TSMC's former co-COO Chiang Shangyi calls Intel a nobody and advises firm to merge with a mature chip manufacturing company instead .
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Scooped by
Richard Platt
onto Internet of Things - Company and Research Focus March 30, 11:26 PM
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TSMC's former co-Chief Operating Officer, Chiang Shang-yi, didn't hold back when talking about Intel's chip manufacturing woes at an event in Taiwan. Chiang advised Intel to move into mature chip manufacturing processes to win, as it was too far behind TSMC to catch up. Chiang added, while Intel was formerly a "King" of the IC industry, it was now a "Nobody." With Intel's new CEO, Lip-Bu Tan, settling into his role, the firm has 2 primary objectives. The 1st is to establish regular production of its 18A chip manufacturing node, and the 2nd is to set up a robust foundry business. Both of these are aimed at competing with TSMC. Should Intel execute with the former, then it will have achieved manufacturing node parity with TSMC, which also plans to place the comparable 2-nm process into HVM in 2025. While Intel might try at another turnaround attempt, TSMC's Shang-yi believes that Intel would be better suited to focus on more mature manufacturing process nodes, instead of competing with TSMC on the high-end nodes, Intel should merge with a company that does not produce leading-edge chips but instead churns out mature process chips in large volumes. As for TSMC, he believes that the firm's biggest advantage lies in its 100s of customers. To serve the voluminous customer base, TSMC has established high output and quick manufacturing speeds, which are its key competitive advantage. Shangyi said TSMC's global dominance and success over UMC (another Taiwanese contract manufacturer) was the firm's focus on R&D. While UMC worked with IBM for research purposes, TSMC self-developed the capabilities. He recalled fondly how hard he worked to overcome Intel's dominance and is happy after witnessing TSMC doing so.