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- ASML's 2026 growth outlook hinges on second-quarter bookings</p>
<p>Nathan VifflinJuly 15, 2025 at 7:01 AM</p>
<p>By Nathan Vifflin</p>
<p>VELDHOVEN (Reuters) -Investors are hoping that ASML's bookings are robust enough to support its 2026 growth ambitions when the world's biggest chip-making equipment supplier reports its second-quarter earnings on Wednesday.</p>
<p>The Dutch firm has lost around 30% in market value since peaking one year ago, reflecting investor concern over its growth prospects.</p>
<p>At an investor event last November, the maker of the EUV machine - the backbone of AI chipmaking - said it saw 2026 as a growth year but didn't specify how much growth it anticipated.</p>
<p>Analysts see the second quarter as a "make or break" period which will determine its outlook for 2026, considering delivery times typically take around 12 months.</p>
<p>"ASML would need to double our second-quarter order estimates (of 5.3 billion euros) to comfort our 2026 revenue forecast," Barclays analyst Simon Coles told Reuters.</p>
<p>Analysts, on average, expect second-quarter bookings to reach 4.44 billion euros, according to a consensus compiled by researcher Visible Alpha, and 21.3 billion euros for the full-year.</p>
<p>TSMC, CHINA DEMAND</p>
<p>Hitting those forecasts depends largely on orders from the world's top contract chipmaker TSMC, analyst Marc Hesselink of ING said. The company, which is also ASML's top customer, is expected to order the tools it needs for its upcoming manufacturing process, N2, this year.</p>
<p>"We see a better-than-expected demand and order from TSMC and China players, but lower-than-expected demand and order from Intel and Samsung," said Kevin Wang, analyst at Mizuho.</p>
<p>Positive news on talks with clients over future orders would also offer reassurance that it will meet current market forecasts, said Hesselink.</p>
<p>ASML still has a long way to go in 2025 to fulfill booking expectations for its lithography systems, after net bookings, the industry's most closely watched figure, came in at 3.9 billion euro ($4.6 billion) in the first quarter, missing estimates, analysts say.</p>
<p>Its earnings will provide a gauge of the resilience of China's chipmakers, which have been buying lower-end ASML equipment not impacted by export restrictions. That demand helped the company beat first-quarter forecasts.</p>
<p>Last October, ASML projected Chinese orders would fall to a 20% share of all machine sales in 2025.</p>
<p>In fact, they constituted 27% of machine sales, steady from a quarter earlier. Analysts expect that trend to continue unless U.S. export curbs are further extended to apply to the older equipment.</p>
<p>($1 = 0.8552 euros)</p>
<p>(Reporting by Nathan Vifflin in Amsterdam; Editing by Matt Scuffham and Bernadette Baum)</p>
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