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Additional Reading from MarketBeat Media
ASML Falls Post-Earnings, Chip-Making Expansion Anchors OutlookAuthored by Leo Miller. Publication Date: 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: Sell 99% of Your Stocks, Do THIS Instead…
Semiconductor manufacturing equipment maker ASML Holding (NASDAQ: ASML) took off in 2025 and hasn't looked back. Shares returned nearly 56% last year, and 2026 has seen more of the same — the stock is up more than 35% on the year despite falling 2.4% after ASML's latest earnings report. Given recent gains, encouraging results and a constructive long-term outlook, ASML remains a focal point for investors. Here's what to know. ASML Earnings: Solid Beats, Mixed Guidance
In Q1 2026, the Dutch advanced lithography maker reported sales rising 13% year over year (YOY) to €8.77 billion (about $10.35 billion), slightly above analyst estimates of $10.24 billion. The company also beat on the bottom line, posting diluted EPS of €7.15 (about $8.44), up 19% YOY and comfortably above estimates of €7.68 per share. Guidance for Q2, however, was light. At the midpoint, ASML forecasts revenue of €8.7 billion (about $10.27 billion) versus analyst expectations of €9.08 billion (about $10.72 billion). Quarterly results can be lumpy for ASML because its machines carry very high price tags. For example, the company's most advanced high-NA extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography machine costs around $400 million. Selling or not selling a single unit can swing quarterly revenue materially, so a one-unit shift can bring guidance and expectations into alignment. That is why annual guidance is a fairer gauge of ASML’s trajectory. The company raised its full-year 2026 midpoint revenue guidance to €38 billion (about $44.84 billion), up from the prior midpoint of €36.5 billion (about $43.07 billion), and slightly above consensus estimates of €37.75 billion (about $44.55 billion). Still, the full-year beat was modest and Q2 guidance disappointed, and investors often assign outsized importance to near-term numbers. These dynamics likely contributed to the stock’s post-earnings decline, since much of the strong performance had already been priced in. Looking ahead, two key dynamics to watch are ASML's constrained sales capacity and developments in China. Manufacturing Buildouts Support Strong Multi-Year DemandASML’s ability to convert robust demand into immediate sales is constrained by its customers’ limited capacity to take delivery and install equipment. Many customers lack the clean-room space required for these machines, and adding significant clean-room capacity typically requires building new fabrication facilities — a multi-year process. Notable capex plans underline future demand: Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing (NYSE: TSM) expects to spend about $54 billion on capital expenditures in 2026, roughly a 32% increase year over year. Micron Technology (NASDAQ: MU) forecasts an 81% YOY jump in CapEx to $25 billion in 2026 and expects further increases in 2027. Samsung Electronics (OTCMKTS: SSNLF) projects $28 billion, and SK Hynix $24.5 billion. Many of these facility expansions are not expected to come online until 2027 or 2028. In short, the demand is present, but conversion to sales is time-shifted by construction cycles — a primary reason for ASML’s optimistic long-term outlook. China Sales Drop, MATCH Act LoomsIn Q1, sales to China declined roughly 23% YOY, falling to 19% of total revenue. That pullback reflects a normalization after Chinese customers front-loaded purchases in 2025 ahead of anticipated export controls. But ASML's business in China could weaken further if proposed legislation advances. The bipartisan Multilateral Alignment of Technology Controls on Hardware (MATCH) Act would, if enacted, ban sales of deep ultraviolet (DUV) lithography machines to China. ASML has not sold EUV machines in China, and DUV accounts for a large portion of its Chinese sales, so a DUV ban would materially reduce ASML's addressable market there. The company states that its 2026 guidance range "accommodates potential outcomes of ongoing discussions around export control." ASML: Chip Equipment Stalwart Facing High ExpectationsASML remains well positioned given multi-year secular tailwinds, constrained near-term supply conversion and substantial customer capex plans. The China-related regulatory risk is meaningful, but whether the MATCH Act passes is still uncertain. As of mid-April 2026, ASML appears neither substantially undervalued nor overvalued, and analysts at major investment banks have maintained Buy ratings following the earnings release.
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