Applied Materials just delivered a gut punch to semiconductor investors, sending shares plummeting 14% in after-hours trading as the chip equipment giant slashed its guidance amid collapsing demand from China and leading-edge customers. The dramatic selloff signals deepening cracks in the global semiconductor supply chain as geopolitical tensions reshape industry dynamics.
Applied Materials just sent shockwaves through the semiconductor industry. The chip equipment giant's shares crashed 14% in after-hours trading after the company delivered guidance that fell dramatically short of Wall Street expectations, citing a sudden collapse in demand from China and leading-edge customers.
The numbers paint a stark picture of the challenges facing the semiconductor supply chain. Applied Materials projected adjusted earnings per share of just $2.11, falling well short of the $2.39 analysts expected according to LSEG data. Revenue guidance of $6.7 billion also missed the mark significantly, coming in nearly $650 million below the $7.34 billion Wall Street had penciled in.
"The current macroeconomic backdrop and trade issues have fueled increasing uncertainty and lower visibility, primarily within our China business," CEO Gary Dickerson told analysts during the earnings call. His candid admission reveals how quickly the landscape has shifted for equipment manufacturers caught between escalating US-China trade tensions and a cooling semiconductor cycle.
The warning extends beyond short-term volatility. Dickerson explained that the company's guidance doesn't account for pending export license applications and assumes a significant backlog – suggesting the pain could deepen if regulatory approvals don't materialize. This uncertainty reflects the complex web of export controls that have reshaped how American semiconductor companies operate in China.
Applied Materials specifically cited weakness from leading-edge customers while noting that China clients are easing spending after a period of rapid manufacturing expansion. The dynamic suggests Chinese companies may have front-loaded equipment purchases ahead of potential restrictions, creating an inevitable demand cliff.
Wall Street analysts are already recalibrating their expectations. Bank of America's Vivek Arya moved swiftly to downgrade shares to neutral and slash his price target, citing "ongoing China and leading-edge headwinds." His research note warned that "the uncertainty could persist, making it tougher for the stock to outperform despite reasonable valuation," while suggesting "the slowdown is more company specific."