Reddit Posts
Last week's market performance and economic news review
What do y’all think about using ChatGPT for stock researching?
It’s 2024, how are you guys planning on taking advantage the “AI Craze”?
TSM - I was right, kind of, and i think there's still more value here.
My portfolio idea - Going into 2023 betting on supply chains
Taiwan Semi (TSMC) will be 'back to strong growth in 2024' - JPMorgan (holding small position)
Thinking about a higher growth portfolio for the new year.
$KO outperforms half of the Mag 7 in 2024 because of $NVO and $LLY
$INTC Israels : 3.2Billion for a Western Worlds TSM. And that ASML NM Machine. 5nm, 3nm, 2nm coming. No More Taiwan TSM China Fear.
How can normalized-diluted-EPS be increasing while total common equity decreases?
Canon, known for its cameras, launches ASML challenge with machine to make the most advanced chips
ASML Misses Earning Huge. EPS 4.81 vs 4.99 est, Rev 6.67B vs 7.31B est
If China invades Taiwan would ASML explode or crash?
Time for the AI bubble to Pop out.
What allocation approach is implied by Toby Nangle's new FT article on narrow markets driving equity returns?
Tesla CEO Elon Musk: 'We're using a lot of Nvidia hardware'
So with both ASML and TSM(C) earnings/calls complete how do we feel for the future of AI/semi-conductor chips sentiment?
ASML- reporting on 7-19. I bought 740 strike call, Aug 18 expiry.
How to decide from which exchange to buy a stock from in a dual listing NASDAQ: ASML vs AMS: ASML?
Samsung Electronics makes 17-fold gains from investment in ASML
The future picks and shovels of AI may not be GPUs but ASICs, following the crypto trajectory. GOOGL and the dreaded Samsung appear to be the leaders in this space. What is the highest-weighted Samsung ETF and what are other industry-leading AI FPGA/ASICs tickers?
The Giant Behind AI Technology: ASML Holdings N.V.
ASML sales and gross margin beat guidance, but continues to see mixed demand signals
Investment Strategy China Invasion of Taiwan + interefence USA
List of public companies that are integral to AI?
Nvidia released a new "nuclear bomb", Google chatbot is also coming, computing power stocks again on the tide of halt
Daily U.S. Stock Market News Flash (Thursday, March 9)
Why did ASML stock drop 5% between 13:30 and 14:40 CET (Amsterdam time)?
Ride the AI Roller Coaster to Strike Gold: Invest in NVIDIA, ASML, and TSMC and step into the future.
AMD, Nvidia lead chips lower as results from Texas Instruments, ASML spurs caution
There‘s a massive earnings week coming up. All Betards looking for Tesla. I‘m more interested in Blackstone, ASML, Microsoft, Credit card companies, 3M and Intel.
Semiconductor. how did other countries become #1 and not USA?
What are some good semiconductor stocks to hold long-term?
Are these tech stocks all worthy of long term investment?
A globally critical chip firm (ASML) is driving a wedge between the U.S. and Netherlands over China tech policy
What is holding the US back from global semiconductor dominance?
Market Weekly Recap: FAAMG, Chip, Software Sectors jumped heavily, coin market tumbled
must read book to under stand the semi conductor industry - Chip wars, chip shortages - etc
Is ASML a less risky semi conductor play because it is not based in China/Taiwan?
Powell did exactly as i thought yesterday which makes me even more bullish now
Market Weekly Recap: Streaming, Chips, Airline Stocks Led the Gain, Tesla Earnings Alarmed the Tech
ASML shrugs off slowdown, U.S. China sanctions, reports strong Q3 earnings
ASML, a major global chip company, jumps 6% after earnings; do you think semiconductor stocks are about to start rising sharply?
Semiconductor route wipes out $240 Billion from chipmakers - TSMC drops 8.3% and Samsung and Tokyo Electron also declined.
Signs are piling up that the tech downturn may be deeper and longer-lasting than feared.
