Nvidia just became TSMC’s top customer, shoving Apple out of priority queue. Intel’s 18A node is suddenly the hottest ticket in town, with up to 20 million Apple M-series chips rumored to be on the table.
TSMC pecking order flips overnight
Jensen Huang confirmed Nvidia now outspends every other TSMC client, including Apple. For the first time in a decade, Apple must compete for 3-nm and 2-nm slots instead of jumping the line. The shift strips Apple of two sweetheart perks: first access to fresh nodes and immunity from paying for defective silicon.
Apple’s Plan B has a name: Intel 18A
Supply-chain analyst Ming-Chi Kuo projects Apple will place 15–20 million M-series units on Intel 18A annually, starting with low-end MacBook and iPad processors. A second wave—iPhone AP on Intel 14A—could follow in 2027, according to industry chatter cited by The Motley Fool.
Why Intel wins even if margins stay thin
- Volume proof: 20 M units validate Intel’s process yield to other hyperscalers.
- Cash-flow cushion: 18A wafers carry ~30% lower cap-ex depreciation than TSMC N3, letting Intel price aggressively while still covering fixed costs.
- Geopolitical gold star: U.S.-based fab satisfies CHIPS Act requirements, unlocking $8.5 B in federal grants already earmarked for Intel.
Investor takeaway: foundry narrative > AI narrative—for now
Wall Street still treats Intel like an AI also-ran, but foundry traction flips the script. Every million Apple chips shipped through 18A adds an estimated $0.12 EPS once yields pass 70%. At 20 M units, that’s a 15% lift to 2027 earnings before any PC or server recovery.
TSMC’s capacity pain is Intel’s gain. If the Apple deal inks, Intel’s foundry segment could triple revenue to $18 B by 2028, turning a loss leader into a cash engine and forcing the Street to re-rate the stock on a sum-of-parts basis.
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