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TSM
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Ltd.
stock NYSE ADR

At Close
Jan 16, 2026 3:59:54 PM EST
342.43USD+0.233%(+0.79)18,245,284
0.00Bid   0.00Ask   0.00Spread
Pre-market
Jan 16, 2026 9:28:30 AM EST
346.53USD+1.431%(+4.89)197,123
After-hours
Jan 16, 2026 4:58:30 PM EST
342.15USD-0.083%(-0.28)1,270,818
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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 Jan 18, 2026 6:16:53 PM EST (6 minutes ago)
Includes all comments and posts. Mentions per user per ticker capped at one per hour.
1 hr ago • u/TKDNerd • r/ETFs • emerging_markets • C
0. I own TSM which is in an emerging market and TSM is about 5% of my portfolio but I don’t own any funds for emerging markets as I find them unstable and not a good opportunity for growth.
sentiment -0.71
2 hr ago • u/bdh2067 • r/stocks • rstocks_weekend_discussion_saturday_jan_17_2026 • C
Agreed. But market seems to be rewarding it more than S&P. At least for now. Maybe bc of TSM but I’m riding it
sentiment 0.73
2 hr ago • u/illuminato8 • r/ValueInvesting • this_sub_got_its_own_etf_pfoe • Discussion • B
I was looking at non–sector-specific ETFs with a high NVO weight and identified PFOE (Pathfinder Focused Opportunities ETF) as having one of the highest allocations. The ETF also includes many companies frequently recommended on this sub, such as GOOG, ASML, MELI, UNH and others.
PFOE positions itself as a quality ETF rather than a value ETF. This makes sense, as most companies recommended in the subreddit are quality & growth companies rather than traditional value names. According to Morningstar, the ETF is classified as a growth fund, which is consistent with expectations.
Main Issues I See
1. Unclear holding horizon
The fund states that it targets long-term holdings, but “long-term” is subjective. I personally plan to hold many of these stocks for at least five years, and it’s unclear whether the fund will maintain positions for that long.
2. Expense ratio (0.59%)
With only 23 holdings (in prospectus they are saying ETF target to have between 60 to 140 companies), the portfolio is relatively easy to replicate. This raises the question of whether the expense ratio is justified compared to holding the stocks directly.
3. Small and new fund
Pathfinder currently offers only two ETFs, and PFOE has a very recent inception date. Assets under management are still small (~$30.8M), which may raise concerns about liquidity and long-term viability.
4. Manager track record
While the managers appear experienced, they are not well-known in the ETF space. To my knowledge, they have not previously managed their own ETF.
Overall, I find this ETF interesting and well-aligned with a quality/growth investing approach. I’m interested in hearing the community’s thoughts.
Current ETF Holdings
| No. | Symbol | Name | % Weight | Shares |
|----:|:---------|:---------------------------------------------------|:--------:|-------:|
| 1 | GOOG | Alphabet Inc. | 7.26% | 6,664 |
| 2 | AMZN | Amazon.com, Inc. | 5.93% | 7,735 |
| 3 | ASML | ASML Holding N.V. | 5.85% | 1,428 |
| 4 | MELI | MercadoLibre, Inc. | 5.68% | 833 |
| 5 | NVO | Novo Nordisk A/S | 5.52% | 28,917 |
| 6 | TSM | Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Limited | 5.30% | 4,998 |
| 7 | QXO | QXO, Inc. | 5.23% | 63,189 |
| 8 | UBER | Uber Technologies, Inc. | 5.03% | 18,326 |
| 9 | BME: FER | Ferrovial SE | 5.01% | 22,848 |
| 10 | LLY | Eli Lilly and Company | 4.97% | 1,428 |
| 11 | UNH | UnitedHealth Group Incorporated | 4.91% | 4,522 |
| 12 | BABA | Alibaba Group Holding Limited | 4.46% | 8,092 |
| 13 | V | Visa Inc. | 4.44% | 4,165 |
| 14 | INTU | Intuit Inc. | 4.15% | 2,261 |
| 15 | NKE | NIKE, Inc. | 4.12% | 19,397 |
| 16 | MSFT | Microsoft Corporation | 4.08% | 2,737 |
| 17 | BN | Brookfield Corporation | 3.90% | 25,466 |
| 18 | ZTS | Zoetis Inc. | 3.83% | 9,401 |
| 19 | UNVGY | Universal Music Group N.V. | 3.82% | 92,106 |
| 20 | NFLX | Netflix, Inc. | 3.65% | 12,733 |
| 21 | NVDA | NVIDIA Corporation | 1.91% | 3,213 |
sentiment 0.96
4 hr ago • u/Much_Candle_942 • r/stocks • rstocks_weekend_discussion_saturday_jan_17_2026 • C
that's TSM, Baba, JD, Samsung etc. not really convinced that they're uncorrelated and immune to Myawrikan economy.
