Key Takeaways
- Taiwan Semiconductor’s 2nm manufacturing capacity is completely reserved through 2028 and beyond
- The capacity shortage could force Nvidia to restructure its upcoming Feynman AI architecture
- Meta and other tech giants are vying for the same limited TSMC production slots
- TSMC plans consecutive annual price increases extending to 2029 amid unprecedented demand
- Wall Street analysts continue rating NVDA as a Strong Buy with a $274.03 average target price
Shares of Nvidia tumbled Monday following revelations that Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company’s production constraints may disrupt the chipmaker’s ambitious roadmap. The semiconductor giant saw its stock price decline 3.28%, while TSMC’s shares dropped 2.82% in tandem.
According to initial reports from Taiwan’s Economic Daily News, TSMC has allocated all available slots on its cutting-edge 2-nanometer production lines through at least 2028. The unprecedented demand from artificial intelligence and high-performance computing sectors has created a severe supply shortage at the world’s premier contract semiconductor manufacturer.
The Feynman platform represents Nvidia’s future data center computing architecture, which was introduced during the company’s GTC 2026 conference. Positioned as the follow-up to the Vera Rubin generation, Feynman was originally slated for commercial deployment in 2028.
The core issue centers on availability: insufficient 2nm production capacity exists to manufacture Feynman according to its current specifications. This reality is forcing Nvidia’s engineering teams to explore alternative design approaches well ahead of the platform’s intended launch window.
Manufacturing Giant Faces Unprecedented Demand
TSMC’s latest 2nm process nodes, particularly the enhanced A16 variation, deliver efficiency improvements ranging from 15% to 25% compared to previous-generation manufacturing techniques. These performance characteristics make them especially attractive for energy-intensive artificial intelligence applications.
Nvidia isn’t alone in this struggle for manufacturing capacity. Social media titan Meta has emerged as a formidable competitor, placing substantial orders for specialized AI accelerators and graphics processors to power its expanding infrastructure. Apple currently commands more than half of all early-stage 2nm production commitments, relegating other customers to extended wait times.
Industry sources indicate Nvidia controls approximately 20% of TSMC’s most advanced production capacity and has secured the majority of CoWoS advanced packaging availability through 2026. Reports suggest CEO Jensen Huang has engaged directly with TSMC leadership to maximize production allocation.
Despite this preferential positioning, even Nvidia cannot escape the capacity crunch. Waiting lists for manufacturing slots now stretch past 2028, prompting TSMC to announce consecutive yearly price adjustments through 2029 to manage escalating operational expenses.
Near-Term Platform Remains Unaffected
While the Feynman architecture faces potential complications, Nvidia’s more immediate Vera Rubin platform continues progressing according to schedule. Initial Vera Rubin shipments are expected to commence later this year, well before the Feynman timeline becomes critical.
Nvidia has successfully locked in A16 manufacturing allocations for both its Rubin Ultra variant and subsequent GPU architectures following Vera Rubin. The capacity shortage appears most concentrated around the Feynman generation, which occupies a later position in the company’s product roadmap.
TSMC executives have publicly recognized the intensifying demand environment and indicated plans to expand production capabilities over time. However, the company has not provided specific commitments regarding when current capacity constraints might ease.
Industry observers have suggested Intel and Samsung as possible alternative manufacturing partners, though neither currently delivers TSMC’s leading-edge capabilities at comparable production volumes.
Financial analysts tracking NVDA maintain optimistic long-term outlooks despite current challenges. TipRanks data shows a Strong Buy consensus from 41 analysts, with only a single Hold recommendation. The collective price target averages $274.03, suggesting approximately 58.7% potential appreciation from present trading levels.
NVDA closed Monday’s session down 3.28%. TSM declined 2.82% during the same trading period.
