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Applied Materials (NASDAQ: AMAT) has underperformed the broader semiconductor sector over the past six months, dropping more than 18% compared to flat performance for the PHLX Semiconductor Sector index over the same period. The company's latest quarterly results aren't going to help change its fortunes, either.
The supplier of chip manufacturing equipment announced results for its fiscal 2025's first quarter (ended Jan. 26) on Feb. 13. Though its revenue and earnings outpaced Wall Street's expectations, the company's tepid guidance sent the stock down 8% the following day. Let's see why that was the case.
Export controls are going to hurt, but growth is still solid
The restrictions announced by the previous U.S. administration in the past couple of months have hampered Applied Materials' Chinese business. In the words of CEO Gary Dickerson on the latest earnings conference call:
The ability of U.S. companies to serve the China market is constrained and has been further limited by updated trade rules announced in December and January. We estimate the incremental impact of these new rules will be around $400 million of revenue in fiscal 2025, approximately half of which is service revenue.
This explains why Applied Materials' revenue guidance of $7.1 billion for the current quarter is lower than the $7.22 billion consensus estimate. The good part is that Applied Materials' guidance suggests that its top line is on track to jump by almost 7% year over year in the current quarter despite the headwinds. That will be an improvement over the flat performance it delivered in the year-ago period.
What's more, the midpoint of the earnings per share guidance of $2.30 points toward a double-digit jump from the year-ago period, when Applied Materials reported an increase of just 5% in its bottom line. The company's growth in the current quarter is almost in line with what it reported in the fiscal first quarter.
Investors, therefore, seem to be missing the bigger picture. Applied Materials is navigating the restrictions on providing sales and service support to China nicely and is clocking better results than it was last year. Moreover, Applied Materials' management sees "China being a smaller portion of global wafer fab equipment spending in 2025."
Industry association SEMI is forecasting a 7% increase in semiconductor manufacturing equipment spending this year following last year's jump of 6.5%. The forecast for 2026 is even better, with an expected jump of nearly 15%. So, Applied Materials seems to have enough opportunity beyond China to grow its sales and earnings in the current fiscal year and beyond.