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Special Report
ASML Falls Post-Earnings, Chip-Making Expansion Anchors OutlookReported by Leo Miller. Posted: 4/16/2026. 
Key Points
- After shares of ASML boomed in 2025 and continued gaining in 2026, markets sold off after the company's latest earnings report.
- However, ASML significantly raised its full-year guidance, providing a strong positive indicator going forward.
- Rising chip-making capacity is a key tailwind, while ASML's Chinese business is a pressure point.
- Special Report: Elon Musk: This Could Turn $100 into $100,000
Semiconductor manufacturing equipment maker ASML Holding (NASDAQ: ASML) surged in 2025 and has continued to perform well. Shares returned nearly 56% last year, and 2026 has seen further gains — the stock is up more than 35% year to date, despite a 2.4% dip after ASML's latest earnings report. Given the recent rally, ASML's encouraging results, and its long-term outlook, the stock remains constructive. Here's what investors should know. ASML Earnings: Solid Beats, Mixed Guidance
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In Q1 2026, the Dutch advanced lithography maker reported sales up 13% year over year (YOY) to €8.77 billion (about $10.35 billion), just above analyst estimates of $10.24 billion. The company also beat on the bottom line, posting diluted earnings per share of €7.15 (about $8.44), a 19% YOY increase versus estimates of €7.68 per share. Guidance for Q2, however, was lighter than analysts expected. At the midpoint ASML forecast revenue of €8.7 billion (around $10.27 billion), below the analyst consensus of €9.08 billion (approximately $10.72 billion). It's often not worth reading too much into a single-quarter miss for ASML because individual quarter results can be lumpy. Its machines are extremely expensive — the company's most advanced high-NA extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography tool costs around $400 million — so the timing of one or two machine deliveries can swing quarterly revenue materially. That makes full-year guidance a fairer barometer. On that front ASML impressed, raising its midpoint full-year 2026 sales forecast to €38 billion (about $44.84 billion), up from a prior midpoint of €36.5 billion (roughly $43.07 billion) and above consensus of €37.75 billion (around $44.55 billion). Still, the full-year beat was modest and Q2 guidance missed expectations, which likely contributed to the post-earnings pullback as investors had already priced in strong performance. Two key dynamics to watch going forward are ASML's constrained sales capacity and developments in China. Manufacturing Buildouts Support Strong Multi-Year DemandASML's ability to convert demand into near-term sales is constrained by customers' limits on installation capacity. Many logic and memory manufacturers lack the clean-room space needed to install additional machines, and building new fabs or significant clean-room expansions can take years. While capacity expansions are underway, they will take time to come online. Several major customers have announced large capital expenditure plans that will support multi-year demand for ASML equipment. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing (NYSE: TSM) expects to spend roughly $54 billion on CapEx in 2026, about a 32% increase versus 2025. Micron Technology (NASDAQ: MU) forecasts CapEx of $25 billion for 2026 — an 81% increase YOY — and expects it to rise further in 2027. Samsung's 2026 CapEx projection is about $28 billion and SK Hynix's is $24.5 billion. Many of these expansions will not be fully operational until 2027 or 2028. In short, the demand for ASML's machines is strong; the primary bottleneck is customers' installation capacity. As fabs and clean rooms come online, that bottleneck should ease, supporting ASML's long-term outlook. China Sales Drop, MATCH Act LoomsSales to China fell roughly 23% YOY, accounting for about 19% of total revenue. That decline largely reflects a normalization after a 2025 surge, when Chinese customers accelerated purchases ahead of tighter export controls. A further risk is the proposed Multilateral Alignment of Technology Controls on Hardware (MATCH) Act, introduced by a bipartisan group in Congress. The bill would seek to ban sales of deep ultraviolet (DUV) lithography machines to China. DUV equipment represents a majority of ASML's China sales (ASML has not sold EUV machines there), so a DUV ban would materially curtail its addressable market in China. ASML says its 2026 guidance range “accommodates potential outcomes of ongoing discussions around export control.” ASML: Chip Equipment Stalwart Facing High ExpectationsOverall, ASML remains well positioned given multi-year demand drivers driven by fab expansions. China-related export risks are meaningful but uncertain, as the fate of the MATCH Act is unresolved. As of mid-April 2026, ASML appears neither substantially undervalued nor overvalued, and after the latest results analysts at major investment banks kept their Buy ratings. |
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