The chip recovery timeline is being pushed back again. Crucial industry supplier
ASML Holding
now expects chip-makers to hold off on investments next year, with the latest U.S.-China tensions acting as a headwind for the semiconductor sector.
ASML (ticker: ASML) supplies the ‘lithography’ machines that are essential for manufacturing semiconductors, with customers including Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing (TSM), Samsung Electronics (005930.Korea), and Intel (INTC). It is Europe’s most valuable technology company.
The Dutch company’s role means it is a bellwether for the semiconductor industry and the latest signs aren’t good.
“Customers continue to be uncertain about the shape of the demand recovery in the industry. We therefore expect 2024 to be a transition year,” ASML CEO Peter Wennink said in a statement alongside the company’s earnings on Wednesday.
ASML now expects its revenue to be broadly flat next year. The uncertainty seen by customers looks to have been heightened by the U.S.’s tighter restrictions on exports of artificial-intelligence chips, announced Tuesday.
“The new China restrictions announced by the U.S. government may also be partly responsible for the flat outlook, which ASML interprets as being applicable to a limited number of fabs in China,” wrote Jefferies analyst Janardan Menon in a research note.
ASML reported third-quarter net profit of €1.89 billion ($2.0 billion) compared with €1.94 billion for the second quarter. Net sales came to €6.67 billion, down from €6.90 billion the preceding quarter.
More worryingly, net bookings for the quarter fell to €2.60 billion from €4.50 billion. Jefferies’ Menon had forecast bookings of €4.50 billion for the quarter. Bookings for extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography machines, ASML’s most advanced systems, came to €500 million. ASML’s EUV systems take 18 months to build and it is barred from selling them to China.
For the fourth quarter, ASML said it expects to report net sales of between €6.7 billion and €7.1 billion with a gross margin between 50% and 51%. It reiterated its full-year guidance of net sales growth toward 30%.
U.S.-listed shares of ASML were down 1.0% in premarket trading. American depositary receipts of
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing
were down 1.4% while Intel was down 0.4%, with tech stocks dropping more broadly amid elevated government bond yields.
Write to Adam Clark at [email protected]
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