Taiwan Semiconductor's Stock Surge Minted $6 Billion For Ken Fisher, Laffont And Sanders

By Surbhi Jain | January 15, 2026, 9:25 AM

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co Ltd (NYSE:TSM) didn't just beat earnings — it forced a rethink on investor positioning. The stock surged to fresh all-time highs after a blowout quarter, but the more interesting story sits beneath the headline numbers: how much wealth this AI rally just locked in for the market's biggest long-term holders.

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Chart created using Benzinga Pro

Over the past year, TSM has climbed roughly 68%, rising from around $207 in mid-January 2025 to above $347 in premarket trading following its fourth quarter earnings’ beat.

For hedge funds that were already heavily invested, this wasn't a marginal win — it was transformational.

Billions Get Cemented

Ken Fisher's Fisher Asset Management, which owns roughly 17.8 million shares, is now sitting on an estimated $2 billion in paper gains over the past year, according to Benzinga calculations based on the firm's disclosed holdings and the stock's year‑over‑year price performance.

Lewis Sanders' Sanders Capital, one of TSM's largest holders with more than 32 million shares, has seen its position swell by roughly $3.5 billion over the same period.

Philippe Laffont's Coatue Management, with just over 8 million shares, is sitting on close to $900 million in gains.

Together, that's more than $6 billion created not by chasing AI hype — but by staying put.

Management Kills The Bubble Narrative

TSM used its earnings call to directly push back on fears of an AI demand bubble. CEO C.C. Wei said customer demand remains strong across consumer, enterprise, and sovereign segments, adding that the company has validated AI demand not just with hyperscalers, but with their end customers.

In Wei's words, AI isn't a short-term cycle — it's a megatrend moving into everyday life.

The market didn't just listen. It repriced the stock in one move, erasing last month's drawdown and pushing TSM into uncharted territory.

Why It Matters

TSM's fundamentals look stronger than ever. The risk now isn't whether AI demand is real — it's how much of that certainty is already owned.

When rallies mint billions, upside becomes less about discovery and more about positioning.

Image: Shutterstock

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