TSMC Founder Morris Chang Reappears in Taipei to Meet NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang

NVIDIA chief executive Jensen Huang has opened his first major international trip of 2026 with a return to Taipei, and one of the most symbolic moments of the visit was a private dinner meeting with Morris Chang, founder of TSMC. Local coverage cited by DigiTimes indicates Chang, now 94 years old, was seen in public for the first time in more than 1 year, arriving in a wheelchair while appearing in good spirits.

While NVIDIA did not publicly detail the agenda behind the dinner, the context almost writes itself. NVIDIA’s modern AI product cycle is inseparable from TSMC’s leading edge manufacturing capacity, and Huang’s Taiwan visits consistently function as high trust alignment checkpoints with the island’s supply chain leadership. In an era where AI demand planning has become a multi quarter chess match, a face to face with Chang sends a clear signal to partners and markets: NVIDIA is still treating Taiwan as mission critical for execution, capacity assurance, and roadmap continuity.

This also lands during a phase where NVIDIA’s next platform ramp is increasingly the story investors and partners care about. The Taiwan trip is expected to include the familiar closed door partner engagements that have become part of Huang’s operating rhythm, where the company synchronizes timelines, manufacturing readiness, and system level delivery expectations with top tier Taiwanese builders. Firms such as Foxconn and Wistron are typically in that orbit, especially when the conversation shifts from chips to full stack deployment and shipment velocity. In this cycle, the spotlight is on Vera Rubin ramp planning, and Taiwan remains the most concentrated execution hub NVIDIA can lean on when every week of schedule matters.

Chang’s appearance also carries a softer but important industry message. Even with age and health constraints, he remains a living anchor for the modern semiconductor era, and the fact he still makes time for relationship maintenance underscores how much of this industry is built on long term trust, not just contracts and quarterly forecasts. For the gaming and creator ecosystem, that matters more than it sounds, because the same capacity, packaging, and supply chain decisions made for AI eventually influence consumer GPU availability, pricing stability, and how quickly new architectures filter down into mainstream builds.


Do you see Jensen’s Taiwan meetings as a pure supply chain sync, or do you think NVIDIA is using them to lock in priority capacity and de risk the next generation ramp before competitors can?

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Angel Morales

Founder and lead writer at Duck-IT Tech News, and dedicated to delivering the latest news, reviews, and insights in the world of technology, gaming, and AI. With experience in the tech and business sectors, combining a deep passion for technology with a talent for clear and engaging writing

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