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Bitcoin More Important Than iPhone to Growth at Some Asian Firms

Bitcoin More Important Than iPhone to Growth at Some Asian Firms

(Bloomberg) -- Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. is one of hundreds of companies that have benefited by supplying components for Apple Inc.’s iPhone over the past 10 years. Now the world’s biggest maker of bespoke microchips may see digital currencies like Bitcoin become even more important for its growth.

TSMC stands to benefit big-time from a boom in cryptocurrency mining driven by Bitcoin’s 1,400 percent leap last year -- the same explosive growth that’s bolstered shares of designers from Nvidia Corp. to Advanced Micro Devices Inc. That’s a timely boost, as expectations for iPhone X shipments dwindle and Chinese smartphone demand tapers off. Crypto-mining could account for as much as a 10th of TSMC’s revenue in 2018, becoming its fastest-growing segment. 

Taiwan’s largest company, typically a barometer of iPhone demand, reports quarterly earnings Thursday. The producer of made-to-order semiconductors now gets about a fifth of its sales from Apple overall, as its main chipmaking partner. But crypto-miners’ contribution to the top line could well double this year to 5 to 10 percent, Nomura International analyst Aaron Jeng estimates. That’s because mining -- the process of winning digital coins by crunching complex equations at the heart of virtual currencies like Bitcoin -- requires the raw processing power of muscular chips that TSMC cranks out for companies like Nvidia and AMD.

“The mining impact on TSMC is now akin to that of a popular new iPhone,” said Mark Li, a Hong Kong-based analyst with Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. “The difference is that each new iPhone requires a huge amount of innovation and marketing. The Bitcoin contribution is automatic.”

Apple and the smartphone boom of recent years -- particularly in China -- helped drive a 69 percent gain in TSMC’s shares since the start of 2016. But a proliferation of vendors such as Oppo, Vivo and Xiaomi Corp. are saturating the country’s mobile device market with a plethora of new models, while adoption in rural markets slows. Chinese smartphone shipments slid almost 12 percent last year, government data showed.

Meanwhile, the digital currency arena has grown in importance for TSMC. It generated $350 million to $400 million of revenue from crypto-mining in the third quarter alone, co-Chief Executive Officer Mark Liu told investors. That’s about 4 to 5 percent of the period’s revenue, according to Bloomberg’s calculations.

Bitcoin More Important Than iPhone to Growth at Some Asian Firms

There’s no guarantee crypto-mania will persist. Regulators from China to South Korea have been clamping down on virtual currency trading to curb financial risk. Miners themselves face disruption, forced to shift their operations as scrutiny over immense power usage tightens. Bitcoin dived as much as 25 percent Tuesday while rival cryptocurrencies also crumbled, including a drop of as much as 40 percent in Ripple.

“Although some investors are bullish that Bitcoin-related chipset demand could offset soft smartphone demand in 2018, we question whether Bitcoin demand will be sustainable” if prices slide, Benjamin Chiang, an analyst at KGI Securities, wrote last week.

In the longer term, the coin’s inherent scarcity -- it’s capped at 21 million -- also imposes an upper limit on chip demand. Once the majority of that is mined, chip demand will disappear, said Nomura’s Jeng. Till then, TSMC’s investors are treating cryptocurrency very much like a potential bonus that could be magnified in the near term.

“Cryptocurrency is like a call option for TSMC, which is an attractive investment on its own,” said Sebastian Hou, an analyst with CL Securities Taiwan Co. “If mining demand vanishes tomorrow, it shouldn’t affect the investment outlook. But if it turns out to be strong, the company will rake it in.”

To contact Bloomberg News staff for this story: Cindy Wang in Taipei at hwang61@bloomberg.net, Gao Yuan in Beijing at ygao199@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Robert Fenner at rfenner@bloomberg.net, Edwin Chan, Peter Elstrom

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.

With assistance from Cindy Wang, Gao Yuan