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Semicon Briefing

6. Mai 2026 · 03:51 Uhr

1

Apple examines Intel & Samsung as TSMC backup for chip manufacturing

Bloomberg / r/wallstreetbets

According to Bloomberg, Apple is conducting exploratory discussions with Intel Foundry and Samsung to diversify its SoC manufacturing away from TSMC exclusivity – so far without concrete orders. The move signals a tectonic loss of power for TSMC and could massively boost Intel stock (+175% YTD) and Samsung's foundry business.

CRITICALZum Artikel
2

Lattice Semiconductor acquires AMI for $1.65 billion – focus on AI firmware

Reuters / @TechPowerUp

Lattice Semiconductor has signed a merger agreement to acquire AMI (THL Partners) for $1.65 billion in cash and stock; closing is planned for Q3 2026. AMI develops platform firmware and infrastructure management solutions for cloud and AI systems – a strategically important move to diversify beyond the core FPGA business.

3

China drives 70% domestic silicon wafer quota – response to US export controls

r/Amd_Intel_Nvidia

The Chinese government is requiring chipmakers to use at least 70% domestic silicon wafers for new capacities – alongside the requirement to use 50% domestic equipment suppliers. The measure accelerates China's decoupling from the Western semiconductor ecosystem significantly and increases pressure on international suppliers.

CRITICALZum Artikel
4

EU revises Chips Act II: direct investments in cross-border fabs

Bits&Chips / Seeking Alpha

According to a draft (expected end of May), the European Commission plans to be able to make direct equity investments in cross-border semiconductor manufacturing projects – a paradigm shift from the previous subsidy model. This is intended to accelerate and make calculable stalled multi-country fab projects such as ESMC Dresden.

5

Intel acquires Tower Semiconductor for $5.4 billion – foundry strategy intensifies

PrivSource / @traderMichael_1

Intel closes its acquisition of Tower Semiconductor for $5.4 billion, strengthening its foundry division with specialty chip capacities – concurrent with Apple's exploratory discussions and the recently announced Tesla Terafab deal. The transaction positions Intel as a serious third-party foundry for external customers and could mark the turning point for the struggling foundry business.

6

Bank of America raises semiconductor revenue forecast for 2026 to $1.3 trillion

@alejandro94964 / TikTok

BofA analyst Vivek Arya raised the global chip revenue target for 2026 to $1.3 trillion and names Nvidia, Broadcom, Marvell, AMD, and Applied Materials as top picks. The revision underscores that the AI-driven demand boom continues despite geopolitical risks and export controls.

Lagebild

The semiconductor sector is experiencing a historic reorganization on multiple levels simultaneously: Apple is signaling for the first time concrete intentions to break its TSMC dependency through Intel and Samsung, destabilizing the entire foundry hierarchy. Geopolitically, US-China decoupling is intensifying – Washington is halting chip equipment exports to Chinese companies, while Beijing is countering with 70% local content quotas and rare earth threats. Europe is responding with a Chips Act reform that for the first time allows direct Commission investments in fabs, but remains structurally behind the pace of the US and Asia. The combination of AI demand boom (BofA: $1.3 trillion market volume 2026), accelerated M&A activity (Lattice/AMI, Intel/Tower), and escalating export controls increases the risk of a fragmented, regional chip industry with significant supply chain disruptions as a systemic risk.

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