KFC operator share price shoots up after a strong year
GO Markets
29/8/2022
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The operator of KFC and Taco Bell restaurants across Australia, Europe and South East Asia Collins Foods Limited, (CKF) saw its share price shoot up by above 11% on Tuesday after releasing its annual report. The company saw its revenue increase to 1,184,521,000 and increased its profit by an impressive 47%. The company also saw a decrease in its net debt and net leverage ratio, as improved cashflow saw the business become more solvent.
CKF saw particularly good growth in its European sector where it saw revenue increase from $134.9 million to $190.4 million year on year. With inflation being a key concern for most businesses in the short/medium term future, CKF outlined how it will deal with rising costs. The company will focus on providing better value than competitors.
It has also already locked in prices for chickens until the end of 2022 and 95% of its inputs are sourced locally, minimising supply chain pressures and costs. CKF managing Director, Drew O’Malley stated that, “KFC Australia managed to deliver positive same store sales growth for the full year, despite cycling unprecedented growth in the prior year. The KFC brand has never been stronger in Australia, and metrics around quality, value and purchase intent are at record level, particularly important in times like these.
Looking forward the company has already seen positive results since the report was finalised. O’Malley outlined that the proven track record of the brands and their customer appeal ensures that CKF is well positioned to manage the challenging economic conditions. From a technical perspective on the day the annual report came out, the share price gapped up above the 50 day moving average on a high level of volume.
The price has so far been unable to make a large move higher as it consolidates through a relatively strong resistance zone. If the price can break out of the resistance zone a target or $11.04 or a secondary target of $12.84 may be practical targets to aim for.
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GO Markets
Disclaimer: Articles are from GO Markets analysts and contributors and are based on their independent analysis or personal experiences. Views, opinions or trading styles expressed are their own, and should not be taken as either representative of or shared by GO Markets. Advice, if any, is of a ‘general’ nature and not based on your personal objectives, financial situation or needs. Consider how appropriate the advice, if any, is to your objectives, financial situation and needs, before acting on the advice.
Tuesday, 12 May 2026, at roughly 7:30 pm AEST, Treasurer Jim Chalmers will stand up in Canberra and deliver the 2026-27 Federal Budget. According to Budget.gov.au, that is when the Budget is officially released, with the Budget papers going live online at the same time.
What are the five Asian tech and infrastructure stocks linked to the AI buildout?
Market Intelligence Insights | GO Markets
Jensen Huang stood on stage at GTC 2026 and projected US$1 trillion in cumulative AI hardware revenue through 2027, spanning the current Blackwell generation and the newly announced Vera Rubin architecture. That is not just a corporate forecast. It is a gravitational pull reshaping parts of the global technology sector.
In market circles, this effect is often linked to Huang's ability to move sentiment across AI-related stocks.
Here is the part that many retail investors can miss: NVIDIA is a fabless chip designer. It conceives the architecture and writes the code, but manufactures none of the actual silicon. Every dollar of that US$1 trillion projection would need to flow through a highly concentrated manufacturing pathway, and that route runs directly through Asia.
For APAC traders, the headline rally in New York is only half the story. The broader opportunity sits inside the Asian technology giants linked to the hardware supercycle: the companies making the parts, infrastructure and capacity without which none of this works.
The largest passive exchange traded funds (ETFs) in the world are moving through a highly concentrated market structure. According to Morningstar Direct and Trivariate Research data, approximately 31.3% of the S&P 500 is now concentrated in just seven stocks. When too many dollars chase too few names, diversification can become less reliable and valuation multiples are more exposed.
US tech giants
High concentration longs
Seven stocks. 31.3% of the S&P 500. When positioning is this crowded, even a beat can fail to move the stock. The multiple is already doing the work the earnings should do.
→ Valuation multiple risk
APAC enablers
Uncrowded physical plays
Memory in Seoul. Foundries in Hsinchu. Power grids in Tokyo. These stocks do not need multiple expansion to perform. They need NVIDIA to keep shipping.
