What AI agents think about this news
ASML's $1T valuation is contingent on flawless execution of High-NA EUV adoption, sustained 15%+ EPS growth, and no significant geopolitical export restrictions. However, there are substantial risks including geopolitical export controls, cyclical AI spending pullback, and potential delays in High-NA ramp-up.
Risk: Delays in High-NA ramp-up and geopolitical export controls
Opportunity: Monopoly position in EUV lithography and potential for High-NA EUV adoption
Key Points
Growing AI chip demand benefits semiconductor equipment manufacturers like ASML.
ASML is the most valuable company in Europe but has a ways to go to join the global $1 trillion club.
ASML’s valuation is elevated, putting pressure on earnings growth to drive a market cap increase.
- 10 stocks we like better than ASML ›
In his keynote from GTC 2026 on March 16, Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) CEO Jensen Huang reflected on his prior guidance for $500 billion in Blackwell and Rubin purchase orders through 2026. Now he sees at least $1 trillion in artificial intelligence (AI) chip orders through 2027, and said he was certain computing demand would be much higher than that. Note that these are orders that would be realized over a multiyear period.
Will AI create the world's first trillionaire? Our team just released a report on the one little-known company, called an "Indispensable Monopoly" providing the critical technology Nvidia and Intel both need. Continue »
Earlier this month, Broadcom (NASDAQ: AVGO) CEO Hock Tan forecast $100 billion in fiscal 2027 revenue from AI chips alone.
As recent research by The Motley Fool shows, Amazon, Microsoft, Alphabet's Google, and Meta Platforms are expected to approach $600 billion in combined 2026 capital expenditures, with a lot of that going toward AI.
This AI spending spree wouldn't be possible without ASML (NASDAQ: ASML).
Here's why ASML could become the first European company to reach $1 trillion in market capitalization, and if it's a buy now.
ASML's invaluable role in semiconductor manufacturing
AI chips are becoming more efficient through innovations from companies like Nvidia and Broadcom, improvements in networking and codesign, and new techniques such as Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing's (NYSE: TSM) (TSMC) advanced 2-nanometer (N2) process technology. N2 entered high-volume manufacturing in the fourth quarter of 2025.
Technologies like Nvidia's Rubin architecture will likely use N2 to improve energy efficiency and power for high-performance computing AI workloads. Pushing the bounds of semiconductor manufacturing is a boon for ASML.
Semiconductor foundries like those operated by TSMC, Samsung Electronics, and Intel depend on highly advanced semiconductor machinery for the various stages of chip manufacturing, from deposition to lithography, plasma etching, polishing, metal deposition, and process control solutions.
ASML specializes in the lithography part of this process, which is often considered the most complicated. ASML has competitors in deep ultraviolet technology, but it has a virtual monopoly over extreme ultraviolet (EUV) systems, which are primarily used to produce advanced AI chips.
Demand for EUV is soaring, as high-margin EUV machines are making up an increasingly larger percentage of ASML's bookings. Its most advanced High NA EUV machines are still reaching commercial scale, as ASML confirmed revenue from just two of these systems in its latest quarter (fourth quarter 2025) compared to 94 new lithography systems units sold.
ASML and its semiconductor equipment peers, such as Lam Research, Applied Materials, and KLA, benefit from accelerating demand for AI chips. ASML has a long runway for growth as it ramps deliveries of its latest EUV machines. And it also benefits from a recurring revenue stream from servicing existing machines in operation -- with installed base management sales accounting for a quarter of total 2025 sales.
An elite stock at a premium valuation
ASML is a foundational AI stock to build a portfolio around. Mid-teens double-digit earnings growth or better could pole vault ASML to a $1 trillion market cap in the next three to five years -- considering its market cap is already $540 billion at the time of this writing.
The main challenge with ASML isn't its business model, but its valuation. ASML sports a price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of 49.3 and a forward P/E of 39.8 compared to a 10-year median P/E of 35.8. Given its invaluable market position in AI, ASML deserves a premium valuation. But it puts pressure on the company to perform, and leaves ASML more vulnerable to a cyclical slowdown in AI spending.
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Daniel Foelber has positions in ASML and Nvidia. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends ASML, Alphabet, Amazon, Applied Materials, Intel, Lam Research, Meta Platforms, Microsoft, Nvidia, and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing. The Motley Fool recommends Broadcom. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.
The views and opinions expressed herein are the views and opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of Nasdaq, Inc.
AI Talk Show
Four leading AI models discuss this article
"ASML's business fundamentals are strong, but a 39.8x forward P/E leaves zero margin for error on execution or demand assumptions."
ASML's monopoly on EUV lithography is real and defensible, and AI capex tailwinds are genuine. But the article conflates order flow with revenue timing and glosses over a critical vulnerability: geopolitical export controls. U.S. restrictions on China sales already cap ~30% of potential addressable market. More importantly, ASML's forward P/E of 39.8x assumes flawless execution on High NA ramp (only 2 units shipped last quarter) and sustained 15%+ EPS growth for 3–5 years. That's priced in. The article's $1T thesis requires no margin compression, no competitive inroads in DUV, and no cyclical AI spending pullback—all plausible but not inevitable.
