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Applied Materials Gives Strong Forecast as Chip Slump Eases

2023-08-18 04:19
Applied Materials Inc., the largest US maker of chipmaking machinery, gave a bullish forecast for the current quarter,
Applied Materials Gives Strong Forecast as Chip Slump Eases

Applied Materials Inc., the largest US maker of chipmaking machinery, gave a bullish forecast for the current quarter, indicating that an industry slump may be fading.

Fiscal fourth-quarter sales will be about $6.51 billion, the company said in a statement Thursday. That compares with an average analyst estimate of $5.88 billion. Excluding some items, profit will be $1.82 to $2.18 a share in the period, which ends in October, versus a projection of $1.61 a share.

The shift toward artificial intelligence computing and the rise of internet-connected devices are helping bolster results, Chief Executive Officer Gary Dickerson said in the statement, “enabling us to consistently deliver strong results in 2023 and positioning Applied Materials for sustainable outperformance.”

After three years of strong ordering, Applied’s chipmaker customers are now slowing down their expansion plans as they cope with a glut in the market for electronic components. But Applied Materials and its peers expect the industry to shrug off short-term problems and accelerate to $1 trillion in total revenue by the end of the decade.

As that recovery nears, analysts are predicting that growth for Applied Materials will return in the second half of next year.

Applied Materials shares gained about 3% in late trading after the results were released. They earlier closed at $137.59 in New York, leaving them up 41% this year.

Semiconductor-related stocks have been a favorite pick for investors, who expect them to benefit from the explosion in artificial intelligence systems. Demand for chips from Nvidia Corp. has been particularly strong, helping send that company’s valuation past the $1 trillion mark.

But other areas are struggling. For Applied Materials, demand from makers of memory chips has been a weak spot. The Santa Clara, California-based company has said that memory customers’ spending is tracking at its lowest level in more than a decade.

Third-quarter profit was $1.90 a share, excluding some items. Sales fell 1.5% to $6.43 billion in the period. Analysts estimated earnings of $1.73 a share and revenue of $6.16 billion.