→ Pure-play volume capture
The APAC enablers tell a different story. They are less crowded than the US mega-cap AI trade, central to the buildout and driven more by volume capture than multiple expansion.
Where each stock sits in the stack
Layer 01
Memory Subsystem: Samsung & SK Hynix
Supplies high-bandwidth memory (HBM4) optimized for modern accelerator architectures.
Layer 02
Physical Fabrication: TSMC Foundry
Manages pure-play silicon wafer etching and critical advanced CoWoS packaging.
Layer 03
Architecture Core: NVIDIA (Fabless)
Conceives system logic blueprints (Blackwell/Vera Rubin platform architecture).
Layer 04
Deployment & Utilities: Alibaba Cloud & Hitachi
Operates localized ASIC data centre clusters and updates grid power infrastructure.
The thesis is direct: identify the companies supplying the raw materials, components and infrastructure, regardless of which AI model ultimately wins the commercial software race.
Five stocks across the AI infrastructure chain
Value Chain Stack Architecture // Individual Operators
01TSMC2330.TW
Taiwan Core Foundry
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company is the foundry that makes the most advanced processors used across NVIDIA's AI accelerator roadmap. There is no credible alternative at scale for the cutting-edge chips the industry currently requires. That gives TSMC significant strategic relevance in this cycle.
For Q1 2026, the company posted revenue of US$35.9 billion, up more than 40% year-on-year, with a gross margin of 66.2%. High-performance computing (HPC), including AI-related revenue, accounted for about 61% of Q1 revenue.
Q1 2026 RevUS$35.9B
Gross Margin66.2%
HPC Segment61%
Watchpoint: CoWoS packaging capacity is still the constraint to watch. Recent supply-chain estimates from TrendForce and Silicon Analysts indicate that TSMC's CoWoS lines are fully booked, with lead times stretching as far as 104 weeks and capacity meeting only around 80% of aggregate demand. The question is whether TSMC's committed US$52 billion to US$56 billion capital expenditure (capex) for 2026 helps close the gap before demand moves further ahead of capacity.
02Samsung Electronics005930.KS
South Korea Memory
Samsung sits one layer above the processing core in the AI chip stack, supplying the high-bandwidth memory (HBM) that helps advanced processors operate at the speeds artificial intelligence workloads demand.
Samsung says its sixth-generation HBM4 is now in mass production and designed for the Vera Rubin platform. That places Samsung inside the next phase of AI infrastructure demand, alongside other HBM suppliers competing for allocation across advanced systems.
Watchpoint: Global tariff headwinds and domestic labour negotiations are the main operational risks to monitor, alongside profitability metrics in Samsung's semiconductor division.
03SK Hynix000660.KS
South Korea Memory
SK Hynix pioneered earlier generations of HBM architecture and remains deeply integrated into the NVIDIA value chain. That relationship is visible in upstream data: FormFactor reported SK Hynix accounted for 29.5% of its Q1 2026 revenue, with NVIDIA accounting for another 10.2%.
SK Hynix is also reportedly evaluating whether its memory products can work with Intel's packaging technology. That move reads as a potential hedge against TSMC's constrained CoWoS capacity.
Watchpoint: Geographic concentration is a real pressure point. Any escalation in regional geopolitical tensions would feed directly into this heavily centralised component ecosystem.
04Alibaba GroupBABA / 9988.HK
China Cloud Infrastructure
While the semiconductor companies capture the manufacturing layer, Alibaba represents the enterprise adoption layer. China's 15th Five-Year Plan for 2026 to 2030 places significant emphasis on an "AI plus" initiative and technology self-reliance.
Alibaba gives investors exposure to China's domestic AI infrastructure push, including customised computing clusters using locally designed application-specific integrated circuits (ASICs) as an alternative to Western-restricted hardware.
Watchpoint: The pressure is margin support. Markets are watching whether consumer-facing revenue can recover strongly enough to support the cloud division while capital-intensive infrastructure spending remains elevated.
