DeepSeek influences US-China competition and cooperation, temporarily impacting the US AI industry while also triggering stricter chip controls on China.
To promote digital innovation and technological upgrades among semiconductor companies in southern Taiwan, and to assist businesses in developing more diverse and industry-competitive system application technologies, the National Center for High-performance Computing (NCHC), under the National Science and Technology Council (NSTC), recently held a briefing in Tainan for the Nano 5 in Semiconductor Industrial Innovation and Upgrade program. The event attracted numerous semiconductor companies and startup teams.
According to industry sources, all major memory chipmakers aim to boost their quotes for the second quarter of 2025, resulting in a change towards a more bullish market attitude.
China’s AI sector regained traction in early 2025 with the breakout launch of DeepSeek, a homegrown AI model that revitalized industry confidence and reignited momentum across the memory and storage ecosystem.
The European and US automobile industries are currently difficult to judge due to tariff disputes launched by the Trump administration, making the second-quarter car market unpredictable, according to market sources.
AI infrastructure startup CoreWeave is seeking a valuation of up to US$32 billion in its upcoming IPO on the NASDAQ, with plans to raise as much as US$2.7 billion. The listing marks a major test of investor confidence in a new generation of AI-focused cloud providers as uncertainty clouds the future of data center demand.
The TV market in 2025 will be significantly influenced by political factors, particularly with US President Donald Trump’s aggressive tariff policies and China’s “trade-in” policy extending from 2024. These developments are causing shifts in the market while also impacting the inventory rhythm of upstream panel manufacturers. Observing the TV market in 2025 reveals five major changes.
While recent reports suggest TSMC’s 2nm trial production is progressing steadily, DIGITIMES Research analyst Luke Lin cautions that actual yield rates will vary depending on the chip design—meaning different readiness timelines for customers like Apple, Nvidia, and AMD.
Artificial intelligence (AI) is now the primary growth driver for the global semiconductor industry. With AI-related demand expected to surge further in 2025, semiconductor equipment spending is on track for another major expansion. Against the backdrop of escalating US sanctions, China is positioning itself to leverage the AI boom as a possible rebound strategy, drawing intense global attention to its next move.