Veteran investor connects with Taiwan Semiconductor after sales

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This has nothing to do with the car.

Duesenberg Automobile & Motors Co. was an American racing and luxury car manufacturer founded in Indianapolis in 1920.

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The company is known for popularizing the straight-eight engine and four-wheel hydraulic brakes, and Duesenberg made the first American car to win a Grand Prix race.

People would often refer to a Duesenberg vehicle as "a doozy," but the car's nickname is not related to the word meaning  "extraordinary," "outstanding" or "one of a kind."

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That doozy had staked its place in the vernacular years before the Duesenbergs hit the road.

And it's this definition that TheStreet Pro's Chris Versace employed in his recent column, "TSM’s Quarterly Sales Bonanza Boosts Outlook for Several Portfolio Stocks."

"September sales from Taiwan Semiconductor landed this morning, and, boy, was the report a doozy," he said.

TSCM shares surged from last year

"Sales for the month rose just shy of 40% year over year, bringing the company’s September-ending quarter sales up a staggering 39% year over year and up just over 6% compared to the previous quarter," Versace added.

TSM produces high-end semiconductors for such tech superstars as Nvidia, Apple, Advanced Micro Devices  (AMD)  and Marvell.

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While the company does not offer any end-market color in these monthly revenue reports, Versace said, judging by recent comments from Nvidia  (NVDA)  CEO Jensen Huang pointing to AI chip demand being “insane” and Hon Hai Chairman Young Liu that demand is “crazy,” “we can deduce TSM’s High-Performance Computing segment revenue was robust.“

The HPC segment is important as it houses TSM's artificial-intelligence and data-center chip revenue, and Versace says the current quarter is shaping up very nicely, not only for Nvidia but for Marvell  (MRVL)  as well.

Versace wrote about Hon Hai in an earlier column, saying the company's September revenue rose almost 34% sequentially and more than 10% from a year earlier.

"The company shared that it saw strong demand for AI servers continuing, which pushed its Cloud and Networking Products segment ahead while new product launches for its Smart Consumer Electronics segment led to strong sequential growth," he said.