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JH Explorer: AI update from Taiwan’s Computex

Portfolio Manager Matt Culley and Research Analyst Shaon Baqui provide an update on the continued momentum of artificial intelligence (AI) after visiting Taiwan – the hub of innovation for this transformative theme.

Matthew Culley

Portfolio Manager | Research Analyst


Shaon Baqui

Research Analyst


1 Jul 2025
6 minute read

Key takeaways:

  • Led by Nvidia, Taiwan has become a virtuous flywheel of AI innovation, with cutting-edge design and fabrication of this powerful theme’s infrastructure occurring on the island.
  • There are few cracks to be found in the AI story, with even the unveiling of DeepSeek earlier this year providing a tailwind as lower-cost applications will likely lead to wider adoption of AI platforms.
  • We expect to see the fruits of AI become more dispersed as the industry seeks to inject resilience into supply chains and end users across the global economy leverage the power of this revolutionary technology to drive productivity gains.
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A team of Janus Henderson Investors portfolio managers and research analysts recently converged on Taipei to immerse ourselves in all things technology at the annual Computex industry conference.

As we dined on some of the country’s signature dumplings, we noted an inescapable fact: The revolutionary AI theme doesn’t happen without the extraordinary technological advances occurring in Taiwan.

With every breath, industry experts uttered the names Nvidia, Taiwan Semiconductor, and Foxconn, almost uniformly in that order. And while Nvidia and its advanced graphics processing units (GPU) have become the flagbearers of all things AI, the entire Taiwan ecosystem is the architect and builder enabling this vast technological revolution. It is perhaps no wonder that the iconic Taiwan 101 was illuminated in Nvidia green during the conference.

Building an ecosystem

Years ago, Computex was synonymous with personal computers (PCs). After that, mobility took center stage. Today, it’s almost purely a showcase for all things AI. A large portion of the exhibition space was understandably dedicated to the equipment and components that enable AI. Only upon seeing the miles of cable, highly complex liquid cooling systems, heat exchangers, racks, and cooling distribution units can one appreciate all that goes into making AI come to life.

Not surprisingly, a highlight of the week was the keynote speech by Nvidia founder and CEO Jensen Huang at the fittingly monumental Taipei Music Center.

It was striking to notice how consistent Jensen’s strategy has been over the past two decades. In conversations with him years ago, he espoused a vision of building a free base of workstations at major engineering universities to create a virtuous flywheel of talented coders who would be well-versed in Nvidia’s proprietary programming platform. Jensen believed accelerated computing would launch a world where GPUs would serve a far greater role than simply improving graphics for video games. He wanted to build an ecosystem around advanced GPUs and his company. That ecosystem is Taiwan.


Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang’s keynote speech.

For much of the world – including a large portion of the investment community – the 2022 release of ChatGPT was the “wow” moment. That belies how many years this revolution has been in the making.

The ethos of collaboration that successfully introduced AI to the world continues. An exemplar of that is a new Nvidia headquarters that is aimed to bring the company even closer to its ecosystem partners. Of greater relevance is the launch of NVLink Fusion, Nvidia’s proprietary networking architecture that allows customers to use their own AI accelerator chips in conjunction with Nvidia’s infrastructure.

As Jensen stated, “I’d love it if you buy everything from me, but just please buy something from me.”

Such a philosophy, in our view, should result in an atmosphere that furthers AI innovation as well as adoption by customers. It is not a coincidence that non-Nvidia AI accelerators – Amazon’s Trainium, for example – will invariably be designed and assembled by various Taiwanese companies.

Cracks in the AI story? None to be found

Many of the event’s attendees were looking for any sign of an AI demand slowdown. Thus far, that has proven futile. Even as production of the most state-of-the-art servers ramps up, order books for both the current and next generation remain full. Interestingly, customers appear to be staggering their purchases so as not to rely too much on any particular generation of chips. This should not only ensure fresh compute capacity for customers but also provide consistency for AI vendors.


Outside the Computex conference.

Heightened attention was paid to hyperscalers’ appetite. This, too, remains robust. And sovereign AI is another source of demand that is only starting to be quantified.

Earlier this year, the industry was briefly paralyzed with fear on the news that Chinese startup DeepSeek’s AI models were delivering impressive performance at putatively a fraction of the cost of Western models. Given the amount of capital expenditure already committed for both training and inference, this development could have proven worrisome for investors and capital allocators. Even when acknowledging that much of DeepSeek’s prowess was built on established platforms, creative, lower-cost solutions should only catalyze AI adoption rather than cannibalize existing demand.

As with other technological innovations, the bending of the cost curve should create tremendous opportunities to expand the customer base and lead to a broadening range of potential AI applications.

If you’re not first, you’re last

Given the strength of the theme – and volume of investment flows – every tech player is trying to come up with an AI story.  Legacy PC and smartphone makers are selling an AI-on-device at the edge1 story, but no one is buying it (quite literally). These players are caught in a chicken-and-egg conundrum: There are no applications because there are no devices, but there are no devices because there are no applications. Again, this illustrates the genius of the nascent GPU industry playing the long game 20 years ago by partnering with engineering universities.

Sharing the wealth

Following the paths set by PCs and mobility, AI has the potential to reshape many aspects of society and how the world conducts business – perhaps even more so. As with its forebears, AI’s productivity gains will be widely dispersed.

It bears repeating that none of this is possible without the pivotal role played by Taiwan – an emerging market. Taiwan’s ecosystem is AI’s flywheel, and this was underscored by two key announcements. First, Nvidia and Foxconn are teaming up with the Taiwan government to build an AI factory featuring 10,000 GPUs to accelerate domestic AI research. Second, Nvidia has committed to building a massive spaceship-like R&D hub called Constellation in the Taipei suburbs.


Tech analyst Shaon Baqui checking out one of this year’s
Computex vendors.

Over the course of Computex, it was discussed whether Taiwan will maintain its preeminent position given the ascendency of tariffs and a potential reconfiguration of global trade. Our view is that it most certainly will. Companies, however, will likely seek to create resilience in their AI supply chains by geographically dispersing some manufacturing capacity. Mexico was more than once highlighted as a potential beneficiary of this shift.

Looking ahead, not only will emerging markets join advanced economies in delivering these innovations, but they will also increasingly deploy AI-based solutions to solve unique frictions such as e-commerce and access to finance and healthcare.

Regardless of the jurisdiction, AI is reshaping how the world operates, and those companies on the right side of innovation stand to benefit massively.

1Edge computing is the concept of pushing compute capacity closer to the end user, e.g. on mobile devices.

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  • Shares/Units can lose value rapidly, and typically involve higher risks than bonds or money market instruments. The value of your investment may fall as a result.
  • Shares of small and mid-size companies can be more volatile than shares of larger companies, and at times it may be difficult to value or to sell shares at desired times and prices, increasing the risk of losses.
  • Emerging markets expose the Fund to higher volatility and greater risk of loss than developed markets; they are susceptible to adverse political and economic events, and may be less well regulated with less robust custody and settlement procedures.
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