05Hitachi6501.T
Japan Grid Infrastructure
Hitachi is not a chip company. It is an industrial conglomerate with deep expertise in factory automation and power grid infrastructure. AI data centres consume enormous amounts of electricity, which can place serious pressure on power networks.
Hitachi recently announced a major collaboration with Intel covering factory automation, energy infrastructure and custom chip design. Hitachi links the digital AI story with the infrastructure layer in Japan, where grid investment, automation and industrial efficiency are becoming part of the same conversation.
Watchpoint: Japanese manufacturers still face margin pressure from elevated domestic energy costs. Material cost inflation also remains a drag on industrial margins.
Macro Matrix Catalyst
16 June 2026
The APAC Central Bank Double-Header
This is the main macro date APAC tech traders need to watch.
Reserve Bank of Australia
4.35% Base
Hold Expected
A hawkish hold is expected as policymakers weigh energy-driven inflation. The RBA's posture is likely to remain important for the yield floor in Australian dollar carry trades.
Bank of Japan
1.00% Projected
66% Hike Prob.
Markets are pricing a 66% probability of a move to 1.00% as policymakers weigh yen weakness and the risk of a disorderly breach of the 160.00 level.
Bottom Line
Do not just watch the green candles in New York. The broader AI infrastructure story runs through memory in Seoul, foundries in Hsinchu and power grids in Tokyo. For traders, the task is to understand which parts of the hardware stack are most exposed before the next macro catalyst arrives. On 16 June, central bank decisions in Australia and Japan could shift the backdrop for APAC technology names.
Intel’s reported Google TPU order has injected fresh drama into the AI chip race.
Intel, TSMC and the AI Chip Squeeze | GO Markets Insights
For most of the artificial intelligence (AI) boom, the market has treated Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) as the toll road everyone had to use. Nvidia, Apple, AMD, Broadcom and many major AI chip players relied on its manufacturing capacity.
Now that story is getting more complicated.
Intel reportedly jumped more than 11% on Monday, 8 June 2026, after reports that Google had placed an order for more than 3 million custom tensor processing units (TPUs) with Intel Foundry for delivery from 2028.
That does not make Intel the new TSMC. It does suggest the market is asking a sharper question: what happens when the AI boom starts running into capacity limits?
Demand for leading-edge wafers and advanced packaging has grown faster than the supply chain can comfortably absorb. That pressure is now forcing major AI customers to consider alternatives, not necessarily because they are abandoning TSMC, but because they may need more than one route to production.
One answer that emerged on Monday was Intel.
Google has reportedly placed an order with Intel to manufacture more than three million in-house tensor processing units in 2028. Nvidia is also reportedly evaluating Intel’s advanced packaging and 18A process for future chips, according to The Information, which cited people with direct knowledge of the talks.
Why Intel moved
Intel shares rose roughly 11% on Monday, closing at US$110.27. The move added to a sharp 2026 rally and signalled that investors may be reassessing Intel’s role in the AI supply chain.
“The AI boom appears to be testing the physical limits of capacity in Taiwan. Intel may be one of the few US companies with infrastructure that could absorb part of the overflow.”
To understand why Monday's news mattered so much, it helps to understand one often-overlooked part of chipmaking: advanced packaging.
Building an AI chip is not just about making the chip itself. Manufacturers also need to connect the processor, memory and other components together so they can work as a single system. That final assembly step is known as advanced packaging.
TSMC dominates one of the most important packaging technologies, called CoWoS (Chip on Wafer on Substrate). The challenge is that demand for CoWoS has surged alongside the AI boom.
Nvidia alone is expected to account for about 60% of global CoWoS demand in 2026, while Broadcom and AMD are expected to take another 26%. That leaves relatively little capacity available for smaller AI chip developers and custom chip makers.
