r/stockstobuytoday • which_stock_do_you_regret_not_buying_sooner • C
Bought TSM back when it was 100. Sold when it was 150 for a 50% gain.
Im back to buying now that it's 400
sentiment 0.53
10 hr ago • u/Suspicious-Mix-3160 • r/AMD_Stock • hes_just_jealous • C
70% cca AMD, some TSM, MU, 40% cash prepared for nice entry in autumn. Trying to find some good shares about machinery( actuators and so on, for next Androids/Humanoids era).
sentiment 0.83
10 hr ago • u/Apprehensive-Mine364 • r/wallstreetbets • daily_discussion_thread_for_june_16_2026 • C
TSM holder hoping dividends pay me well for my confirmation bias holding of the stock.
sentiment 0.48
13 hr ago • u/TopEast7122 • r/stockstobuytoday • what_stocks_do_you_hold • C
NVIDIA, AMD, investor, TSM, NVTS, Sofi, APLD, Siemens energy, nokia, boliden
sentiment 0.27
13 hr ago • u/patricktu1258 • r/wallstreetbets • new_world_order • C
Replace that clown with TSM
sentiment 0.00
14 hr ago • u/Thedividendprince1 • r/dividends • what_tech_stocks_are_you_buying_right_now • C
At 54, I’d focus less on “hot tech” and more on durable cash flow. MSFT, AVGO, QCOM, ADP, ACN, and maybe ASML/TSM would be research-list names for me, not automatic buys. Since you already own TXN, I’d watch semiconductor concentration too. Also, if you own an S&P 500 or total market fund, you already have a lot of tech exposure.
sentiment 0.00
15 hr ago • u/music_is_gud • r/wallstreetbets • what_are_your_moves_tomorrow_june_16_2026 • C
AVGO, NVDA, TSM, GOOG (maybe), and honestly maybe some index funds
sentiment 0.46
18 hr ago • u/golf_234 • r/stockstobuytoday • whats_a_stock_you_would_buy_today_if_it_dropped • C
this is like every stock in my portfolio. AMD, MU, NVDA, AVGO, INTC, WDC, AMZN, AAPL, SNDK, GOOG, TSM, MRVL and more
sentiment 0.36
18 hr ago • u/PuzzledLeader8941 • r/wallstreetbets • what_are_your_moves_tomorrow_june_16_2026 • C
Feels like a TSM calls kinda summer
sentiment 0.61
19 hr ago • u/conoremc • r/wallstreetbets • what_are_your_moves_tomorrow_june_16_2026 • C
That plus so much reserved for retail cause "power to the people" or whatever. Now it's worth more than TSM, who makes 3x the revenue and more in net income than SpaceX makes in its entirety while growing at a similar rate and being so integral to the global supply chain that fire-bombing them would trigger WW3.
Whatever he paid these bankers for it, money well spent.
sentiment 0.57
20 hr ago • u/First-Hotel4694 • r/options • high_iv_trade • C
If you mean which stocks am I doing the high IV trades on they are MU mostly although I have done it with AMD, TSM, AMZN, GOOG, it all depends on the conditions at the time. I don't do a lot but what I try for is at least one or two a week. It's enough to bring in a couple of 1000 per week. and so far no losses although I have had to go down and out couple of times in either the same expiration or one or two weeks further out. If your planning on trying it make sure you can afford to carry it through or you will lose everything. One put on MU right is would cost a 100,000 or more if assigned. True you should be able to get most of it back but your account could be liquidated while trying to do so.
sentiment 0.78
21 hr ago • u/conoremc • r/stocks • how_elon_has_engineered_the_spacex_ipo_to_benefit • C
30B annual revenue brother. This is just telling me to buy more MU, SOXL, and TSM based on their current growth curves.
sentiment 0.48
22 hr ago • u/MysteriousCold9481 • r/investingforbeginners • looking_for_advice_on_my_investment_strategy_26yo • C
First off, congrats on getting started at 26 and committing €500 a week. That's a strong amount to invest consistently, and consistency is usually more important than finding the perfect stock picks.
Looking at your allocations, I'd personally consider putting a larger percentage into VUAG or other broad market funds. Your AI/Tech, Defense, and Quantum buckets have a lot of exposure to individual companies, which can offer higher upside but also much higher risk. The Quantum bucket especially is very speculative at this stage.
I like the core holdings such as VUAG, BRK.B, MSFT, ASML, and TSM. If your goal is long-term growth, you might consider making your index fund allocation an even larger portion of the portfolio and treating the sector-specific buckets as satellite positions around that core.
Overall, I think you're off to a solid start and have clearly put thought into the structure. The biggest thing is staying consistent and avoiding the temptation to constantly change your plan.
I've also picked up some useful investing insights and portfolio discussions from the community linked on my profile if you're interested in seeing different perspectives.
sentiment 0.97
23 hr ago • u/Bosto2025 • r/ETFs • wow • C
Ummm. Just look at the performance for almost any time period which proves the international stocks significantly underperform US stocks, with a few standout individual stocks (eg ASML, TSM). The only time recently that international stocks have come close to out performing was last year during the tariff tantrum where people overreacted and pulled money out us stocks. This year has proven them to be very dumb to have done that. This is especially true if you’re putting money into a bunch of under performing European stocks.
sentiment -0.72


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