By Najat Kantouar and Mauro Orru
ASM International cut its revenue forecast for the year due to lower-than-expected demand for semiconductor-making equipment as some clients are shying away from orders amid trade uncertainty.
The Dutch company provides tools--mostly for the deposition of thin films--that chip makers need to produce increasingly sophisticated semiconductors as demand for smaller but more efficient chips to power artificial intelligence keeps booming.
But while AI demand shows no sign of abating, the company said appetite for logic and foundry orders--those from customers seeking to produce integrated circuits that power smartphones, computers and other electronic devices--had declined recently. Weak logic and foundry orders had already weighed on ASM International in the second quarter.
Meanwhile, the company said demand in the power, wafer and analog markets was also sluggish. The group cited a mixed picture per customer, a sign that some clients aren't rushing to place orders as President Trump's tariff policies create uncertainty.
The European Union recently secured a deal with Trump that set a 15% tariff ceiling for semiconductor exports to the U.S. However, countries like China haven't clinched a deal with the U.S.
For the year, ASM International now expects revenue growth at constant currencies at the lower end of a previous range of 10% to 20%.
In the second half, revenue should be 5% to 10% lower compared with the first half at constant currencies, reflecting weaker demand in the fourth quarter. For bookings, lower demand is projected to result in a book-to-bill below 1 in the second half, it added.
The company's guidance cut will likely lead to consensus downgrades, JP Morgan analysts wrote in a note to clients. The U.S. bank anticipates full-year consensus estimates to decline by around 4% in sales and close to 6% in earnings. "Estimates for 2026, which were considered too high, are likely to be reset, while the medium-term outlook is positive," they added.
ASM International shares in Amsterdam slid more than 5% earlier on Tuesday as investors factored in new guidance for the short term. However, the group said it expected sales to grow in the coming years, boosted by AI.
"The semiconductor market is on track to reach $1 trillion by the end of the decade, driven by lasting megatrends, especially AI," Chief Executive Hichem M'Saad said.
The company expects revenue to exceed 5.7 billion euros by the end of the decade. Its gross margin, a closely watched metric for companies operating in the semiconductor industry, is expected to range from 47% to 51% in 2030. Free cash flow should increase to more than 1 billion euros by then.
Write to Najat Kantouar at najat.kantouar@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
September 23, 2025 05:29 ET (09:29 GMT)
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