TAIPEI, Taiwan — In Taipei, real estate agent Jason Sung is betting that home prices around a high-tech industrial park in the northern part of Taiwan's capital will soon take flight – because of computer chip maker Nvidia.
The area is where Nvidia plans to build its new Taiwan headquarters as it rapidly expands on the island, set to surpass Apple to become the biggest customer of Taiwan semiconductor maker TSMC, the biggest contract manufacturer of the advanced chips needed for artificial intelligence.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang describes Taiwan as the ''center of the world's computer ecosystem.'' It's riding high on the global AI frenzy. Its economy grew at an 8.6% annual pace last year, and it's hoping to maintain that momentum after it recently sealed a trade deal with U.S. President Donald Trump that cut U.S. tariffs on Taiwan to 15% from 20%.
''We have been lucky,'' said Wu Tsong-min, an emeritus economics professor at National Taiwan University and a former board member of Taiwan's central bank.
But Taiwan's heavy reliance on computer chip makers and other technology companies carries the growing risk of the AI craze turning out to be a bubble.
''What if the AI bubble is real, and what if its rapid growth pace slows, what's next for Taiwan? That's the question many have been asking,'' Wu said.
Escalating tensions with Beijing, which claims independently governed Taiwan as mainland China's territory, are another abiding threat, despite the island's vital role in global chip and AI supply chains.
Taiwan's leads in chipmaking