sentiment -0.07
4 hr ago • u/Chogo82 • r/NVDA_Stock • nvda_to_the_rescue • C
China has at best mediocre 7nm. Blackwell uses nice quality 4nm. The newest iterations will be 3nm while Samsung and TSM are all working on 2nm and smaller.
There are some physical limitations that just aren’t surpassable even with the best engineers, corporate espionage, and copying.
sentiment 0.90
6 hr ago • u/dljmonkeyboiz • r/wallstreetbets • weekend_discussion_thread_for_the_weekend_of • C
China gonna take over Taiwan while EU and U.S. are distracted. Calls on TSM.
sentiment 0.03
9 hr ago • u/mjblank2 • r/ValueInvesting • the_rotation_risk • Discussion • B
Good morning. The era of Big Tech dominance appears to be pausing. We explain the shift to small companies, and the hidden risk.
*By* [Marques Blank](https://www.blankcapitalresearch.com/author/marques/)
Published:January 16, 2026, 8:45 am
[0](https://www.blankcapitalresearch.com/analysis-small-cap-rotation-2026-builders-vs-borrowers/#comments)|Share
# The Shift
For the last three years, the American stock market has been defined by a single, overwhelming theme, size.
If you invested in the largest technology companies, the "Magnificent Seven," you likely saw significant returns. These giants benefited from the artificial intelligence boom, immense cash reserves, and a widespread belief that in an uncertain economy, bigger was safer.
Conversely, if you invested in the smaller companies that make up the backbone of the domestic economy, you were largely left behind. High interest rates punished them, and their stock prices stagnated.
Now, in the first two weeks of 2026, the market’s leadership has abruptly changed.
Since New Year's Day, the Russell 2000, the benchmark index for small publicly traded companies, has surged nearly 6 percent, significantly outpacing the S&P 500. On Wall Street, this phenomenon is being called "The Great Rotation."
The theory driving this shift is straightforward:
1. The Federal Reserve has begun cutting interest rates, lowering the cost of doing business.
2. The economy is growing at a robust 5.3 percent pace, defying fears of a recession. 3
3. The recently passed "American Competitiveness Act" has introduced new tax incentives designed to favor American manufacturers over global conglomerates.
On the surface, the environment seems perfect for smaller companies to catch up.
# The Complication
However, a deeper look at the data reveals a significant structural flaw in this rally. The small-company universe is currently divided into two distinct groups, and the market is currently lifting both of them indiscriminately.
1. **The Builders:** These are profitable industrial firms and manufacturers. They are generating cash and utilizing the new tax credits to expand factories and upgrade fleets.
2. **The Borrowers:** This is a large cohort of companies—roughly 43 percent of the index—that do not currently generate a profit. They rely heavily on debt to fund their daily operations.
For much of the last decade, the second group survived because borrowing costs were historically low. That era has ended, and a financial deadline is approaching.
# The Maturity Wall
To understand the risk, it helps to look at the corporate calendar.