CoWoS
2026 Demand
Projected Advanced Packaging Demand
Nvidia60%
Broadcom & AMD26%
Other Developers / ASICs14%
Projected CoWoS demand concentration in 2026. Nvidia, Broadcom and AMD are expected to absorb most available advanced packaging capacity, leaving a smaller share for other developers and ASIC vendors. Figures are illustrative and based on reported industry estimates.
In simple terms, demand for AI chips is growing so quickly that one of the industry's key manufacturing steps is becoming a bottleneck.
Where Intel may fit
Intel has been developing its own alternative packaging technology, called EMIB, or Embedded Multi-die Interconnect Bridge. The technical details are complex, but the market point is simple: Intel believes EMIB can support large AI chip designs and may become an alternative to TSMC’s CoWoS for some workloads.
Intel’s EMIB has reportedly gained traction at Google and Meta, with production yields said to reach around 90%. Yield refers to the percentage of chips that come off the production line working properly. Higher yields generally mean lower costs and more reliable manufacturing.
The geopolitical angle also matters. Some chips made at TSMC’s Arizona facility may still need advanced packaging in Taiwan before final delivery. That weakens the idea of a fully onshore supply chain and helps explain why US-based packaging capacity is getting more attention.
1
Fabrication
Dies etched at TSMC facility in Arizona, USA.
→
2
Transit
Partly completed chips shipped over the Pacific.
→
3
Assembly
Advanced packaging applied back in Taiwan.
→
4
Distribution
Finished hardware distributed to end markets.
This packaging dependency complicates the local assembly objective behind the US onshore framework.
The extended fabrication and packaging loop. Chips fabricated in Arizona may still require advanced packaging in Taiwan before final distribution, highlighting a potential supply chain vulnerability.
The Intel story is not just about one company winning a contract. It is a signal about where the AI supply chain may be heading.
When Google, one of TSMC’s key customers, reportedly tests a competitor’s packaging technology and then places a multi-million-unit order, the market hears several things at once: TSMC’s capacity constraints may be pushing customers toward alternatives, Intel’s technology may be gaining credibility, and the old “Intel is too far behind to matter” narrative may need updating.
Intel has gained approximately 422% over the past 12 months, an unusually large move for a large-cap semiconductor stock. For traders, the transmission effect is broader than Intel alone. A stronger Intel foundry story may attract capital into US semiconductor names and create a relative value debate between Intel and TSMC, not because TSMC is in trouble, but because its near-monopoly premium is being reassessed.
INTC vs TSM, relative performance in 2026
Year to date (YTD) performance to 9 June 2026. Figures are approximate and provided for illustrative market context.
~+175%
INTC
Intel Corp
~-30%
TSM
TSMC
~-60%
NVDA
NVIDIA
~-25%
SOX
PHLX Semi
Assets and names to watch
A structural shift in foundry dynamics ripples outward across key technology components. Monitor this streamlined breakdown to scan positioning profiles.
Name
Why it matters
What to watch
Intel Corporation
US foundry challenger. The reported Google TPU order and Nvidia trials support the second-source story, but foundry losses and execution risk remain the key limits.
Google order final confirmation, 18A process yields, structural foundry unit losses.
TSMC
Still the dominant global foundry. The risk is not immediate share loss, but that capacity limits create space for alternatives to gain relevance.
The demand engine behind much of the AI supply chain pressure. Its Intel trials matter, but testing does not equal a production shift.
Whether multi-project wafer trials translate into high-volume commercial production orders.
SMH ETF
Broad semiconductor exposure through a basket containing TSMC, NVIDIA and Intel.
Useful for tracking whether the story is stock-specific or sector-wide.
Bull case, cautionary case and what could go wrong
The supportive case for Intel is easy to understand. AI demand remains strong, TSMC capacity stays tight and major customers are looking for credible second-source manufacturing options. If Intel can turn reported trials and early customer interest into commercial production, the market may continue to treat its foundry strategy as more credible.
But this is still a conditional story, not a completed turnaround.
