Micron Vs Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing: Which Ai Ch…

By Adam Levy – Mar 29, 2026 at 9:53AM EST

Key Points

  • Both have seen strong earnings growth and are poised for that to continue in 2026.

  • However, the valuations of Micron and TSMC s look very different.

  • That’s for good reason, and one of them stands out as a clear bargain right now.

What’s driving these chipmakers’ results?

There’s no doubt that AI has been a driving force for both Micron and TSMC’s recent results.

Micron specializes in memory chips, which have seen a recent spike in demand. That’s because GPU and other AI accelerator chips require significant amounts of specialty chips called high-bandwidth memory (HBM). That demand has increased recently as new artificial intelligence models use more parameters and larger context windows, requiring more working memory.

Micron is just one of three major suppliers of HBM chips. The sudden spike in demand left the entire industry in short supply, driving prices higher. As a result, Micron is seeing good growth in bit shipments for its chips, but pricing is the real driving force behind its stellar earnings growth.

Taiwan Semiconductor is the world’s largest contract chip manufacturer. It’s seen its grow over the past few years as demand for more advanced chips grows faster than the overall market, and TSMC has the best manufacturing technology in the world. Practically every high-end AI chip comes out of TSMC’s facilities.

TSMC has also been able to increase pricing amid strong demand for its products. It implemented a price increase earlier this year for its most advanced chips with plans to raise prices annually. As it ramps up its newest chip process, N2, it’s charging a significant premium per silicon wafer over the previous generation (although it theoretically can print more chips per wafer). That said, the bulk of its growth stems from printing, packaging, and shipping more chips.

Micron Technology Stock Quote

NASDAQ: MU

Micron Technology

Today’s Change

(0.59%) $2.10

Current Price

$357.56

Key Data Points

Market Cap

$403B

Day’s Range

$354.15 – $368.71

52wk Range

$61.54 – $471.34

Volume

1.9M

Avg Vol

38M

Gross Margin

58.54%

Dividend Yield

0.13%

How durable are earnings?

Both Micron and TSMC are poised to grow earnings in 2026, but long-term investors should look well beyond the current year. A company with a competitive advantage in its market can reliably produce earnings growth year after year.

TSMC has established itself as the technology leader among contract chip manufacturers. It stands to maintain that lead for two key reasons. First, it generates significantly more revenue than the competition, giving it more cash to invest in research and development for its next-generation technology. That ensures it can maintain its technology lead and win contracts year after year. Second, it has more capacity than any of its competitors. While a large customer could switch some of its work to a competitor, it’s unly TSMC will lose all of a chipmaker’s work. Building out new capacity takes years and massive upfront capital investments.

Micron, unfortunately, doesn’t appear to hold much of a competitive advantage at all. Memory chips are more or less a commodity. And while packaging for high-bandwidth memory can provide some differentiation between the chipmakers, Micron doesn’t appear to have the lead in that regard.

That means Micron’s pricing power won’t be long lived. As the chipmaker and its competitors bring on more capacity to meet the demand for memory chips, prices will trend lower. That will severely cut into earnings, eventually leading to a drop. It’s a pattern seen over and over again. Micron’s management has said it expects the supply shortage to last through 2027. Analysts agree, projecting earnings growth to skyrocket through next year. However, they then see a stark drop in earnings in fiscal 2028 and 2029.

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Stock Quote

NYSE: TSM

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing

Today’s Change

(0.40%) $1.31

Current Price

$327.42

Key Data Points

Market Cap

$1.7T

Day’s Range

$322.33 – $329.56

52wk Range

$134.25 – $390.20

Volume

893K

Avg Vol

14M

Gross Margin

58.73%

Dividend Yield

1.03%

Which is the better buy?

Even with the expected drop in earnings as the supply-demand equilibrium returns to balance, Micron could be a better buy than TSMC based on market valuations.

In fact, Micron s trade for just 6.5 times forward earnings estimates. And with earnings per expected to climb even more in 2027, the stock trades for just under 4 times next year’s earnings. But before investors get too excited about that dirt cheap valuation, it’s important to put it in the context of the stock’s valuation amid previous earnings cycles. Micron has historically traded at 3 to 6 times earnings at the peak of its earnings cycles. As a result, a multiple of 4 times 2027 earnings is about fair value for the stock today.

TSMC, on the other hand, trades for nearly 24 times earnings. However, it’s well-positioned for long-term earnings growth. Analysts expect a 37% in earnings per this year and 24% in 2027. That growth should continue through the end of the decade, as management’s long-term outlook calls for average annualized revenue growth of 25% from 2025 through 2029.

Management has already raised that outlook once, and it’s historically provided conservative guidance to investors. The company should deliver stronger gross margins in the forecast period as it raises prices and ramps up its newest chip processes, driving strong and sustained net income growth exceeding revenue growth. As a result, TSMC s look underpriced today.

So while Micron s look they’re trading at a fair price right now, investors buying the stock are betting that the current earnings cycle will last longer than most analysts expect or that the peak of the earnings cycle will end up higher. By comparison, investors can get a bargain price on TSMC right now based on its expected growth over the next two years, and management’s long-term outlook, which has historically proved relatively conservative.

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About the Author

Adam Levy

Adam Levy is a contributing Motley Fool stock market analyst covering technology, consumer, and financial stocks and how policy, economic, and consumer trends shape personal finance, Social Security and retirement savings. Before The Motley Fool, Adam was a financial advisor at Edward Jones. He studied finance and electrical engineering at Carnegie Mellon University.

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Stocks Mentioned

Micron Technology Stock Quote

Micron Technology

NASDAQ: MU

$357.22

(+0.49%)+$1.76

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Stock Quote

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing

NYSE: TSM

$327.42

(+0.40%)+$1.31

*Average returns of all recommendations since inception. Cost basis and return based on previous market day close.

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