ASML Holding N.V.
Equity Research Report
Report Date: June 11, 2026 | Data as of: Q1 2026 Earnings (April 15, 2026) | Sector: Semiconductors & Equipment | HQ: Veldhoven, Netherlands
Business Model — What Does ASML Actually Do?
ASML is a Dutch technology company founded in 1984 as a joint venture between Philips and ASM International. In simple terms: ASML builds the machines that build microchips. Every time TSMC, Samsung, or Intel manufactures a processor — for your smartphone, a data-center AI server, or a car — they use equipment made by ASML to “print” the circuit patterns onto silicon wafers with extraordinary precision.
Lithography is the step in chipmaking where a light source is used to expose a pattern onto a photosensitive layer on a wafer — essentially like a very high-precision photocopier for circuits. ASML’s most advanced systems use Extreme Ultraviolet (EUV) light with a wavelength of just 13.5 nanometers (a human hair is ~80,000nm wide) to print features smaller than any competing technology can achieve.
Each EUV machine is a school-bus-sized engineering marvel: it fires laser pulses at tin droplets to create plasma that emits the EUV light, then bounces that light off ultra-precise mirrors machined to within a fraction of an atom’s width. A single machine contains around 100,000 individual parts and takes two years to manufacture. ASML designs, assembles, and services these systems from its base in Veldhoven, Netherlands.
Revenue Streams
ASML generates revenue through two main pillars:
| Segment | What it includes | FY2025 Est. Mix | Key Metric |
|---|---|---|---|
| System Sales | New EUV and DUV lithography machines sold to chipmakers worldwide | ~75% | EUV = 48 units shipped in 2025 |
| EUV Systems | Low-NA EUV (NXE series, ~€180M/unit) + High-NA EUV (EXE series, >€350M/unit) | ~35% of total | €11.6B system revenue in 2025 (48% of sys. rev.) |
| DUV Systems | Deep UV ArFi immersion tools (131 units in 2025) + older KrF/i-line for mature nodes | ~40% of total | 131 immersion DUV units in 2025 |
| Installed Base Mgmt (IBM) | Service contracts, spare parts, field upgrades, and software for machines already in fabs | ~25% | €8.2B in FY2025 (+26% YoY) |
Why does this model matter for investors? System sales are lumpy (customers order in large batches), but IBM revenue is sticky and growing. As ASML’s installed fleet expands — now thousands of machines across fabs worldwide — the annuity-like service business becomes a larger and more predictable portion of total revenue. This is similar to the classic “sell razors, profit from blades” model, scaled to multi-billion-euro machines.
Geographic Revenue Mix (FY2025 estimates)
| Region | Est. Share of Revenue | Key Customers |
|---|---|---|
| Taiwan | ~35% (Q2 spike to 35%) | TSMC |
| South Korea | ~20–25% | Samsung, SK Hynix |
| China | ~33% in 2025; guided ~20% in 2026 | SMIC, CXMT, YMTC (DUV only) |
| USA / Europe / Japan | ~15–20% | Intel, Micron, Infineon |
Industry Trends
ASML operates at the intersection of multiple powerful secular trends that are reshaping the global technology landscape:
1. The AI Infrastructure Buildout. Every AI model trained or run requires semiconductors — GPUs, HBM memory, custom ASICs. TSMC, Samsung, and Intel are all racing to expand capacity at the leading edge (3nm, 2nm, and beyond), and every leading-edge chip requires multiple passes through an EUV machine. ASML’s CEO noted in January 2026 that customers shared “a notably more positive assessment of the medium-term market situation, primarily based on more robust expectations of the sustainability of AI-related demand.”
2. The High-NA EUV Ramp. ASML’s newest generation — the High-NA EUV (TWINSCAN EXE series, 0.55 NA) — enables features as small as 8nm in a single exposure, 2.9× denser than Low-NA can achieve. Intel and Samsung have taken early units. High-NA machines cost over €350 million each. As chipmakers transition from 2nm to 1.4nm nodes, High-NA becomes essential, representing a major multi-year revenue catalyst.
3. Memory Cycle Recovery. DRAM and NAND markets are recovering from a 2022–2023 downturn. High-Bandwidth Memory (HBM) — the stacked DRAM that feeds AI accelerators — is booming and requires advanced lithography tools. ASML guided that EUV revenues will increase significantly in 2026 as a result of dynamics in advanced Logic and DRAM.