Intel’s foundry unit posted an operating loss of approximately US$10.3 billion in fiscal 2025, while the stock has already rallied about 175% year to date (YTD). That leaves less room for disappointment if future updates fall short.
The biggest technical test is 18A. Intel needs its manufacturing process to reach yields that commercial customers can rely on. Yield refers to the share of chips that come out usable. If Q2 disclosures disappoint, confidence in the foundry story could weaken.
Customer confirmation also matters. NVIDIA has not placed a production order with Intel. Reported Feynman architecture trials are still early stage, and testing does not guarantee committed production volume.
TSMC is another constraint on the Intel bull case. It is targeting CoWoS capacity of approximately 130,000 to 140,000 wafers per month by 2026 to 2027. If that expansion catches up with demand, the pressure pushing customers toward alternatives may ease.
There is also the broader AI spending cycle. If hyperscalers such as Google, Microsoft, Amazon and Meta slow infrastructure spending, the whole semiconductor sector could come under pressure, regardless of Intel’s progress.
The key variables to watch are customer confirmation, 18A yield progress, Intel foundry pipeline updates, TSMC capacity expansion and whether AI infrastructure spending remains strong.
Key takeaway
The semiconductor space is no longer just about raw processor speeds, it has become an execution battleground for advanced packaging capacity and global footprint resilience.
Part one of GO's educational series, designed to help new traders understand the key forces that shape global markets.
Every day, traders watch gold, oil and equities move, looking for the next catalyst. But behind almost every major market move is an invisible force shaping the direction: the US dollar.
Many traders treat it as just another pair to trade. That can leave a major part of the market story out. When traders look at gold, oil or the Australian dollar, they may also be taking a view on the US dollar, whether they realise it or not.
Why the US dollar matters
The US dollar is the world’s reserve currency. It is the denominator for global trade, commodities and risk, so when the dollar moves, the impact can ripple across almost every market traders watch.
In financial markets, the dollar is typically measured by the US Dollar Index (DXY): a benchmark that tracks the value of the US dollar against a basket of six major currencies. The Euro carries the heaviest weighting, followed by the Japanese yen, British pound, Canadian dollar, Swedish krona, and Swiss franc.
Because the US dollar is the world's reserve currency, it acts as the backbone of the global financial system. Central banks hold it in their reserves. International trade is settled in it. Major commodities are priced in it.
When commentators talk about "dollar strength" or "dollar weakness," they are referring to the DXY moving up or down against these peers.
DXY
100%
Index Composition
EUR57.6%
JPY13.6%
GBP11.9%
CAD9.1%
SEK4.2%
CHF3.6%
Why traders watch the dollar, even when they don't realise it
Because the dollar is the pricing unit for so many global assets, its movement mechanically affects their prices. Four connections matter most for traders already active in these markets.
1. Gold (XAU/USD) is priced in dollars. A stronger dollar can make gold more expensive for buyers holding other currencies, which may weigh on price. The reverse can also apply when the dollar weakens.
2. Oil (WTI and Brent) often follows a similar dynamic. USD strength tends to weigh on crude prices; USD weakness often provides support.
3. AUD/USD is a risk-sensitive currency pair with strong links to commodities and global growth sentiment. It typically falls when the US dollar strengthens and global risk appetite weakens, creating a double headwind for the pair.
4. US equities, including the S&P 500, can also feel the pressure. A persistently strong dollar weighs on the earnings of US multinationals because their overseas revenues translate back into fewer dollars at home. That earnings drag flows into index valuations.
Gold · XAU/USD
More expensive for foreign buyers
↓
Oil · WTI/Brent
Dollar pricing creates headwind
↓
AUD/USD
Risk + commodity currency double hit
↓
S&P 500
Multinational earnings drag
↓
Typical directional impacts when the US dollar strengthens. Tendencies, not guarantees.
What moves the US dollar
The dollar does not move in a vacuum, rather, it responds to five main forces. Understanding these forces can help traders move beyond reacting to price and start reading the context behind it.
