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ASML poised to benefit from AI megadeals and chip expansion wave

Dutch chipmaking equipment giant ASML is expected to benefit from a surge in AI-related megadeals between major technology firms and semiconductor manufacturers, with investors anticipating a strong outlook when it reports third-quarter earnings on Wednesday.

Analysts believe ASML’s top customers — including TSMC, SK Hynix, and Samsung — are preparing to ramp up production capacity through 2026 and beyond, driven by a global race to expand AI data centres. These expectations have already boosted ASML’s stock by 32% since early September, outpacing the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index, which rose 15% in the same period.

Forecasts compiled by Visible Alpha suggest new bookings — a key industry indicator — will total 5.36 billion euros ($6.21 billion) for the quarter, following 9.48 billion euros in the first half of the year. Meanwhile, net income is projected to rise 1.4% year-on-year to 2.11 billion euros, according to LSEG IBES data.

Recent multi-billion-dollar deals between NVIDIA, AMD, Intel, Samsung, Meta, and Oracle are fuelling optimism for ASML, whose machines — costing more than $300 million each — are essential for producing advanced chip circuitry.

However, analysts note that building fabrication plants can take several years. They want to hear whether ASML’s clients can accelerate these expansion plans amid rising demand. “Every memory chipmaker is likely to increase production capacity for AI,” said Michael Roeg of Degroof Petercam, citing Micron, SK Hynix, Samsung, and Chinese competitors.

Samsung forecasts best profit in three years amid AI-driven chip boom

Samsung Electronics said it expects its largest quarterly profit since 2022, as a global surge in demand for AI and memory chips pushes prices higher and tightens supply. The South Korean tech giant estimated an operating profit of 12.1 trillion won ($8.5 billion) for the July–September quarter, up 32% year-on-year and well above the 10.1 trillion won expected by analysts. This marks Samsung’s best performance in 13 quarters.

Analysts said the surprise earnings were powered by strong demand for commodity memory chips, used in data centre servers, which offset slower-than-expected progress in the company’s high bandwidth memory (HBM) chip sales to Nvidia. Despite slipping 0.5% in morning trade after an early rally, Samsung’s stock has risen around 75% this year, reflecting investor confidence in its chip rebound.

Experts noted that reduced inventories and stronger DRAM and NAND prices have given Samsung an edge. “Samsung is a big beneficiary of growing demand for commodity chips,” said Sohn In-joon from Heungkuk Securities. Meanwhile, narrower losses at its foundry unit helped ease cost pressures.

The company also expects revenue to hit a record 86 trillion won, up 8.7% year-on-year, aided by a weaker won. However, analysts warned that trade tensions between the U.S. and China, potential U.S. tariffs, and China’s export controls on rare earth materials could cloud future performance.

Samsung plans to release full quarterly results on October 30 and has reportedly introduced a stock-based incentive plan for all South Korean employees to align performance with company growth.

Samsung Ordered to Pay $445.5 Million in U.S. Patent Verdict Over Wireless Technology

A federal jury in Marshall, Texas, has ruled that Samsung Electronics must pay nearly $445.5 million in damages to Collision Communications for infringing on patents tied to 4G, 5G, and Wi-Fi technologies.

The jury determined that several Samsung products — including its Galaxy smartphones, laptops, and other wireless-enabled devices — violated four patents held by the New Hampshire-based firm. The verdict marks yet another major legal setback for Samsung in the same Texas court, which has issued multiple high-value patent rulings against the company in recent years.

Collision Communications filed its lawsuit in 2023, alleging Samsung used patented innovations designed to improve wireless network efficiency. The company said the technology originated from research done by defense contractor BAE Systems, though BAE was not involved in the case.

Samsung denied the infringement claims and argued the patents were invalid. Neither company’s representatives immediately commented on the verdict.

Marshall, Texas, has become a notable hotspot for high-stakes intellectual property litigation, drawing some of the world’s biggest tech firms into multimillion-dollar disputes.