Close Menu
Money MechanicsMoney Mechanics
    What's Hot

    $60 oil forces Europe’s energy giants to rethink buybacks – Oil & Gas 360

    February 5, 2026

    $50,000 for a 7-Day Cruise? Here’s What That Kind of Money Gets You on a Superyacht

    February 5, 2026

    Don’t Like Trump’s Economy? Maybe You Will Next Year

    February 4, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • $60 oil forces Europe’s energy giants to rethink buybacks – Oil & Gas 360
    • $50,000 for a 7-Day Cruise? Here’s What That Kind of Money Gets You on a Superyacht
    • Don’t Like Trump’s Economy? Maybe You Will Next Year
    • Health Care Expenses Can Significantly Reduce Retirees’ Income—Here’s What To Know
    • AMD’s Stock Got Crushed Today. CEO Lisa Su Says Demand Is ‘On Fire’
    • Here’s How to Stream the Super Bowl for Less
    • Amazon, UPS and Other Major Companies Are Making Big Job Cuts. Is AI To Blame?
    • How to Watch the 2026 Winter Olympics for Less
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Money MechanicsMoney Mechanics
    • Home
    • Markets
      • Stocks
      • Crypto
      • Bonds
      • Commodities
    • Economy
      • Fed & Rates
      • Housing & Jobs
      • Inflation
    • Earnings
      • Banks
      • Energy
      • Healthcare
      • IPOs
      • Tech
    • Investing
      • ETFs
      • Long-Term
      • Options
    • Finance
      • Budgeting
      • Credit & Debt
      • Real Estate
      • Retirement
      • Taxes
    • Opinion
    • Guides
    • Tools
    • Resources
    Money MechanicsMoney Mechanics
    Home»Opinion & Analysis»Why neither Asia nor the US has produced a rival to ASML
    Opinion & Analysis

    Why neither Asia nor the US has produced a rival to ASML

    Money MechanicsBy Money MechanicsJanuary 21, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram Pinterest Tumblr Reddit WhatsApp Email
    Why neither Asia nor the US has produced a rival to ASML
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


    Unlock the Editor’s Digest for free

    Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.

    ASML sells just over 40 of its most advanced chipmaking machines each year. For over a decade, investors questioned whether such limited volumes could ever add up to a viable business.

    Those doubts have aged badly. After an 80 per cent rise in its share price over the past six months, ASML is now valued at more than $500bn.

    To understand why, it helps to look at where the real power sits in the AI supply chain. Chipmakers have become the industry’s most visible winners of the AI boom. But even the most advanced makers, such as TSMC and Samsung, still compete the old school way: through running factories more efficiently, scaling production and improving yields. Their dominance is not guaranteed and customers can and do move.

    ASML plays a different game. It is the only company that can make the extreme ultraviolet lithography machines required to produce those advanced chips. Each one has a starting price of $220mn and there is no commercially credible alternative supplier.

    At first glance, this kind of dominance looks improbable. In most industries, a monopoly this profitable — ASML’s gross profit margins were 52 per cent in the third quarter — would attract competition, especially from regions that already lead in related technologies. Asia runs the global chip industry. Taiwan makes the most advanced chips and Korea leads in memory. Japan is unrivalled in chipmaking materials while China is willing to spend heavily to close the technology gap. If any region could produce a credible second supplier of EUV lithography, it would likely be one of these.

    Yet there is no number two. The usual explanations, including insufficient talent, funding or policy failure, do not address the core issue: in EUV, second place just does not work.

    Some content could not load. Check your internet connection or browser settings.

    The reason is that the technology behind EUV machines is a chain of almost impossible steps, all of which have to work at the same time. Modern chips are made by printing patterns, layer by layer, on to silicon using light. 

    To do this, engineers first need to create a form of light that does not occur naturally. Powerful lasers are fired at microscopic droplets of molten tin, turning them into plasma hotter than the surface of the Sun. That creates a pulse of extreme ultraviolet light, which is then reflected off a series of mirrors, each made with atomic-level precision and taking months to make, before the pattern is finally transferred to the silicon wafer.

    The hardest part to replicate is the optics. EUV-grade mirrors are produced by a single supplier: Carl Zeiss SMT. They are the product of decades of tightly integrated development between Zeiss and ASML.

    Some content could not load. Check your internet connection or browser settings.

    Even if a peer could replicate that technology, the economics do not work. Any new entrant would sell too few machines each year to recover development costs, yet those machines would still be expected to deliver near-perfect reliability from day one. Chip fabrication plants operate continuously. At a company like TSMC, which makes more than $120bn in sales a year, a day of lost output across those fabs can cost hundreds of millions of dollars. A lithography tool that works almost as well as ASML’s would be too much of a production risk, regardless of how much cheaper the sticker price looks.

    Recommended

    Attendees walk past a large CES sign; one person is taking a photo with a phone.

    As a result, chipmakers are unwilling to experiment with unproven EUV tools in volume production. That means a rival would never accumulate the field data required to improve. ASML shipped its first EUV machine in 2006 and its first production capable system in 2013. Because chip factories run around the clock, cumulative operating hours now run into the millions. That gap in real world operating data explains why Nikon and Canon, once ASML’s peers in lithography, ultimately withdrew from pursuing EUV lithography systems over a decade before it became commercially viable, and why no successor has emerged since their exit.

    Governments are often proposed as the solution. In theory, a determined state, backed by subsidies and guaranteed local buyers, could create a rival. China is one example. It has treated chipmaking as a national priority since export controls cut Huawei off from advanced chips in 2020. Efforts to make its own chipmaking machines are ongoing and heavily funded.

    Yet China’s experience has been the strongest test of the idea that money and policy can create a rival. ASML shows how, beyond a certain technological threshold, markets no longer correct monopolies.

    june.yoon@ft.com



    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email
    Previous ArticleHow Warren Buffett’s Protégé Used a Simple Habit to Achieve Success
    Next Article Americans Have Paid For 96% of Tariff Costs, Study Finds
    Money Mechanics
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Amazon, UPS and Other Major Companies Are Making Big Job Cuts. Is AI To Blame?

    February 4, 2026

    SpaceX and xAI Have Merged. Now Investors Are Wondering What’s Next for Tesla

    February 4, 2026

    PayPal Names New CEO as Outlook, Results Disappoint. The Stock Is Tumbling

    February 3, 2026
    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    $60 oil forces Europe’s energy giants to rethink buybacks – Oil & Gas 360

    February 5, 2026

    $50,000 for a 7-Day Cruise? Here’s What That Kind of Money Gets You on a Superyacht

    February 5, 2026

    Don’t Like Trump’s Economy? Maybe You Will Next Year

    February 4, 2026

    Health Care Expenses Can Significantly Reduce Retirees’ Income—Here’s What To Know

    February 4, 2026

    Subscribe to Updates

    Please enable JavaScript in your browser to complete this form.
    Loading

    At Money Mechanics, we believe money shouldn’t be confusing. It should be empowering. Whether you’re buried in debt, cautious about investing, or simply overwhelmed by financial jargon—we’re here to guide you every step of the way.

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest YouTube
    Links
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Disclaimer
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    Resources
    • Breaking News
    • Economy & Policy
    • Finance Tools
    • Fintech & Apps
    • Guides & How-To
    Get Informed

    Subscribe to Updates

    Please enable JavaScript in your browser to complete this form.
    Loading
    Copyright© 2025 TheMoneyMechanics All Rights Reserved.
    • Breaking News
    • Economy & Policy
    • Finance Tools
    • Fintech & Apps
    • Guides & How-To

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.