Register For Our Mailing List

Register to receive our free weekly newsletter including editorials.

Home / 607

Investing in the backbone of the digital age

In our increasingly digital world, semiconductors – which allow the control of electrical signals – are essential to almost all the innovations that are improving our lives. These building blocks of modern technology power everything from artificial intelligence (AI), cloud computing, and autonomous vehicles to consumer electronics, industrial automation, and cutting-edge defence systems.

Given semiconductors’ centrality to modern life, there is a constant race to develop chips that are ever more powerful and efficient – which in turn fuels further advances. So the semiconductor sector is a crucial enabler of global innovation.

How the chips lie …

At present, growth in the semiconductor industry is being driven by a broad range of innovative industries. Undoubtedly, the most talked about is AI. Advanced AI models require exponentially more computing power, which has created unprecedented demand for high-performance chips.

There’s also the trend towards electrification and automation. The automotive and industrial sectors increasingly depend on high-performance chips to facilitate advanced processes – all with the aim of delivering efficiency.

Another key area is data. In our Information Age, the storage and retrieval of data are crucial considerations. Volumes of data are exploding, so cloud storage – which relieves the pressure on physical infrastructure – is increasingly important. The big players here are ‘hyperscalers’ – the companies that run cloud services for corporate and institutional clients. These firms are investing heavily in advanced semiconductors to ensure that their clients can continue to scale up their operations indefinitely.

And then there are the concerns about the semiconductor supply chain, which have arisen as the geopolitical situation has become increasingly tense. Governments and companies alike are prioritising the resilience of their semiconductor supply chains – leading to significant investment in domestic production. This is a serious undertaking: building semiconductor ‘foundries’ is an extremely challenging process given concerns about site location, water supply and workforce skills, among others.

Key players

At Orbis, we focus on finding companies trading at a discount to their intrinsic value. Sometimes those are ‘deep value’ stocks, but sometimes they are world-class businesses with strong competitive advantages and clear potential for long-term growth. This is no different when it comes to semiconductors – an area where we prefer three companies with very strong industry positions.

The first of these is Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC). This company is the undisputed leader in manufacturing advanced microchips. Its cutting-edge semiconductors are in huge demand for AI, smartphones, and cloud computing.

At present, it is benefiting from heightened demand for leading-edge nodes (the processes used to produce the smallest and most powerful chips) for customers including Apple, Nvidia, and AMD.

Another of our favoured investments is Micron Technology. This US company is a leader in DRAM and NAND memory chips – critical for AI processing, data centres, and high-performance computing. Micron Technology is well placed to capitalise on the AI-driven demand for high-bandwidth memory. This is an essential component for next-generation AI workloads.

An enduring evolution

This year’s big development in AI is the emergence of China’s DeepSeek large language model. DeepSeek has demonstrated efficiency gains and technological advancements - at significantly lower costs - that could reshape the competitive landscape in generative AI. Its big breakthrough is better performance with lower use of power. The DeepSeek team appear to have achieved this through optimising algorithms to reduce the computational burden. Given the growing constraints on semiconductor supply and energy use, this could be a meaningful opportunity for various companies participating across the semiconductor value chain.

The optimisation of AI models means that future semiconductor demand may focus on power efficiency and computational speed. This will create new cycles of innovation in the industry – and those best placed to profit will, again, be companies with technological leadership and advantages of scale and expertise.

More broadly, more efficient AI models may speed up the pace of AI adoption – leading to much more widespread use and, overall, greater demand for the technologies that make it possible – of which semiconductors are the most essential.

Given their staggering range of applications, semiconductors remain a compelling investment theme in the market today. For us, this is a high-conviction, long-term growth story that rests on what we believe to be a powerful and enduring long-term growth path. Through our investments in companies like TSMC and Micron, we achieve exposure to a vast array of new and fast-evolving industries – along with the security that comes from investing in long-established businesses with high barriers and deep moats, trading at attractive discounts to what we believe they are truly worth.

 

Eric Marais is an Investment Specialist at Orbis Investments, a sponsor of Firstlinks. This article contains general information at a point in time and not personal financial or investment advice. It should not be used as a guide to invest or trade and does not take into account the specific investment objectives or financial situation of any particular person. The Orbis Funds may take a different view depending on facts and circumstances.