4. CHIPS Act & Geopolitical Fab Diversification. The US, EU, Japan, and India are all subsidizing semiconductor manufacturing domestically. Intel’s Ohio and Arizona fabs, TSMC’s Arizona gigafab, and Samsung’s Texas fab all require ASML equipment, expanding geographic customer diversity and creating long-term structural demand outside of Taiwan and Korea.
Competitive Landscape
ASML’s competitive picture depends on which product line you’re examining. In EUV lithography, ASML has no competitor. In DUV and the broader semiconductor equipment market, it faces meaningful but narrow rivals.
Financial Performance
Annual Snapshot
| Metric | FY2024 | FY2025 | Q1 2026 | FY2026 Guide |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total Net Revenue | ~€28.3B | €32.7B | €8.8B | €36–40B |
| Gross Margin | ~51% | 52.8% | 53.0% | 51–53% |
| Net Income | ~€7.8B | €9.6B | €2.8B | N/A |
| Operating Margin | ~32% | ~34% | 36.0% | Guided stable |
| IBM (Service) Revenue | ~€6.5B | €8.2B (+26%) | ~€2.5B est. | Continued growth |
| Q4 Net Bookings | N/A | €13.2B (record) | N/A | — |
| Total Backlog | ~€39B | €38.8B | Elevated | Multi-year visibility |
Balance sheet highlights (Q1 2026 per SEC filing): Total assets €48.1B; shareholders’ equity €20.8B; debt/equity ratio ~0.24 — a conservatively levered balance sheet. The company returned capital via a €7.50/share dividend for 2025 (up 17% vs 2024) and announced a €12 billion share buyback program through 2028. Cash & equivalents stood at ~€8.4B at end of Q1 2026.
Valuation
Valuation is arguably the most contested aspect of ASML’s investment case in mid-2026. The stock has surged approximately 148% from its 52-week low, raising legitimate questions about how much of the fundamental story is already priced in.
| Metric | ASML (Jun 2026) | Semis Industry Median | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Trailing P/E | ~52–59x | ~30–35x | Premium for monopoly moat |
| Forward P/E (FY2026) | ~41–46x | ~35x | Convergence as earnings grow |
| EV/EBITDA | ~37x | ~20–25x | Significant premium |
| PEG Ratio | ~2.0x | ~1.5x | Elevated but growth warrants it |
| Price/Sales | ~14x | ~4–6x | Monopoly pricing power reflected |
| ROE | ~50% | ~15–20% | Best-in-class capital efficiency |
Growth Drivers
Near-term (2026–2027):
EUV system shipments are accelerating — ASML guided for at least 60 EUV systems in 2026 (vs 48 in 2025), rising to at least 80 per year by 2027. Q4 2025 net bookings hit a record €13.2 billion, of which €7.4 billion was EUV-specific. Q1 2026 results beat consensus: €8.8B in sales at 53% gross margin, prompting a full-year guidance raise to €36–40B.
Medium-term (2027–2030):
The High-NA EUV ramp is the single most important catalyst. Each EXE:5200B unit priced at >€350 million vs ~€180 million for a standard NXE scanner means the transition to High-NA will expand average selling prices significantly. High-NA units are projected to represent roughly one-quarter of EUV revenue by 2028, according to Counterpoint Research (February 2026). Simultaneously, the DRAM/HBM memory cycle adds a second structural growth leg beyond logic-only demand.
Long-term (2030 and beyond):
ASML is in early feasibility studies for Hyper-NA EUV — the generation beyond High-NA — targeting the 2030s. IBM/service revenue will continue compounding as the installed fleet grows. CHIPS Act-driven fab construction in the US and Europe adds new customers in new geographies. Semiconductor content per vehicle (automotive), per data center, and per consumer device continues to expand.
