White House mulling tariff exemptions for Big Tech — Amazon, Google, Microsoft, other AI hyperscalers to be spared worst of import duties with U.S.-Taiwan deal
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The U.S. Department of Commerce is reportedly planning tariff carve-outs for AI hyperscalers within the country, including Amazon, Google, and Microsoft, among others. According to the Financial Times, the move will allow these companies to acquire the chips they need to remain competitive in the AI race, while still pushing chip makers like Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) to continue investing in the U.S.
Taiwan and the U.S. agreed on a trade deal last month, with Washington cutting tariffs on the island from 20% to 15% in exchange for a $250-billion commitment on direct investments, plus another $250 billion in credit guarantees from Taipei to allow its companies to invest in the American semiconductor industry. The 15% tariff is set to include chips made on the island, but Taiwanese companies building fabs in the U.S. will get an exemption.
These chip manufacturers can import two and a half times their fab’s planned capacity tariff-free while their plants are under construction. That number would then fall to just 1.5 times once they start churning out semiconductors locally. TSMC is expected to allocate its exemptions to its Big Tech clients that are ordering huge numbers of AI chips, but the total quantity of tariff-free chips will still depend on the company’s investments in the U.S.
Article continues belowAt the moment, TSMC has already committed to invest $165 billion in the U.S., with one fab already operational in Arizona. Despite this, a source told the Financial Times that U.S. President Donald Trump is delaying the signing of the agreement. “We’re going to be monitoring what unfolds after this is unveiled like hawks to make sure that the integrity of what we’re trying to accomplish with the tariffs and the rebates isn’t undermined and that this doesn’t end up being a giveaway to TSMC,” the administration official said.
On the other hand, the TSMC board recently announced a $45 billion spending package on new fabs. This is a massive change for the company, which usually spreads out its capital appropriation throughout the year. This recent move instead saw a huge chunk of the chip maker’s planned $52 to $56-billion budget for capital expenditure allocated in the first quarter of 2026. It’s unclear how much of this will be spent on American fabs, though. Although Taiwan rejected the possibility of moving 40% of its semiconductor capacity inside the U.S.’s borders, it said that the production capacity of both local and American chip production is expected to scale hand-in-hand as the AI infrastructure build-out continues, driving record demand for the latest chips.
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Jowi Morales is a tech enthusiast with years of experience working in the industry. He’s been writing with several tech publications since 2021, where he’s been interested in tech hardware and consumer electronics.
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hotaru251 foreign source vendors: "so now we have a list of companies we straight up charge higher prices to since they get special treatment from the USA"Reply -
tamalero Reply
pay 2 win.SomeoneElse23 said:Smells like br, I mean, lobbying, where those with the money control things.
Remember when they insisted that working harder gives you a better chance to be rich? XD -
ezst036 It's really a lose lose situation.Reply
The administration slams with tariffs today, then a year or three from now everybody who loves tech and loves the CHIPS act demands CHIPS 3.0 or some other form of a bailout to fix the damage done by tariffs.
Or else no tariffs and no bailouts required since no damage is being done.
Heads they win tails we lose.:sick:
I'll go barf now. The billionaires always win. -
SomeoneElse23 Replytamalero said:pay 2 win.
Remember when they insisted that working harder gives you a better chance to be rich? XD
Well, it does.
Except money talks, apparently, and with enough money you can cheat. -
JayGau So they basically admit that it's the US companies that pay for the tariffs and not the other countries?Reply