In 2026, small and mid-sized U.S. companies must refinance approximately $368 billion in debt. Even with the Federal Reserve’s recent rate cuts, the math for these companies is difficult.
Many of these loans were originated in 2020 and 2021, when interest rates were near zero. As these loans come due this year, companies will be forced to refinance them at current market rates, which remain significantly higher. Lenders, wary of credit risk, are presently demanding interest rates between 7 and 9 percent for smaller borrowers.
Unlike a giant like Apple, which uses long-term fixed bonds to lock in low rates, smaller companies often rely on floating-rate debt. This means their interest payments rise almost immediately when rates tick up or credit conditions tighten. For a company operating with thin profit margins, a doubling of interest expenses is not merely a financial headwind; it is a threat to solvency.
# Quality Wins
The optimistic case remains valid for specific businesses. The new tax law’s 100% bonus depreciation rule, which allows companies to immediately deduct the cost of new equipment, is a substantial benefit for profitable industrial firms. Companies like [Comfort Systems USA (FIX)](https://comfortsystemsusa.com/?ref=blankcapitalresearch.com) or [Argan, Inc. (AGX)](https://arganinc.com/?ref=blankcapitalresearch.com), which fund their own growth through profits rather than debt, are well-positioned to thrive.
The rotation into small stocks is based on real economic changes, but it carries a hidden danger for passive investors. The "rising tide" of the economy will not lift every vessel. The prudent strategy is to distinguish between the companies with healthy balance sheets (often found in the S&P 600 index, which requires profitability for inclusion) and the broader, debt-laden index.
# Latest News
# [TSMC (TSM)](https://investor.tsmc.com/english?ref=blankcapitalresearch.com)
* The world's largest chipmaker raised its capital expenditure guidance to over $50 billion.
* This is fuel for the small-cap supply chain. Equipment makers like Onto Innovation (ONTO) and MKS Instruments (MKSI) rallied in kind.
* The trade has moved from "buying the chips" to "buying the machines that make the chips."
# [Talen Energy (TLN)](https://ir.talenenergy.com/?ref=blankcapitalresearch.com)
* The independent power producer announced a $3.45 billion deal to acquire natural gas assets in the PJM grid (Ohio/Indiana).
* This is an "AI Infrastructure" play. Data centers need constant, reliable power that wind and solar cannot yet provide alone.
* Talen is effectively cornering the market on the "dispatchable electrons" needed by Amazon and Microsoft.
# Biotech
* **Beam Therapeutics (BEAM)** The biotech firm rose 20% after the FDA agreed to an "accelerated approval path" for its gene-editing therapy.
* On the flip side, **Arcus Biosciences (RCUS)** crashed after a failed Phase 3 cancer trial. The divergence highlights the binary nature of the sector: regulatory wins create massive alpha, while clinical failures wipe out value overnight.
# Movers & Shakers
* [**Bank OZK (OZK)**](https://ir.ozk.com/?ref=blankcapitalresearch.com) Up 6.2% The mid-cap lender rallied following the positive news from [First Horizon](https://www.blankcapitalresearch.com/regional-bank-recovery-kre-breakout-svb-crisis-end/)[ (as covered yesterday)](https://www.blankcapitalresearch.com/regional-bank-recovery-kre-breakout-svb-crisis-end/). Investors are betting that a stable economy will restart paused construction projects in the South, where the bank is heavily exposed.
* [**Kulicke and Soffa (KLIC)**](https://investor.kns.com/?ref=blankcapitalresearch.com) Up 8.4% Shares of the equipment maker rose on the heels of the strong report from TSMC. The company builds the specialized tools needed to package advanced AI chips, positioning it to benefit directly from the industry's spending boom.
* [**Applied Digital (APLD)**](https://ir.applieddigital.com/?ref=blankcapitalresearch.com) Up 11.5% The data center operator jumped after securing a $300 million loan to expand its campus in North Dakota. It is the latest sign that smaller, agile companies are racing to build the physical infrastructure for AI—sometimes faster than the tech giants can.
