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Share surge propels Taiwan chip giant TSMC into top ten by Staff Writers Taipei (AFP) July 28, 2020 Taiwanese chip giant TSMC on Tuesday briefly became the world's tenth largest company thanks to a two-day surge in its stock price that has propelled the island's exchange to a record high. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, the world's largest contract microchip maker, produces the processors that provide the computing muscle for everything from iPhones, laptops and games consoles to servers and critical internet infrastructure. The company's worth reached some $410 billion on Tuesday morning to surpass US firms Johnson & Johnson and Visa to rank 10th in the world, according to Bloomberg News. Shares rose by the maximum 10 percent Tuesday to a high of Tw$466.5 ($15.8) within the first ten minutes of trading before paring back to Tw$437.5 by the middle of the day. TSMC also hit the 10 percent limit Monday, adding $35 billion to its value and propelling the Taiex to an all-time high for the first time in three decades. The Taiex is dominated by TSMC, which accounts for a whopping one third of the exchange. So far this year the Taiex is currently up five percent, but without TSMC it would be down around two percent. Despite the US-China trade war and the coronavirus pandemic investors have flocked to TSMC. Even before Monday's rally the company's share price was up 17 percent this year. Analysts say the latest surge was spurred by reports of US chip titan Intel having to place new orders with rivals, including TSMC, after saying its own next-generation 7-nanometre production was behind schedule. Asian chip giants like TSMC and Samsung are likely to benefit as a result of any delays Intel might suffer. Most of TMSC's factories are located in Taiwan where they specialise in making some of the world's smallest and fastest chips. The company announced in May that it would spend $12 billion on a state-of-the-art semiconductor foundry in Arizona, its second manufacturing site in the United States.
DARPA Selects Teams to Increase Security of Semiconductor Supply Chain Washington DC (SPX) May 29, 2020 As Internet of Things (IoT) devices rapidly increase in popularity and deployment, economic attackers and nation-states alike are shifting their attention to the vulnerabilities of digital integrated circuit (IC) chips. Threats to IC chips are well known, and despite various measures designed to mitigate them, hardware developers have largely been slow to implement security solutions due to limited expertise, high cost and complexity, and lack of security-oriented design tools integrated with supp ... read more
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