ASML shows chasm in chip land: AI winners versus everyone else

In This Article:

(Bloomberg) — There’s a growing divide in the $530 billion semiconductor industry between the companies that are riding the artificial intelligence wave and those that aren’t. And looking at the early returns from this earnings season, that gulf could soon widen into an abyss.

Most Read from Bloomberg

“Without AI, the market would be very sad,” Christophe Fouquet, chief executive of ASML Holding NV (ASML), said last week on a conference call after the Dutch chip production equipment maker cut its sales forecast for 2025 due to sluggish demand in everything other than AI.

ASML’s results sparked a new round of worries about the health of the chip industry, which is being hurt by weakness in key businesses like personal computers and automobiles. It also has been caught up in the rising geopolitical tensions between the US and China that could cut off access to the Chinese chip market, which is the biggest in the world.

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSM, 2330.TW), which includes Apple Inc. (AAPL) and Nvidia Corp. (NVDA) among its customers, assuaged some of those fears after lifting its revenue forecast for 2024. While its growth is being fueled by AI-related drivers, overall chip demand has “stabilized” and is starting to improve, Chief Executive Officer C.C. Wei said.

The Philadelphia Stock Exchange Semiconductor Index, better known by its symbol SOX (^SOX), tumbled last week, losing 5.3% on Tuesday alone before paring its losses following TSMC’s results on Thursday. To highlight the bifurcation, semiconductor equipment makers like ASML and Lam Research Corp. (LRCX) were among the leading decliners, while several chipmakers, including Marvell Technology Inc. (MRVL), managed to rise.

“We should expect this kind of divergence to continue, since it is completely correct to assume it is all AI,” said Gabelli Funds research analyst Ryuta Makino, who sees the separate paths remaining until at least 2025.

Chip creators

The semiconductor business is often viewed as a barometer for the global economy since chips are vital for a range of products, from data center servers to dishwashers. The companies that provide the equipment used to create these chips are on the industry’s front lines.

Before semiconductor companies can begin production, it takes months to build, install and test the machines used to manufacture the chips. As a result, companies like ASML have unusually long-range views of how their customers are feeling. At the moment, they’re flashing a caution signal for everything other than AI. For example, automotive and industrial suppliers are experiencing a demand slump as clients sit on elevated inventories.