Mentions
The dutch can take the A.I. lead look at ASML
I think the only growth prospect for ASML is in margin and numbers unfortunately. The new $300-500 HNA EUV machine is fairly close to the physical limits of the technology. We will probably see some upgrade packages for it to increase output and maybe some improvements in quality, but I don't expect EUV litho to go much further. Keep in mind that this is more on the 10-15 year horizon though. Their only positives in my opinion is the quasi monopoly and healthy margin. Their R&D and capex costs are relatively high, and cranking output numbers seems hard given a lack of skilled personnel. I'd put ASML almost equal to an Airplane manufacturer like Boeing or Airbus. Their products generally don't grossly change, and the lack of skilled personnel and facility is limiting their output.
What about Dutch ASML gonna tariffs those Ultra UV licenses to faf US ?
How do you see the next three years compared to the past three? I see ASML is up 6% in that time. Or is it more of a 10 year time window play?
No. Cash and real estate. There's a reason the European stock market is shit. Even the sticks that do well like ASML are carried by the rest of the world.
When? Because Biden said it would happen within the end of his term. What year? The US handouts billions and we get what? How many jobs? What production actually increased because of the government largess? So what year will US produce more chips? Why is China and Taiwan able to build factories in less than two years and acquire ASML production machines in less time?
Yes I know ASML makes the lithography machines. But just because you own an insanely complicated machine, you still need decades upon decades of trade secrets to be able to build chips. US has leverage because we are buy a lot of TSMC.
Just putting it out here, because, let's be honest, I think we've all heard of ASML, Safran and Novo before. (Oh, and by the way: Norsk delivers to ASML, and Safran and Norsk are exploring ways of collaborating right now.)
I'm invested in a few Nordic companies. I have a position in Novo Nordisk, Atlas Coco and Sandvik. Also have a bit of MSCI Nordic ETF. Other than that, I'm invested in ASML and Saint Gobain.
Everyone has ASML machines, just having them doesn't mean you can manufacture ultra-low nm chips. TSMC is still the only one that can get high yields using ASML machines.
I prefer to buy when something is cheap vs when something is extremely frothy. Microsoft has been considered a great company to own for years, if you bought it in 2000, it took you 16 years to see a return on investment. Buying a great company at the wrong time is still a bad decision. Palantir is trade at 100× sales, NVDA might be a buy right now but with all the uncertainty around AI because of deepseek it could plummet but with a PEG of .9 it does look interesting, but you have to expect them to continue to grow earnings and revenue at the current clip which for the next 5 years I'd consider unsustainable. AI as a whole looks incredibly frothy personally I'm in on ASML, I'd rather invest in the company that makes the equipment to make the chips rather than any individual chip companybas they currently have basically a monopoly, just my opinion though but what do I know with my 35% cagr over the past 5 years
I think the Dutch index AEX is perhaps the most solid and undervalued index right now. ASML Unilever Prosus Adyen Shell and.. lesser known, ASM international
And what do you think happens to ASML’s stock if Taiwan gets invaded?
TSMC is one CCP invasion away from turning your tendies into dust. ASML prints money no matter who wins. Don’t be blindsided by geopolitical roulette.
That’s why I bought ASML. The house always win.
ASML, AIRBUS, SAFRAN, VEOLIA, SANOFI, NESTLÉ, DEUTSCHE TELEKOM, SCOR SE, ALLIANZ and the European Large caps you mentioned 👍
Novo Nordisk & ASML. Personally I'm also invested in Airbus.
Companies like Taiwan's TSMC use Dutch ASML's machines to make their chips. However: The US government invented Extreme Ultraviolet Lithography (EUV) technology, but Dutch engineer Erik Loopstra and Dutch-Russian physicist Vadim Banine made key contributions to its development. Explanation * **Research**In the 1990s, the US Department of Energy (DOE) funded research into EUV lithography at Lawrence Livermore, Sandia, and Berkeley National Laboratories. * **Licensing**The US government owned the rights to EUV lithography, but licensed it through a Cooperative R&D Agreement (CRADA). The CRADA involved a consortium of private companies and the labs. * **Commercialization**The Dutch company ASML commercialized EUV lithography. ASML was a subsidiary of Philips, a Dutch electronics company. * **Contributions**Loopstra and Banine made key inventions in EUV lithography manufacturing. EUV lithography uses extreme ultraviolet light to print patterns on wafers. This process is used to make smaller, more powerful chips. From Google.
Guess who ASML gets components from? INTC, AMAT, LRCX. It’s a global business and supply chain.
