ASML builds the lithography machines that chipmakers need to manufacture advanced semiconductors, and no other company in the world sells EUV systems. For investors, the stock works as an early signal of AI capital spending: EUV orders show where chip capacity is heading, and the backlog shows how much demand is already locked in.
ASML sits in an unusual place in the technology world. It does not make chips, and it does not design them. It makes the machines that make chips possible. Its customers are the manufacturers themselves: TSMC, Samsung, Intel, and the major memory makers SK Hynix and Micron.
The company's core product is the lithography system, which projects circuit patterns onto silicon wafers. Its EUV machines, which print the tiniest features using extreme ultraviolet light, are the only tools of their kind on the market. Decades of research and a supplier network no rival ever matched left ASML as the sole source for the equipment behind every advanced AI chip. The shares trade in Amsterdam and as a New York ADR under the ticker ASML.
Revenue comes from two streams. Machine sales provide the large but uneven payments, since each EUV system costs more than $150 million and only a few hundred systems of all kinds ship in a year. Service and upgrades on the installed fleet provide the steady layer underneath, growing every year as more machines enter operation.
Chip factories are planned years ahead, and the equipment is ordered first. That timing makes ASML's net bookings, its measure of new orders, one of the earliest hard signals of where semiconductor capacity is going. When foundries believe AI demand will keep rising, the first proof is an EUV order, placed long before any new chip ships.
2025 quarter | Net bookings | Of which EUV |
Q1 | €3.9 billion | €1.2 billion |
Q2 | €5.5 billion | €2.3 billion |
Q3 | €5.4 billion | €3.6 billion |
Q4 | €13.2 billion | €7.4 billion |
Notice two things in that table. Quarter to quarter, the totals jump around, which is normal when single machines carry nine-figure price tags. Across the year, though, the EUV share climbs steadily and then explodes in a record fourth quarter that more than doubled analyst expectations. Management linked the surge to customers turning more confident that AI demand would last, and raising their capacity plans to match. That is the transmission signal working exactly as investors hope to catch it.
A backlog that size does real work. It lets management guide full-year revenue with confidence even when one quarter's bookings disappoint. It shows that customers have put binding money behind their expansion plans rather than just talking about them. And it filters the noise out of the order data: a weak booking quarter against a record backlog reads very differently from a weak quarter against a thin one.
The limits matter too. Backlog can be delayed if customers push out factory construction, so its quality depends on how firm those plans are, which is why analysts press management about delivery timing on every call. In early 2026 the visibility held up: first-quarter sales reached €8.8 billion and the company raised its full-year outlook, while the long-term scenarios in its
official results presentation pointed to €44 billion to €60 billion in annual revenue by 2030 as High-NA EUV, the next generation of the technology, ramps up.
The chain runs in four steps, each with a delay. Cloud providers such as Microsoft, Amazon, Google, and Meta budget billions for AI data centers. Those budgets become chip orders at Nvidia, AMD, and the custom processor programs inside the cloud companies. The chip orders force TSMC, Samsung, and Intel to add advanced manufacturing capacity. And new capacity means new lithography machines, which land at ASML as bookings.
Because ASML sits at the end of the chain, its orders look furthest into the future. Strong EUV bookings mean foundries are betting AI demand holds for years, since that is how long a new fab takes to build and fill. Weak bookings, especially with a healthy backlog behind them, are often the first hard evidence that the buildout is slowing. This is why ASML shares react to capex announcements from companies that will never buy its machines, and why its results ripple through chip stocks worldwide. Traders following this chain can track major semiconductor names through
stock futures on MEXC.
The 2025 numbers show what the chain delivered: EUV system sales rose 39% to €11.6 billion across 48 systems, including revenue on the first of the new High-NA machines, while total sales reached €32.7 billion at a 52.8% gross margin.
Reading single quarters wrongly is the everyday mistake, but the structural risks run deeper.
The first is the cycle. Equipment spending is the fastest thing chipmakers cut when demand cools, so an AI capex slowdown would hit ASML early and hard, amplified by the fact that a handful of foundries place most orders.
The second is China. The country was ASML's largest regional market in 2025 at roughly a third of total revenue, as reported by
Caixin from the company's results, even though EUV systems have never been permitted for sale there. Export rules on the older DUV tools that drive those sales keep tightening, and ASML itself expected China's share to fall sharply. The third is High-NA timing: if customers adopt the expensive next-generation platform slowly, the upgrade cycle that supports long-term targets stretches out.
Investors can trade ASML as a direct way to participate in the AI semiconductor cycle. This allows for exposure to the foundational manufacturing layer of the industry through the following options:
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ASML is AI infrastructure rather than a direct AI stock: it supplies the machines that make advanced AI chips possible. It benefits when AI capacity is being built, and it carries equipment-cycle risk when that building slows.
Net bookings measure the value of new system orders ASML accepted in a quarter. They are watched closely because equipment is ordered years before chips ship, making bookings an early signal of future semiconductor capacity.
ASML ended 2025 with a €38.8 billion backlog, covering more than a year of revenue. Backlog gives revenue visibility, though deliveries can shift if customers delay their factory plans.
EUV took ASML decades of research, billions in investment, and a specialized global supplier network that no competitor replicated. Nikon and Canon still compete in older DUV tools, but ASML is the only EUV producer.