* [**Sterling Infrastructure (STRL)**](https://www.strlco.com/investor-relations/overview/?ref=blankcapitalresearch.com) Up 5.5% The mid-sized construction firm hit a new high. Sterling specializes in preparing the ground for massive projects—from data centers to highways. As companies like Amazon and Google break ground on new facilities, Sterling is often the first phone call they make.
# The Briefing
# The Economy
* **Strong Growth:** The Atlanta Fed’s latest model forecasts GDP growth of 5.3 percent for the fourth quarter. This data suggests the economy is re-accelerating rather than slowing down, challenging the "soft landing" narrative.
* **The Fed's Dilemma:** Because growth is so robust, traders are beginning to expect the Federal Reserve to pause its rate-cutting campaign later this month. Central bankers remain wary of lowering rates too quickly, lest inflation reignite.
# The Markets
* **Housing Resilience:** Despite mortgage rates remaining elevated, homebuilder stocks (tracked by the ETF ITB) have risen 13 percent this year. A persistent shortage of existing homes for sale has effectively forced buyers into the new-construction market.
* **Banking Risks:** Regional bank stocks have stabilized, but they face a challenge. Approximately $1.5 trillion in Commercial Real Estate loans will mature this year. As banks preserve capital to cover potential losses in office real estate, they are tightening lending standards for small businesses.
# The Policy
* **Consumer Stimulus:** The provision in the new tax law eliminating federal taxes on tips and overtime pay is now in effect. Economists expect this to boost disposable income for service workers, potentially benefiting casual dining chains and regional retailers.
# The Flows
* **Moving Money:** In the first week of January, investors withdrew $4.6 billion from large-cap funds and moved $267 million into small-cap value funds. This indicates that professional asset allocators are actively repositioning their portfolios for a broader market rally.
# Today's Fact
On **January 16, 1919**—107 years ago today—the United States ratified the 18th Amendment, effectively banning the sale of alcohol and ushering in the Prohibition era.
While the law destroyed the legal brewing industry (wiping out thousands of small businesses), it inadvertently created one of the most lucrative "black markets" in history. The bootlegging industry grew so large that by the mid-1920s, the "shadow economy" of illegal alcohol was estimated to be worth $3 billion annually, roughly equivalent to $55 billion today.
**The Investment Lesson:** Government regulation never truly kills demand; it simply displaces it. In 2026, we see the same dynamic in the AI chip market, where US export bans to China have created a thriving "gray market" for processors, boosting sales for third-party distributors in Asia.
***Thank you for your time this morning. Have a great weekend, I'll be back Monday with another edition. -Marques***
sentiment 1.00
18 hr ago • u/feltdeez • r/investingforbeginners • best_stocks_to_buy_2026_looking_for_ideas_that • C
I invested in LRCX, MU, TSM, NVDA after "Liberation Day" and they have been on a crazy run. Still have 70% in VOO but the other 30%.. I'm investing that in individual stocks.
I know AI is more than likely a bubble so I will need to make some decision's soon or put some stop gaps in these individual stocks. What I have been doing is selling a bit to capture some gains and let the rest ride. I had AMD on a stop gap and sold at a profit and then it shot up $30 in one day.
sentiment 0.26
20 hr ago • u/InitialEfficient2918 • r/AMD_Stock • daily_discussion_saturday_20260117 • C
LOL. the TDS is too much. How quickly we forget what happen with the last set of tariffs. Please stop being so emotional - Just ride the volatility and get more shares if it dips. Trump uses these outrages lines to get everyone to the table so they can make a deal.
we are all long term investors.. right? going to 600 a share soon.. right?

Did we forget what got us here in the past week? Data Center CPUs being sold out, TSM saying demand is accelerating.
sentiment -0.35
22 hr ago • u/Fearless_Strike5651 • r/NVDA_Stock • stock_price • C
I actually agree with most of your take. NVDA’s been consolidating, not breaking down, big difference.
