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Mar 26
Arm's self-developed chip sparks cross-industry clash, TSMC-backed GUC faces impact
Arm has officially unveiled its first fully self-designed physical chip, the Arm AGI CPU, targeting data center mass production. The announcement came at the Arm Everywhere conference in San Francisco, sending shockwaves through an already fiercely competitive AI chip market.

In a rare show of bipartisan unity, a key US congressional committee voted 42-0 on Thursday to advance the Chip Security Act (CSA). The bill marks one of the most aggressive efforts yet to embed national security directly into the semiconductor supply chain, shifting export compliance from paperwork to hardware-level monitoring.

Taiwan's memory module giant Adata Technology has secured a NT$12 billion (US$375 million) syndicated loan led by Bank of Taiwan, strengthening its mid-term working capital while advancing its expansion into enterprise AI infrastructure.
Automotive printed circuit board (PCB) manufacturer Eikei Group announced plans to establish a subsidiary in Slovakia, aiming to diversify geopolitical risks across its three major markets in Europe, the Americas, and Asia in 2026. Company chairman Shih-lin Liu added that the rapid growth momentum of artificial intelligence (AI) servers is expected to drive profitability higher.
Paris-headquartered Air Liquide has inaugurated a new advanced materials plant in Taichung, marking its first large-scale production base in Taiwan for deposition and etching materials. The facility is designed to meet rising demand from the island's semiconductor ecosystem and support next-generation chips for AI and high-performance computing (HPC), reinforcing the company's strategic expansion in Asia.
AI computing is pushing the semiconductor industry into a structural growth phase, reshaping global capacity and technology pathways, according to Lily Feng, President of SEMI China, and Benjamin Loh, chairman of Comet AG and vice chair of the SEMI International board, at SEMICON China 2026.

SK Hynix expects stable growth in its high-bandwidth memory (HBM) business this year and plans to keep shipments in line with initial projections as it advances its next-generation roadmap amid evolving market conditions.

Core component costs for smartphones are surging at unprecedented rates, threatening the survival of low-priced models in the market. Nikkei reports that prices for two essential memory types—DRAM (mainly LPDDR) and NAND flash—are soaring faster than ever before.
Cloud AI demand is tightening advanced-node supply, with TSMC's 3nm capacity emerging as the most constrained segment at the end of the first quarter of 2026, according to IC design houses.
As AI compute demand surges, the rising need for high-bandwidth memory (HBM) testing and failure analysis is reshaping semiconductor inspection equipment markets, affecting chipmakers, foundries, and equipment suppliers worldwide. Demand for integrated microscopy platforms and localised service hubs is increasing to control yield, reduce costly iterations, and secure AI supply-chain positions.
At SEMICON China 2026, AMD VP and Head of Corporate Strategy and Partnerships Mario Morales delivered a stark warning: while the AI market is rapidly expanding toward a projected US$1.7 trillion valuation, the ultimate constraint may not be silicon capability — but electricity.

Micron Technology, on March 26, held an inauguration ceremony for its Tongluo site in Miaoli County, marking a milestone following the acquisition of a facility previously owned by Powerchip Semiconductor Manufacturing Corporation (PSMC).