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Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. TSM-N, the world’s largest contract chip maker, on Friday reported a 20.45-per-cent increase in fourth-quarter revenue from a year earlier, beating the market ⁠forecast, as demand for the company’s products leapt in response to surging interest in AI applications.

The company, whose customers include Nvidia NVDA-Q and Apple AAPL-Q, has been a major beneficiary of ‌advances in AI, ‍which has more than offset the tapering off of ‍pandemic-led demand for chips used in consumer ‌electronics like tablets.

Revenue for the October-December ⁠period was T$1.046 trillion (US$33.11-billion), according to Reuters calculations ​based on monthly data released by the company, compared with T$868.46 billion in the year-ago period.

The latest result beat a LSEG SmartEstimate of T$1.036 trillion (US$32.79-billion) drawn from 20 analysts, and was ​in line with guidance of US$32.2 billion to US$33.4 billion issued by TSMC in October in its last earnings call. TSMC only gives guidance in U.S. dollars.

TSMC will report full fourth-quarter earnings on Jan. 15, when it is expected to provide updated ⁠guidance for the current quarter and full year, including ⁠its capital expenditure plans and revenue growth outlook.

TSMC’s Taipei-listed shares gained 44.2 per cent ‌last year, outperforming the 25.7-per-cent rise for the broader market.

Taiwan’s Foxconn, the world’s largest contract electronics maker and Nvidia’s biggest server maker, also reported bumper sales on Monday, logging T$2.6028 trillion (US$82.20 billion) for the fourth ‌quarter.

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