A $4.4T AI leader doesn’t move because Reddit sentiment dipped. It moves on hyperscaler demand, and that demand hasn’t slowed at all.
Nothing in the fundamental story has changed…. Blackwell/H200 are sold out, AI CapEx keeps rising (TSM Earnings) and every major cloud provider is still increasing GPU orders. Technical levels like 183 or 187 matter for short term traders, but they don’t override the multi year trend.
This looks like normal consolidation after a massive run, not a bearish shift. Once this range breaks, NVDA likely resumes higher the underlying catalysts are still fully intact.
sentiment 0.61
22 hr ago • u/Appropriate_Mixer • r/stocks • if_america_invades_greenland_the_stock_market • C
I don’t think you understand the chip market well. The US can make those lower quality chips just like China without ASML just fine. It’s just the high quality 2-3nm chips of NVIDIA and TSM that are used for AI data centers and such that wouldn’t be available.
sentiment 0.20
23 hr ago • u/messengers1 • r/ETFs • does_anyone_think_smh_will_split_again_now_that • C
It may attract more micro investors to jump in after splits when ASML and TSM keep breaking trading price record.
sentiment 0.36
24 hr ago • u/PriceActionPlaybook • r/investingforbeginners • weekly_playbook_january_19th_market_overview • B
# Key Takeaways This Week
* Earnings season is moving from assumption to verification, with guidance and price acceptance in focus
* Leadership continues to broaden beneath flat index performance, led by small caps and rotation
* Stock specific reactions, including Netflix, are key tests of whether execution still justifies upside
* Last week’s movers: TEM, DAL, PDD, TCOM, TSM, BABA and MU
* Earnings to watch this week: NFLX, JNJ, FCX, GE, PG, COF, INTC and ISRG
https://preview.redd.it/7p9cyrr1yzdg1.jpg?width=1024&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=c7408b75a7aab13c7cbb7efb09ce418c3aa35a29
# Market Overview
Earnings season is starting to move from warm up to execution. The early prints did little more than confirm what the market had already assumed, but the cadence is shifting. Guidance density increases from here, and that is where the real work begins. This is the phase where broadening either earns credibility or quietly stalls. Price action has been great so far, and now it has to prove it can continue. EPS still matters, but it is no longer the primary driver on its own. As JC Parets put it, the explanation rarely gets more complicated than this: you like a stock because you think you can sell it at a higher price. That framing fits this tape well. Earnings grant permission. Price decides whether that permission is used.
Last week served as a useful bridge into that environment. On the surface, major indexes finished modestly lower. Underneath, participation continued to expand. Small caps outperformed again, extending their streak versus large caps and closing at record levels. Equal weighted exposure, cyclicals, and international stocks held firm even as megacap technology paused. That divergence mattered more than the index math. It showed that risk appetite did not vanish when leadership rotated. It simply redistributed. Early week pressure tied to bank earnings and inflation prints faded quickly. Midweek weakness stayed concentrated in software and large growth. By the end of the week, renewed strength in small caps and cyclicals carried the tape, reinforcing the idea that this is rotation, not risk off behavior.
The small cap move continues to look more structural than tactical. After more than a decade of relative underperformance, earnings momentum is finally improving, and that matters in a market that has been starved for new leadership. Profitable small caps are benefiting from stabilizing domestic demand and the prospect of lower financing pressure if long end yields cooperate. More speculative segments are moving faster, as they always do when risk appetite returns, but the healthier signal is coming from the higher quality end of the universe. The rally is not being driven by valuation arguments alone. It is being supported by earnings inflection and broader participation, which is why it has been able to persist without obvious stress.