For more articles and papers from Orbis, please click here.

 

RELATED ARTICLES

DigiCo REIT and the data centre opportunity

5 exciting areas of investment opportunity

Why AI is today’s most important investment theme

banner

Most viewed in recent weeks

Maybe it’s time to consider taxing the family home

Australia could unlock smarter investment and greater equity by reforming housing tax concessions. Rethinking exemptions on the family home could benefit most Australians, especially renters and owners of modest homes.

Supercharging the ‘4% rule’ to ensure a richer retirement

The creator of the 4% rule for retirement withdrawals, Bill Bengen, has written a new book outlining fresh strategies to outlive your money, including holding fewer stocks in early retirement before increasing allocations.

Simple maths says the AI investment boom ends badly

This AI cycle feels less like a revolution and more like a rerun. Just like fibre in 2000, shale in 2014, and cannabis in 2019, the technology or product is real but the capital cycle will be brutal. Investors beware.

Why we should follow Canada and cut migration

An explosion in low-skilled migration to Australia has depressed wages, killed productivity, and cut rental vacancy rates to near decades-lows. It’s time both sides of politics addressed the issue.

Are franking credits worth pursuing?

Are franking credits factored into share prices? The data suggests they're probably not, and there are certain types of stocks that offer higher franking credits as well as the prospect for higher returns.

Are LICs licked?

LICs are continuing to struggle with large discounts and frustrated investors are wondering whether it’s worth holding onto them. This explains why the next 6-12 months will be make or break for many LICs.

Latest Updates

A nation of landlords and fund managers

Super and housing dwarf every other asset class in Australia, and they’ve both become too big to fail. Can they continue to grow at current rates, and if so, what are the implications for the economy, work and markets?

Economy

The hidden property empire of Australia’s politicians

With rising home prices and falling affordability, political leaders preach reform. But asset disclosures show many are heavily invested in property - raising doubts about whose interests housing policy really protects.

Retirement

Retiring debt-free may not be the best strategy

Retiring with debt may have advantages. Maintaining a mortgage on the family home can provide a line of credit in retirement for flexibility, extra income, and a DIY reverse mortgage strategy.

Shares

Why the ASX is losing Its best companies

The ASX is shrinking not by accident, but by design. A governance model that rewards detachment over ownership is driving capital into private hands and weakening public markets.

Investment strategies

3 reasons the party in big tech stocks may be over

The AI boom has sparked investor euphoria, but under the surface, US big tech is showing cracks - slowing growth, surging capex, and fading dominance signal it's time to question conventional tech optimism.

Investment strategies

Resilience is the new alpha

Trade is now a strategic weapon, reshaping the investment landscape. In this environment, resilient companies - those capable of absorbing shocks and defending margins - are best positioned to outperform.

Shares

The DNA of long-term compounding machines

The next generation of wealth creation is likely to emerge from founder influenced firms that combine scalable models with long-term alignment. Four signs can alert investors to these companies before the crowds.

Sponsors

Alliances

© 2025 Morningstar, Inc. All rights reserved.

Disclaimer
The data, research and opinions provided here are for information purposes; are not an offer to buy or sell a security; and are not warranted to be correct, complete or accurate. Morningstar, its affiliates, and third-party content providers are not responsible for any investment decisions, damages or losses resulting from, or related to, the data and analyses or their use. To the extent any content is general advice, it has been prepared for clients of Morningstar Australasia Pty Ltd (ABN: 95 090 665 544, AFSL: 240892), without reference to your financial objectives, situation or needs. For more information refer to our Financial Services Guide. You should consider the advice in light of these matters and if applicable, the relevant Product Disclosure Statement before making any decision to invest. Past performance does not necessarily indicate a financial product’s future performance. To obtain advice tailored to your situation, contact a professional financial adviser. Articles are current as at date of publication.
This website contains information and opinions provided by third parties. Inclusion of this information does not necessarily represent Morningstar’s positions, strategies or opinions and should not be considered an endorsement by Morningstar.