• Thu. Jan 23rd, 2025

Got $1,000? A Top Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stock Is On Sale Right Now

Got ,000? A Top Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stock Is On Sale Right Now

With how popular some artificial intelligence (AI) stocks have become, many investors may feel like they’ve missed the boat. However, one of the top ways to invest in AI just went on sale.

ASML (NASDAQ: ASML) has a technology that nobody else has, giving it a technological monopoly status. Without its machines, chip companies wouldn’t be able to make the same cutting-edge chips that push the limits of computing power. As a result, ASML is one of the most critical companies in the chip value chain, thus making it a key AI player.

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However, as alluded to earlier, ASML just went on sale due to a poorly received earnings report. Is this a buying opportunity? Or is there a good reason that it fell around 40% from its all-time high?

ASML isn’t the cheapest stock on the market at $670 per share, but it’s a long way off from its all-time high of nearly $1,100. With how critical of a company ASML is in the chip value chain, it may surprise investors not to see this company at its all-time high. After all, Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) is selling more and more graphics processing units (GPUs) each quarter, which requires a lot of chips produced by Taiwan Semiconductor (NYSE: TSM) in a process that uses ASML machines.

However, the key thing to remember about ASML is that it isn’t directly aligned with the chip business cycle. Orders for ASML’s lithography machines are placed years in advance, so the capacity that is being built out now for AI chips has already hit ASML’s books. Unfortunately for investors, this has caused management to reduce its expectations for 2025.

Previously, management projected between 30 billion and 40 billion euros for 2025. However, that guidance has been reduced to 30 billion to 35 billion euros — a move that the market didn’t appreciate. Following this announcement, the stock tumbled 20% in the following few trading days.

This reduction is due to China, which has become an outsized part of its business in recent years. In Q3, 47% of sales went to China, but in 2025, they project it will make up around 20% of sales — a more historically normal level. The business reduction likely has two factors (although management didn’t comment on why in its earnings release).

First, Western governments don’t want China and its allies getting their hands on ASML’s most cutting-edge machines, as this would allow them to produce the most technologically advanced chips available. Through various export bans imposed by the Dutch (ASML is based in the Netherlands) and the U.S., ASML is already limited in what it can sell to China, and further restrictions have recently been implemented.

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