Tuesday, April 18th 2023
Cross-straits Conflict May Have Spooked Warren Buffett to Liquidate His $4 Billion Stake in TSMC: Report
Ace investor Warren Buffett held a US $4 billion stake in TSMC as of January, and has reportedly sold all of it over a period between February to April, 2023. The sale has triggered alarm bells in some circles over the possible reasons someone like Buffett—who wrote the book on long-term strategic investments—would liquidate their holdings. The ongoing slump in the semiconductor industry, and economic recession in the West, seem to cut it as valid reasons. Fortune Magazine has a more grim theory.
Fortune writes that the possibility of a cross-straits conflict between Taiwan and China is at an all-time high, and this could have been a consideration for Buffett to sell his TSMC stake. It is assessed that a Chinese invasion of Taiwan now—with global chip supply chains not yet having attained "resilience"—would minimize economic reprisals on China from the West. The other side of the story could be that the economic slump, in combination with semiconductor manufacturing facing its biggest technological challenges as it approaches the 20-angstrom realm, may have soured TSMC's long-term prospects for Buffett.
Source:
Fortune
Fortune writes that the possibility of a cross-straits conflict between Taiwan and China is at an all-time high, and this could have been a consideration for Buffett to sell his TSMC stake. It is assessed that a Chinese invasion of Taiwan now—with global chip supply chains not yet having attained "resilience"—would minimize economic reprisals on China from the West. The other side of the story could be that the economic slump, in combination with semiconductor manufacturing facing its biggest technological challenges as it approaches the 20-angstrom realm, may have soured TSMC's long-term prospects for Buffett.
38 Comments on Cross-straits Conflict May Have Spooked Warren Buffett to Liquidate His $4 Billion Stake in TSMC: Report
There is a liquidity crisis lots of people need money and banks aren’t lending.
He probably just really likes his job to continue doing it.
Its not like they hit the shrink wall and just stop. TSMC will continue to make chips until the entire world is using silicon on the last node. That will take some time.
(Note to mods: This was not intended to be a political statement, only an opinion based on a conclusion of available facts.)
Warren Buffet, visionary!
You can't say TSMC isn't slowly becoming a high risk investment, if you consider the political development around Taiwan.
At the same time though TSMC is a 100% certain investment in terms of short term value. The question is, when do you extract that value, or will you sit with dividends. If China starts something (or the US), that share price might redline entirely overnight. Their new US branch isn't going to be the same thing, we all know this. People aren't bricks, and those are key here. Give all employees green cards... who said they want to live in the US?
I mean, it's all well and good at the moment, but if somebody, either deliberately or accidentally, drops a few 2000 lb. bombs through the roofs of the fabs, I'm not so sure you can come back from that. I think that is a situation where people use the term, "costly delays..."
You need sand and not just any old sand... You need the right kind of sand/silicon to start with and although you could probrably get it shipped in, that also depends on where it's coming from.
If China is the one with the sand and your country has sanctions on them guess what?
To say it like the old Soup nazi in NYC would say it....
No sand for you!!!
There is also the thing about rare earth minerals, something else China has an abundance of vs other countries and it doesn't help that Russia also has a majority, if not a lock on at least a few of these rare earth mineral types/kinds.
In either case if you can't get them and you need them, guess what you'll be doing regardless of where the building is?
Not a damn thing.
Think about it.
And that's just from a materials viewpoint, there is also a personel issue(s), logistics issue(s), equipment issue(s), enviroment/enviromental issues...... So much that goes into where a place is built to do something of this kind of specalized production nature you must take into account before scooping up the literal first shovelfull of dirt onsite to build it.
Well the motto is buy low and sell high
Being 93YO dude is likely also simplifying investments for his exit
To sell or dump shares you have to have buyers so it's just money/ risk changing hands only thing that would be interesting is the dump/ sell price Buffett accepted ;)
Mind you said data is before the pandemic. China's GDP growth rate plummeted during the pandemic and sat at 3.8% in 2022. In the same year India maintained a growth rate of 7.8%.
Second, TSMC hardly needs the Chinese market at all. It only represents a tiny fraction of their revenues.
Third, China has made it abundantly clear that it wants to make it's own chips. What solace would it have been for TSMC to do business in China knowing the government's goal is to steal their technology and replace them with a government controlled chip fab?
Fourth, TSMC is a Taiwanese. Consider that China has an ideological vendetta against Taiwan because modern day Taiwan is full of people who fled the PRC as the PRC was killing off political dissidents. In what world do you think the current PRC government is going to provide a fair playing field or even a hospitable business environment to TSMC? You are smoking something if you think the PRC will just allow TSMC to gain influence on the mainland, China has labeled the ROC it's political enemy.
Looking at all the factors, it makes zero sense to say cutting TSMC off from China makes it a bad investment.