Against that backdrop, Netflix earnings take on added importance. Not because they define the market, but because they sit at the intersection of growth expectations, margin discipline, and narrative fatigue. The stock has already absorbed years of execution, from subscriber growth to pricing power to content spend normalization, and now carries incremental uncertainty tied to acquisition ambitions and industry consolidation chatter. What matters is not a beat or miss in isolation, nor the headline outcome of any deal speculation, but whether cash flow durability and margin trajectory remain credible enough to justify continued acceptance at current levels. In a market that is rotating away from narrow leadership, single name reactions like this become more informative. They reveal whether investors are still willing to extend upside on execution, or whether enthusiasm is becoming harder to sustain.
The rest of the macro backdrop remains supportive but secondary. AI continues to dominate capital allocation decisions, though the tone is shifting from pure acceleration to constraint management. Power availability, financing capacity, and credit market absorption are no longer abstract risks. They are shaping behavior at the margin. At the same time, policy noise around the Fed and credit remains just that. Markets have shown a clear ability to compartmentalize headlines unless they directly interfere with earnings or liquidity. Rate expectations matter, but they are no longer the sole anchor. Equity tolerance is increasingly being set by corporate commentary rather than central bank signaling.
The thread running through all of this is selectivity. Broadening has reduced dependence on a handful of stocks, but it has also raised the bar for execution. This is no longer a market where narratives glide unchecked. As earnings season shifts into a higher gear, assumptions will be tested name by name and sector by sector. The environment still favors participation, but it demands discipline. Price will continue to reward what it believes can be sold higher. Everything else will struggle to hold attention.
Read the rest: [https://priceactionplaybook.substack.com/p/weekly-playbook-january-19th](https://priceactionplaybook.substack.com/p/weekly-playbook-january-19th)
sentiment 0.99
1 day ago • u/Beginning-Camp6557 • r/trading212 • looking_for_feedback_on_metlen_mtln_as_a_longterm • C
No advice on the actual stock per say, all I’d say to play the devils advocate here:
You said ‘have been trying to understand’ which says to me you didn’t do enough research prior to investing.
Also, it seems as if your entire investment thesis is banking on gallium play. Normally not the best play when it’s based around one thing, especially if that thing isn’t up and running yet. When is completion? What if there’s delays? Etc etc
Again, I don’t know anything about MTLN but those are some thoughts that come to mind when you mention it.
Also, if I wanted to go risky and invest in single stocks I’d probably go for GOOGL, GOOG, MSFT, AAPL, NVDIA, AMD, META, TSM, ASML, AVGO based on the whole tech and AI race.
sentiment -0.69
1 day ago • u/15xorbust • r/investing • preparing_for_an_invasion_of_taiwan • C
TSM is building factories in Arizona for exactly this reason. But I don’t know that they’ll completely make up for everything it has in Taiwan if they are invaded by China. I think this concern is why their stock is not priced higher.
sentiment 0.20
1 day ago • u/cannythecat • r/investing • preparing_for_an_invasion_of_taiwan • C
Do you want NVDA to be in your port if TSM is lost. Its the biggest holding in the indices
sentiment -0.25
1 day ago • u/xconnor759 • r/wallstreetbets • weekend_discussion_thread_for_the_weekend_of • C
Oh damnnn they got assigned. Best of luck man 💪🏼 micron is strong and TSM earnings gave the sector some faith
sentiment 0.92
1 day ago • u/No_Economist3815 • r/wallstreetbets • weekend_discussion_thread_for_the_weekend_of • C
Sounds like tues is going to be a great day to pick up some bargains. Luckily I went cash gang after TSM earnings
sentiment 0.88
1 day ago • u/StuffAffectionate803 • r/StockMarket • ai_bubble_term_has_plunged • C
You don’t really know TSM .I’m Taiwanese in TSMC. The AI demand is very strong than you know
sentiment 0.48
1 day ago • u/Itu_Leona • r/Bogleheads • do_you_follow_the_bogle_method_for_all_your • C
Mostly. 1-2% is in a few other things outside TSM/TBF.
sentiment 0.00


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