Key Risks
| Risk | Severity | Explanation |
|---|---|---|
| China Export Controls | High | China accounted for 33% of ASML’s revenue in 2025. The Netherlands and US have progressively restricted DUV immersion exports to China. ASML expects China to fall to ~20% of 2026 revenue. A proposed US MATCH Act could tighten restrictions further. Q1 2026 saw China fall to 19% of system sales. Revenue at risk from further restrictions is estimated by analysts at a “single digit” % of total sales, but uncertainty is elevated. |
| Semiconductor Cyclicality | High | Semiconductor capital spending is notoriously cyclical. Chipmakers over-order in booms and cancel/defer orders in downturns. While the AI-driven cycle appears durable, a demand shock (recession, AI investment pause, consumer spending collapse) could impact equipment orders. ASML stopped publishing quarterly bookings data in April 2026, reducing visibility for investors. |
| Taiwan Geopolitical Risk | High | TSMC — ASML’s largest customer estimated at ~40% of EUV demand — is based in Taiwan. A geopolitical crisis in the Taiwan Strait could disrupt ASML’s largest revenue source and create global semiconductor supply chaos. This is a tail risk but a material one. |
| High-NA Ramp Execution | Medium | High-NA EUV is the most complex machine ever built. Throughput targets of 175–220 wafers/hour are ambitious. Early adoption is concentrated at Intel (18A node) and Samsung — both companies with track records of manufacturing delays. A stumble in customer adoption timelines would delay ASML’s High-NA revenue ramp. |
| Valuation / Re-rating Risk | Medium | At 52–59x trailing P/E — 62% above ASML’s own 10-year historical average — the stock has significant multiple compression risk if growth disappoints. The stock fell ~6–7% after Q1 2026 earnings despite beating estimates, suggesting high expectations are already priced in. |
| Canon NIL / Competitive Disruption | Low (LT) | Canon’s Nanoimprint Lithography technology can achieve 14nm-equivalent patterning at much lower cost and power than EUV for certain applications. Canon plans 10–20 NIL units per year in coming years. Not a near-term threat, but a long-term risk worth monitoring for specific use cases. |
| Supply Chain Concentration | Medium | ASML depends on Carl Zeiss SMT (Germany) as the sole supplier of the optics inside both EUV and High-NA machines. Any disruption at Zeiss — fire, labor action, geopolitical incident — could halt production. ASML owns a stake in Zeiss SMT and co-invests heavily to manage this risk. |
Bull / Base / Bear Cases
Research Summary
ASML — The Analyst’s View in Plain Language
ASML occupies a position that is genuinely rare in the global technology economy: it is the sole supplier of a critical manufacturing technology with no credible near-term substitute. Every leading-edge semiconductor chip — AI GPUs, smartphone processors, HBM memory — requires ASML’s EUV machines to be manufactured. Without them, the semiconductor roadmaps of TSMC, Samsung, Intel, and SK Hynix simply cannot progress.
What the bull case rests on: a multi-decade AI infrastructure buildout that requires continuous chipmaker capacity expansion, a €38.8 billion order backlog providing multi-year revenue visibility, and a High-NA EUV ramp that materially lifts average selling prices. The Installed Base Management business — now €8.2B/year and growing 26% — compounds quietly in the background.
What keeps analysts cautious: a trailing P/E of 52–59x sits 62% above ASML’s own 10-year average, leaving limited margin for error. China’s gradual exclusion from advanced tools removes a revenue stream that was 33% of sales in 2025. Semiconductor cycles are real, and a correction in AI capex would expose the stock to significant multiple compression. The geopolitical shadow over Taiwan — home to ASML’s largest customer TSMC — remains an unquantifiable tail risk.
The structural conclusion: ASML’s competitive moat — built over 30 years of R&D in laser physics, plasma science, and ultra-precision optics — is as durable as any in technology. The technology leadership argument is compelling. The question every investor must answer for themselves is whether the current valuation price adequately compensates for cyclical and geopolitical risks, and how much of the “AI forever” narrative is already embedded in today’s share price.
Primary Sources Referenced
ASML Q4 2025 Full-Year Earnings Release, January 28, 2026 (asml.com) · ASML Q1 2026 Earnings Release, April 15, 2026 (SEC Form 6-K) · ASML 2025 Annual Report — Financials Section (asml.com) · CNBC “ASML Q4 2025 Earnings Report”, January 28, 2026 · Tom’s Hardware “ASML Lithography Roadmap Examined”, May 2026 · Tom’s Hardware “ASML Projects $71B by 2030”, January 2026 · Counterpoint Research “ASML 2025 Revenue Up 16% YoY”, February 2026 · TIKR.com “ASML Stock Raises 2026 Guidance After Q1 Beat”, April 2026 · StockAnalysis.com Valuation Metrics (June 2026) · GuruFocus Forward PE & GF Value (June 2026) · FullRatio.com Historical P/E Analysis (June 2026) · CNBC “ASML Shares Fall After Proposed US Export Curbs”, April 7, 2026 · MarketWise “ASML Faces New China Export Restrictions”, April 2026 · HeyGoTrade “ASML Investment Case: EUV Monopoly”, May 2026 · Investing.com “ASML Q1 2026 Earnings Transcript”, April 2026 · Yahoo Finance / Bank of America PT to EUR 1,921 (June 2026)