Is It Finally Time to Buy This Incredibly Cheap Semiconductor Stock Following Its Latest Crash?

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The year went from bad to worse for Applied Materials (NASDAQ: AMAT) investors last week when shares of the company crashed 9% following the Nov. 14 release of its fiscal 2024 fourth-quarter results (for the three months ended Oct. 27).

Though the semiconductor equipment supplier's revenue and earnings exceeded expectations, the outlook wasn't solid enough to satisfy Wall Street. Not surprisingly, investors pressed the panic button. Applied Materials stock has now lost 34% of its value since hitting a 52-week high in early July this year.

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However, there were certain silver linings for investors in Applied Materials' latest results. Let's take a closer look at the sharp pullback in the company's stock price to see if it's a buying opportunity for investors.

Applied Materials' growth is gradually picking up

Applied Materials' fiscal Q4 revenue jumped 5% year over year to a record $7.05 billion, while adjusted earnings increased 9% to $2.32 per share. Analysts would have settled for $2.19 per share in earnings on revenue of $6.97 billion, but the strong demand for the company's manufacturing equipment needed for making artificial intelligence (AI) chips helped it beat expectations.

For instance, sales of the company's foundry and logic equipment increased 12% from the prior-year period on account of the growing demand for gate-all-around (GAA) transistor nodes, which are being used by the likes of Samsung to manufacture AI chips. GAA technology should improve going forward as it is the successor to the fin field-effect transistor (FinFET) technology.

GAA is said to be more powerful and efficient than FinFET technology and it is expected to help chipmakers make advanced chips for multiple applications ranging from AI to graphics cards to gaming to automotive to 5G connectivity. On its latest earnings conference call, Applied Materials CEO Gary Dickerson remarked:

Overall, the transition from a FinFET-based node to node with gate-all-around transistors and backside power distribution grows Applied's available market from around $12 billion to approximately $14 billion for every 100,000 wafer starts per month of capacity.

More importantly, Dickerson is confident that the company will be able to "capture more than 50% of the process equipment spending for the gate-all-around nodes." Applied Materials generated $2.5 billion in revenue thanks to the demand for GAA equipment in fiscal 2024, a number that it expects to double in the new fiscal year.