What moves the US dollar
Fed/US interest rates
Rate differentials drive capital flows. Higher US rates attract capital into USD assets, increasing demand for the currency.
↓ tap to expand
Strengthens
The Fed raises rates or signals fewer cuts than markets expected
Weakens
The Fed cuts rates or signals a more dovish path
US economic growth
Strong growth attracts foreign investment and sustains demand for USD. Growth divergence is one of the most persistent drivers of currency trends.
↓ tap to expand
Strengthens
US grows faster than other major economies
Weakens
US growth slows or disappoints relative to peers
Risk sentiment (safe haven)
The dollar is often treated as one of the world’s key safe-haven currencies. In genuine crises, USD demand surges as institutions sell risk assets and hoard cash.
↓ tap to expand
Strengthens
Global panic, equity sell-offs, credit stress
Weakens
Risk appetite returns; traders move into higher-yield assets
Inflation data (CPI/PCE)
Inflation can move markets because it changes expectations for the Fed, which can then flow through to the dollar. Watch what the data implies for rates, not just the headline number.
↓ tap to expand
Strengthens
Inflation runs hot and the Fed is expected to hike
Weakens
Inflation cools and rate cut expectations rise
Global dollar liquidity
Strong offshore demand for USD, used to settle trade and service debt, can drive the currency independently of US domestic fundamentals.
↓ tap to expand
Strengthens
Dollar funding stress; shortage of USD offshore
Weakens
Abundant liquidity; Fed QE or swap lines activated
Watch this, not just that
Don't just watch whether the dollar is rising or falling. Watch why it is moving.
A dollar rally driven by US growth is different from a dollar rally driven by global panic. The first is a risk-on signal. The second is a risk-off signal. The markets that may benefit, and the ones that may come under pressure, can be very different in each case.
Three common US dollar scenarios to recognise
The diagram below maps a simple if and then chain: macro catalyst, dollar mechanism and potential asset impact.
Macro Catalyst
Fed holds or hikes rates
Dollar Mechanism
USD strengthens
Capital flows into USD assets
Asset Impact
Gold ↓Oil ↓AUD/USD ↓
Macro Catalyst
Fed pivots dovish
Dollar Mechanism
USD weakens
Capital flows out of USD assets
Asset Impact
Gold ↑Oil ↑AUD/USD ↑
Macro Catalyst
Global panic/risk-off
Dollar Mechanism
USD spikes
Safe-haven demand surges
Asset Impact
Equities ↓Risk FX ↓Gold ↕
Common trap
Assuming that a stronger US dollar is always good news.
For traders with long exposure to gold, oil, AUD/USD or emerging market equities, a rising dollar can act as a headwind. It may push commodity prices lower, pressure resource-linked currencies and weigh on markets priced in USD. USD strength may benefit USD cash holders and some domestic US equity investors. But for traders exposed to commodities and FX, the effect is often more complicated.
The mistake is treating the dollar as a neutral barometer. It is not neutral. It has a direction, and that direction can affect almost every position you hold.
When the dollar may deserve closer attention
The dollar may deserve closer attention around events that shift Federal Reserve expectations or rattle global risk appetite.
CPI/inflation releases: Inflation can move markets because it changes expectations for the Fed, which can then flow through to the dollar. Watch what the data implies for rates, not just the headline number.
Federal Reserve meetings: Rate decisions and forward guidance directly reprice the dollar. The statement and press conference often matter more than the actual decision.
Non-Farm Payrolls and jobs data: Strong employment can reduce expectations for near-term rate cuts. Weak jobs data can increase expectations for Fed easing. Both move USD significantly.
Major risk-off event: Geopolitical shocks, banking stress, or sharp equity sell-offs can trigger sudden safe-haven demand for USD, causing rapid spikes in dollar strength regardless of underlying US fundamentals.
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Key takeaway
The US dollar is not just another market input. It is one of the main reference points global markets keep coming back to.