Youre right, ASML depends on TSM also
Been investing on a monthly basis for about 7 years now. Had quite a few higher risk bets that I decided to cash in recently, and concentrate everything into these 3 stocks which I plan to hold for a long time (and hopefully not worry too much about): - AAPL 50% - GOOGL 30% - ASML 20%
And the work of TSMC van be replaced by GlobalFoundries, Intel, Nikon, … ASML has no competitors in this space..
Agree that he needs a miracle just not the one you mention. That would result in a global recession and a 30% drop in ASML shares. Service revenue will be gone and their largest EUV customer will be done. Sanctions against China will stop export to China, largest customer region done.. so better hope for another miracle..
ASML has taken a beating but lots of good info out with earnings now about future trajectory.
Alright mainly first bought last week 1/28, stupidly doubled down this week when it was dipping. Was it stupid yes, i wish i set it for 850 or 900 for a safer bet. I invested in ASML specifically because they make the AI chip systems that companies like NVIDIA, INTEL, TSM utilize. Furthermore other financial groups have increased their stock ownership of ASML just recently. I’ll see what happens I guess
> theoretical limit Practical limit you mean. Theoretically we can come up with ways to go down to Planck length. But they would be the only supplier capable of delivering machines at that limit, for years and years to come. It’s not that flagship foundries would switch back to 44/193nm procedé because ASML can’t get 9 Angstrom down to 7 Angstrom
ASML's issues, are they are pretty quickly closing on in the theoretical limits of process node advancements. So what happens when it's like yeah bro, physics says we cant make better machines anymore.
Not sure how you figured, it's all connected, NVDA does well, TSMC, does well ASML does well... none of them can work without the other.
Just as an FYI Intel has the first, next gen machines from ASML, not even TSMC has those yet. Currently yeah TSMC, is the bottleneck, but by end of this yeah, early 2026, Intel will be a major player in fabs.
Wait this is WSB, not /r/investing. If you buy some ASML for the long run, I’ll buy some TSM for the semi short term
All the names I mentioned are better investments than ASML. ASML’s problem is they can only produce like 600 or so machines per year and their customer base is very limited due to export restrictions. Names I mentioned are growing sales faster with much higher margins 20+ points.
They are only successful because of the EUV success of ASML. That’s the true monopoly in the semiconductor world in the coming 20 years
Funny how easy you miss TSM. Much better investment than ASML
Funny how easy you miss ASML in this one
>Isn't safer to hold a Nasdaq ETF that includes all? Even better would be even broader than that. No need to skip out on tech companies on the NYSE, or outside the US (ASML, TSMC for example).
ASML the #5 capitalisation in Europe expected to jump 27% on it earnings. Yup, OP is regard.
BVB is just very cheap currently, Vonovia is expected to go +50% somewhere next 2 years latest (real estate, biggest renter in germany), Kemira is a super dividend stable finland top company, Iberdrola is the most stable Energy provider that is highly Alternative you can imagine and ASML is anyways priceless. and rather cheap again after AI bust
ok. Buy Kemira, Vonovia, BVB, Iberdrola, ASML
short TSLA short PLTR short ARM long BITCOIN long EUROPOO solid cheap P/E Stonks (Iberdrola, Vonovia, Kemira, ASML, Novo..)
Yep, MA did well... ASML, IBM and GE also did well.
I do not want to violate the rules of this subreddit, so posting here instead of a thread response to get the blessings of the mods. After seeing this [Video](https://youtu.be/5RpPTRcz1no?feature=shared) I am concerned that I need to change my investment strategy to potentially include commodities (as a hedge against inflation, stock market downturns, and fundamental changes to government oversight). I am not sure if this is a conspiracy theory (I came across this in a different subreddit), but since this video has posted about 2 months ago, I can see how the author has laid an interesting case that follows the individuals who came to power and explains their actions (which she has no influence over, by people whom she has called out). I don't know how to redistribute my investments to accommodate for this. My current plan is to continue in VOO and maybe redistribute over time to VXUS depending on trends). If AI is going to be a driving factor for the near future, I see ASML/TSMC as good buys as they are ExUS for individual stocks. Energy producing companies may be a good buy (Ex-US solar producers/nuclear) for funds focused on certain sectors. When should Gold (and I typically would avoid it as it's not a great hedge/long term investment) be considered. I would appreciate any viewpoints. I am just trying to position myself for several potential outcomes with a conservative approach to investing.
