When ASML reports second-quarter results on Wednesday, the Dutch lithography giant will be asked to reconcile two competing realities: a production pipeline stretched to its physical limits and a US legislative push that threatens to sever its second-largest market. The stock edged 1.42 percent higher on Tuesday to €1,541.40, trading 3.41 percent above its 50-day moving average of €1,490.60, as options markets priced in a swing of 8.36 percent—double the average move of the past four quarters.
The bullish energy has a clear catalyst: Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., whose June sales surged 68 percent year-on-year, signaling robust demand for the advanced chip nodes that require ASML’s lithography systems. Analysts at LSEG expect the company to post a net profit of €2.61 billion for the quarter, up 8.8 percent from a year ago, on revenue of €8.8 billion—a 14 percent increase. The stakes are elevated because the report arrives just as the entire semiconductor supply chain is testing whether the AI-driven investment cycle has further room to run.
Capacity Constraints and the High-NA Milestone
Behind the financials lies a more strategic question: how many EUV machines can ASML actually ship this year and next. The company plans to deliver 60 low-NA EUV units in 2026, a 25 percent increase over 2025, and aims to raise that to 80 units by 2027. JPMorgan analysts believe the ceiling could be as high as 110 units if the company optimizes its supply chain. An ASML spokesperson told Reuters that the firm is “looking at creative ways beyond 90 to help customers,” including faster assembly, quicker installation, and upgrades of existing machines. To support that push, the company has secured additional long-lead components such as lenses and mirrors from Germany’s Zeiss and high-power lasers from Trumpf.
The next-generation High-NA EUV systems, which cost roughly $400 million each, have crossed the threshold into series production. Over 500,000 silicon wafers have already been processed on these tools, with uptime reaching about 80 percent and a target of 90 percent by year-end. The technology is considered critical for manufacturing the next wave of AI accelerators and high-bandwidth memory chips—a market that has already lifted ASML’s stock by roughly 56 percent year-to-date and more than 123 percent over the past twelve months.
Analyst Conviction vs. Geopolitical Risk
The optimism among sell-side analysts is unusually strong. Deutsche Bank raised its price target this month from €1,600 to €1,800 while reiterating a buy recommendation. Bernstein also reaffirmed its outperform rating. Susquehanna analyst Mehdi Hosseini expects ASML to beat consensus projections and lift its full-year guidance, arguing that the company’s manufacturing capacity through end-2027 may already be fully booked. Morningstar’s Javier Correonero goes further, calling the company’s 2030 revenue target of at least €44 billion “very likely outdated” and pegging his own estimate at €60 billion.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Asml?
Yet a growing political risk could temper those ambitions. The so-called MATCH Act, a draft US law that names ASML directly, would compel American allies to align their export controls on China with Washington’s. Beijing currently accounts for roughly 20 percent of ASML’s total revenue. While the company has strictly adhered to bans on the most advanced EUV machines, sales of older DUV immersion systems for automotive and industrial chips have remained a reliable cash flow source. If management signals on Wednesday that servicing existing installed units in China could also be restricted under the proposed legislation, a significant portion of the long-term service revenue would be thrown into doubt.
Technicals and the Road Ahead
Technically, the stock sits in a neutral zone. The 14-day relative strength index at 48.8 indicates neither overbought nor oversold conditions, despite the year-long rally. The 30-day annualized volatility stands near 64 percent, reflecting the market’s expectation of a sharp move. At €1,541.40, the share price remains 11.8 percent below its all-time high of €1,748.00 set on June 30.
The first-quarter results provide a high watermark for comparison: revenue of €8.76 billion, net profit of €2.84 billion, and a gross margin of 53 percent at the top end of the company’s own guidance. That performance prompted CEO Christophe Fouquet to raise the full-year revenue forecast to a range of €36–€40 billion, up from the prior band of €34–€39 billion, citing “a solidifying growth outlook” and customers accelerating capacity plans for 2026 and beyond.
Wednesday’s report will therefore be read as a verdict on whether that acceleration can continue—or whether a combination of capacity bottlenecks, political headwinds, and the sheer weight of investor expectations will finally slow momentum. The three key topics that investors will watch are net bookings, the China exposure narrative, and the concrete capacity roadmap for the next two years. How ASML navigates the tension between a booming order book and a tightening geopolitical leash will set the tone not just for its own stock, but for the entire AI hardware cycle.
Ad
Asml Stock: Buy or Sell?! New Asml Analysis from July 14 delivers the answer:
The latest Asml figures speak for themselves: Urgent action needed for Asml investors. Is it worth buying or should you sell? Find out what to do now in the current free analysis from July 14.
Asml: Buy or sell? Read more here...