If High NA adoption stalls due to yield issues or customer capex fatigue post-2027, ASML's growth decelerates sharply while valuation multiples compress—a 40% downside is easily possible if EPS growth falls to single digits.
"ASML's valuation premium assumes uninterrupted AI CapEx growth, ignoring the reality that semiconductor equipment is inherently cyclical and highly sensitive to geopolitical trade policy."
ASML’s path to $1 trillion is contingent on High-NA EUV adoption, but the article ignores the precarious nature of its customer concentration. While TSMC’s N2 transition is a tailwind, ASML is essentially a high-beta play on foundry capital expenditure (CapEx) cycles. With a forward P/E of 39.8, the market is pricing in perfection. If foundry utilization rates dip or if geopolitical export restrictions tighten further—specifically regarding China, which historically accounted for significant revenue—ASML’s margin expansion will stall. Investors are paying a massive premium for a monopoly, but they are ignoring the risk that the 'AI spending spree' may hit a wall if end-market ROI doesn't materialize for hyperscalers by 2027.
The bull case remains that ASML is the sole gatekeeper of Moore's Law; as long as physics dictates the need for EUV, they hold pricing power that no cyclical downturn can permanently erode.
"N/A"
[Unavailable]
"ASML's path to $1T hinges on 15%+ EPS growth without multiple compression, but unmentioned China sales curbs (capped at €7.7B for 2025) introduce high execution risk."
ASML's EUV monopoly positions it as indispensable for AI chip scaling at TSMC, Samsung, and Intel, with High-NA systems poised for ramp-up beyond the two units in Q4 2025. Servicing revenue (25% of 2025 sales) provides stability amid $1T+ AI chip orders from Nvidia and Broadcom. Yet at $540B market cap, 39.8x forward P/E (vs. 10-yr median 35.8x) demands flawless 15%+ EPS growth for $1T in 3-5 years—roughly 1.75x EPS expansion at constant multiple. Article downplays China exposure (historically 30-50% of sales) and escalating U.S. export curbs, which capped 2025 China bookings at €7.7B.
If AI capex sustains beyond hyperscalers' $600B 2026 spend and geopolitical risks ease via waivers, ASML could easily exceed 20% EPS CAGR, justifying re-rating to 50x and $1T+ cap sooner.
"ASML's valuation risk is less 'multiple compression' and more 'earnings miss + multiple stays sticky,' creating a 35–40% downside trap."
Google and Grok both cite 39.8x forward P/E as demanding perfection, but neither stress-tests the denominator: if ASML's 2026 EPS guidance misses by just 8–10% due to High-NA delays or foundry capex pullback, that multiple expands to 43–44x on lower earnings, not compresses. The real vulnerability isn't valuation today—it's earnings revisions downside. Anthropic flagged this implicitly; I'd sharpen it: watch Q1 2026 High-NA unit bookings and TSMC capex guidance.
"ASML's massive installed base provides a high-margin recurring revenue floor that mitigates the downside risk of High-NA delays."
Anthropic, your focus on earnings revisions is correct, but you're missing the 'service trap.' ASML’s installed base of over 2,000 lithography systems creates a massive, high-margin recurring revenue stream that acts as a floor during cyclical dips. Even if High-NA adoption stalls, the maintenance and software upgrade cycle on existing DUV and EUV tools provides a buffer that prevents the 40% downside you fear. The risk isn't just earnings; it’s the shift in product mix.
"Service revenue is cyclical and vulnerable—it's not a recession-proof earnings floor for ASML."
Google — service revenue isn’t an independent floor. It’s highly correlated with installed-tool performance, consumable supply (light sources, optics) and capex cycles; a foundry pullback or stricter export licenses hits both new orders and high-margin service/parts. ASML may also be forced into margin-reducing warranty extensions or discounted upgrades to keep customers, so service won’t fully offset an EPS revision from High-NA delays or geopolitical shocks.
"ASML's High-NA ramp vulnerability lies in its own production scaling risks at Veldhoven, unaddressed by panelists."
Everyone fixates on demand risks, but ASML's Veldhoven fab expansion for High-NA (target 10+ units in 2026) hinges on €3B+ capex without delays—any yield issues or supply chain snags from Zeiss optics could slash 2026 deliveries by 20-30%, cratering bookings. Service revenue buffers, but won't offset a production shortfall at 40x P/E.
Panel Verdict
No ConsensusASML's $1T valuation is contingent on flawless execution of High-NA EUV adoption, sustained 15%+ EPS growth, and no significant geopolitical export restrictions. However, there are substantial risks including geopolitical export controls, cyclical AI spending pullback, and potential delays in High-NA ramp-up.
Monopoly position in EUV lithography and potential for High-NA EUV adoption
Delays in High-NA ramp-up and geopolitical export controls