After seeing this [Video](https://youtu.be/5RpPTRcz1no?feature=shared) I am a little concerned that I need to change my investment strategy to include commodities, to hedge against inflation, stock market downturns, and fundamental changes to government control and society. I am not one to share conspiracies, but I am also aware of correlation and fact checking. I don't know how to redistribute my investments to accommodate for this. If AI is going to be a driving factor for the near future, I see ASML/TSMC as good buys as they are ExUS. Energy producing companies may be a good buy (Ex-US solar producers/nuclear). Also Gold (and I typically would avoid it as it's not a great hedge/long term investment). I would appreciate your viewpoints.
Done with u ASML. You are, how do I say, dog shiet.
TSM is one of ASMLs main customers. Its stock is even performing better than ASML lol
whats actually going on with ASML being a shit stock
2025 is the year of great rotation. Unexpected names like JPM, Visa, Costco, Netflix, MU, ASML might just rule the performance charts.
ARM, NVDA, AVGO, MRVL, TSMC are the cool kids AMD, GFS, ASML, QCOM, AMAT are the freaks and geeks it seems
I can see how Sony is a great opportunity (and a great business) to buy into, but it looks like you're buying highly cyclical companies of decent business quality with low growth prospects aside. I wouldn't say any of these other businesses are great. Most of these outside of Sony and Nucor have under-performed the index over the past 10 years. They're fair mature businesses, but I find it extremely difficult to consider them great businesses when they simply don't have the growth prospects, pricing power, or optionality of companies like ASML, Ferrari, Nintendo, MercadoLibre, or Hermes... just to list 5 ex-US firms that are on my watchlist, 2 of which I hold in my portfolio. Those are superior firms with wide moats that will continue to grow far into the foreseeable future. You get a discount for owning a stock outside of the S&P 500 or the QQQ sure, but is it really a great company? Will it outperform the benchmark over the coming 10 years?
Yeah the equipment suppliers like ASML LRCX etc
That is **THE** starting point for the semi-n-chips (and overall markets) run-up since 2023. AI workloads means demand for cloud computing and data centers. That fueled Nvidia, AMD and chip makers like TSM.. all the way down to ASML, LRCX and AMAT, and finally down to energy sector. Basically, 70% of S&P hinges on the storyline that companies will use AI / crypto, and consume computing resources like mad.
Pricy machines ASML reported revenues of $9.88 billion in the last reported quarter, representing a year-over-year change of +26.8%. EPS of $7.30 for the same period compares with $5.60 a year ago.
But in that case then I gotta say ASML as it is the only company in the world that produces the machines that makes chips
PLTR on the heels of Chevron, Toyota, ASML, Coca Cola
ASML builds 5-6 machines per year. Plus, it's only an AI stock in the most peripheral way.
ASML has a monopoly. If cap ex is being spent they will be up. If it isn't they will be flat.
Yes but do you understand how much revenue they make off of maintaining the machines as well? No matter what if a chip fab is being built ASML going to have their machines there no matter what. If there’s a list of companies you should bet against ASML should be near the bottom in any long term scenario
NVDA the amount of buying. ASML fundamentals.
NVDA looks straight shot over $140. ASML gooftroopin to $800.
ASML hurry up and get to $800.
are you Kamala? Just get Google and chill. ASML is like betting on farm equipment, because demand is insane for cakes! Hyperscalers ⏩ NVDA ⏩ TSM ⏩ ASML ⏩ AMAT Cakes ⏩ Wheat ⏩ Famers ⏩ Farm equipment ⏩ Steel
Started wondering if it's too late to buy into Meta or if it's a good option at all. Excess cash I'm getting I plan to invest into ASML because of its strong monopoly position in the industry. And it will be a major beneficiary in AI and capex spend that will happen globally (not just the hyperscalers, in my view). Currently my 3 that I'm putting money to is GOOGL, AMZN, and ASML. Because based on the price, I think these have a better "margin of safety" I guess. But Meta seems more expensive hence staying away. But Meta is growing revenue fast. Faster than the others. And Metas social media is not going away. In fact, it may accelerate. Thoughts on my word salad?
