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Up to Taiwan companies to decide on their US investments, president says

By Thomson Reuters Feb 12, 2026 | 10:55 PM

TAIPEI, Feb 13 (Reuters) – It is up to companies to decide where best to spend the $250 billion Taiwan has pledged in investments in the United States but their largest ​production capacity will remain at home, President Lai Ching-te ‌said on Friday.

Trump administration officials on Thursday signed a final reciprocal trade agreement that confirmed a 15% U.S. tariff rate for imports from Taiwan, while committing Taiwan to a schedule for eliminating or lowering tariffs on nearly all ‌U.S. ​goods.

The outline of the deal reached last ⁠month included a pledge by ⁠Taiwan that its companies would invest $250 billion to boost production of semiconductors, energy and artificial intelligence in the U.S., including $100 billion already committed by Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Corp.

Lai said that when ​he took office two years ago his message was that Taiwan’s national economic strategy is for Taiwan to position itself globally ⁠and sell to the whole world.

“This ⁠round of tariff negotiations is also a very important ​opportunity. Its purpose is precisely this: to enable our industries to ​go global,” he told reporters, when asked whether TSMC’s investments ‌in the U.S. would risk hollowing out Taiwan’s industry.

“Whether it is TSMC or other industries, as long as their research and development centres are in Taiwan, their advanced manufacturing processes are in Taiwan, ⁠and their largest production capacity is in Taiwan, Taiwan can continue to develop steadily,” Lai added.

The government respects companies’ investment decisions, he said.

“This includes ⁠our negotiations with ‌the United States this time: of course, the $250 ⁠billion in investment refers to companies’ own, voluntary ​investment ‌decisions.”

TSMC, which is investing a total of $165 billion ​in the ⁠U.S. state of Arizona to build factories, did not respond to a request for comment.

The company, the world’s main producer of advanced chips powering the trend towards AI, last month flagged more U.S. manufacturing capacity was in the works.

(Reporting by Yimou Lee and Ben Blanchard; Editing ​by Stephen Coates)