Quarterly Outlook
Q1 Outlook for Traders: Five Big Questions and Three Grey Swans.
John J. Hardy
Global Head of Macro Strategy
ASML beat expectations and raised its outlook as artificial intelligence spending reaches chip factories.
Capacity plans suggest customers are accelerating real production, not merely discussing future demand.
Export controls, execution and a rich valuation leave less room for disappointment.
The artificial intelligence boom is moving from the digital world to the factory floor. On 15 July, ASML showed that the journey is speeding up.
The Dutch company reported second-quarter results above Bloomberg consensus across revenue, gross profit, net income and earnings per share, as the attached chart shows. More importantly, it lifted its full-year outlook and announced plans to increase manufacturing capacity.
ASML shares rose sharply in Amsterdam. The reaction matters because ASML sits near the narrowest point of the global chip supply chain. When its customers accelerate plans, digital excitement is turning into physical equipment orders.
ASML does not design artificial intelligence models or sell cloud services. It makes lithography machines, which use light to draw the microscopic patterns that become transistors on a chip.
Its most advanced extreme ultraviolet systems are essential for producing leading-edge processors and memory chips. ASML is the only company making these machines at commercial scale, giving it an unusually strong position.
The chain is simple. Technology groups spend on data centres. Chipmakers such as Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, Samsung and SK Hynix expand production. ASML supplies the equipment that makes those expansions possible.
The strongest signal was not the earnings beat itself. Quarterly results can shift because a few expensive machines arrive earlier or later than expected.
The more important message was management’s decision to raise its 2026 sales and margin outlook again. Customers appear to be giving ASML enough visibility to plan years ahead, rather than merely hoping demand remains strong.
ASML plans to increase capacity for both extreme ultraviolet and deep ultraviolet machines. Deep ultraviolet systems are older and less advanced, but remain essential for many everyday chips and manufacturing steps.
The company plans roughly 30% more capacity next year and is examining another increase in 2028. This is not the digital equivalent of adding a few cloud subscriptions.
ASML’s machines depend on precision optics, lasers, specialist parts, clean rooms and highly trained engineers. Higher output therefore supports a broad supplier network, but it also demands careful execution.
More machines create another benefit. Each one can generate years of service, maintenance and upgrade revenue. This installed-base business performed better than expected and gives ASML a more recurring income stream alongside equipment sales.
That matters because factory orders can be uneven. Service revenue does not remove the cycle, but it can make the ride less bumpy.
Intel has begun using ASML’s newest High Numerical Aperture extreme ultraviolet machine in chip production. The technology allows finer patterns, helping chipmakers place more computing power onto a small piece of silicon.
This suggests the machine is moving from technical promise towards commercial use. However, adoption may not be quick or uniform. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company has indicated that it can wait because the system is expensive.
That is a useful reminder. Even essential technology must make economic sense for customers. ASML does not need everyone to buy the newest machine immediately. It needs the industry to keep demanding more precise and productive manufacturing tools over time.
The first risk is slower artificial intelligence spending. Warning signs include weaker data-centre budgets, falling memory prices or delayed factory plans from major customers.
The second is geopolitics. Export controls already limit sales to China, while tighter rules could also affect servicing existing machines.
The third is execution. Expanding a complicated supply chain can create delays, higher costs or quality problems. ASML’s strong share-price rally also means expectations are high. A great company can still be a demanding stock.
Watch customer investment plans before focusing on one quarter’s sales.
Separate shipment timing from lasting demand by tracking multi-year capacity commitments.
Follow service revenue and margins to see whether growth creates durable economics.
Check portfolio concentration, since ASML may already sit inside European or technology funds.
ASML’s quarter is a reminder that artificial intelligence is not floating in a digital cloud. It needs factories, power, memory, packaging and some of the most complicated machines ever built. The results suggest chipmakers are still rushing to secure those machines, while ASML prepares to produce more of them.
That strengthens the long-term story, but it also raises the bar. Capacity must arrive on time, customers must keep spending and politics must not close too many doors. The opening idea still stands: the artificial intelligence boom is becoming increasingly physical. On 15 July, ASML showed that the factory floor is getting busier, the queue outside the clean room is still growing, and the pressure to deliver is rising with it.
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