Just got in from Dutch news site: [ASML is being spied by Russian spies](https://www.nu.nl/binnenland/6344977/rus-verdacht-van-spionage-bij-asml-had-contact-met-russische-geheime-dienst.html) lol Article is in dutch maybe Chrome can auto-translate it for you.
Where? i can't see it flying. Maybe it lost it wings? (got some ASML so i hope it will fly)
ASML is flying high 
#**TLDR** --- **Ticker:** INTC **Direction:** Up **Prognosis:** Buy INTC stock. Calls are risky. **Additional Info:** Intel's new CEO could be Dr. Thomas Caulfield, potentially signaling a merger with GlobalFoundries. Intel's new process nodes are looking very promising, and significant tariffs might be coming that heavily favor domestic chip manufacturers. OP is currently down big on calls, so learn from their mistake! **Funny Note:** The previous Intel CEO gambled away a bunch of money on ASML machines...God told him to.
The best values I can see right now WMT APLD ASML TSLA..
So buying ASML (0) is the way to go, since 1 makes GPU's thanks to 0
Without ASML's EUV, it's physically impossible to compete with NVDA's GPU.
I am currently up 95% since January because options and being greedy(and realistic). And that because I holded with Deepseek crash options I sold after loosing 80% value. Otherwise would be +200. Here is what I am doing: Calls when markets drops and starts to recover(+1% index). Never put more than 1/3 portfolio in options. I made +200% with ASML calls. I saw opportunity after seeing Nvidia recovery and asml was barely up with no reason. Now holding NDQ calls since today let's see if get to +200% overall.
Biggest regret is that I started too late. Second biggest regret is buying ASML at €1030 a piece. After a 30% drop I sold it all and bought Palantir at $53. Sometimes an impulse buy pays off more then something you researched for weeks.
If theres a God let ASML be green 
Depends, there are rumours of an EUV to be announced end of this year. But I will hold off on making any decisions until later this year. They seem to have hired some of the best in the field already to do this work. Hell many of China's gains are from geniuses who used to work in TSMC. If I remember one guy left TSMC, joined Samsung, helped them close the gap, some political issue within company and he joined SMIC and is doing the same. EUV though is a different tech, but they have got some people from the ASML on their team already.
100%. ASML might just have the GOAT MOAT, they’ve been building it for 30 years and have exclusive partnerships with Zeiss who literally spent their own 50 years building a moat with mirrors.
I don't know, Chinese are pretty good at math and have millions of engineering grads to tap into on an annual basis. I'd have to imagine the software side would not be the bottleneck after a few years. It's more the capital equipment game for lithography and other fabbing processes that relies on engineering and materials science art perfected over the last half century by companies like Zeiss, ASML etc. That's hard to catch up on no matter how smart you are because it requires countless iterations of trial and error in the physical realm, and this takes time.
Old stuff only, they smuggled some recent-ish stuff until 2022 though. It will take a few more years until the effects of being cut off from ASML, EDAs, KLA and others becomes apparent.
Is SMIC currently able to orders suff from ASML or not?
PLTR, sold after 100, will re purchase after a slight correction (if not happy with profits) Google, this always beats everything, and after the 8 percent drop in aftermarket I brought a bunch Apple, after that huge dip from the 2/3 month chart I brought some shares, big companies like this always bounce back when they announce something unexpected, a company like apple wont just burn Microsoft, although it continually dipped over the past few weeks, I’m now tracking this for similar reasons Uber, brought when that tanked regarding waymo news and it’s bounced back and still growing, locked in some profits yesterday for the Google dip Sofi, had a dip past few days, so averaged down a bit Sound hound (ideally if the entry point is below 14 EasyJet, always has dips on news and recovers well, I did this previously and it dipped way more since then so I brought some, will sell at recovery Nvidia, I’m still in, down 15 odd percent but it doesn’t phase me, they will bounce back but I’m not considering averaging down Tesla, Elon always manages to be the centre of the news and no matter what others think, he disrupts markets and this drives stock sentiment ASML, big dip for ATH, but don’t have a solid reason for putting in this, but I’m hopeful given the industry Broadcom, small holding MSTr, followed the hype on this one, either going to leave it or sell at breakeven
Why bearish on ASML?