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Aandeel ASML Holding AEX:ASML.NL, NL0010273215

Laatste koers (eur) Verschil Volume
683,000   -7,800   (-1,13%) Dagrange 680,500 - 686,100 23.836   Gem. (3M) 763,9K

ASML 2022

9.199 Posts
Pagina: «« 1 ... 433 434 435 436 437 ... 460 »» | Laatste | Omlaag ↓
  1. The voice 9 december 2022 11:06
    an hour ago
    Chipbedrijven veren op na de sterke stijging van de omzet van TSMC. De Taiwanese leverancier boekte 50% meer omzet op jaarbasis. Chipbedrijven ASMI, Besi en ASML wonnen tot 1% op de slippen van het bedrijf, ondanks de afnemende vraag naar consumentenelektronica en de coronaverstoringen in China. TSMC is een belangrijke klant van ASML en een grote toeleverancier van Apple.
  2. The voice 9 december 2022 12:18
    Futures op Wall Street staan hoger voor de opening van de handel om half vier. De Dow winst een fractie bij 34.058 punten, Ook de S&P en de Nasdaq blijven dicht bij huis. De aandacht van beleggers gaat waarschijnijk vooral uit naar de Amerikaanse producentenprijsinflatiecijfers van november die om 14.30 uur worden bekendgemaakt. De markt rekent op een verzwakking van de inflatie van 8% naar 7,2% op jaarbasis verwacht.

    dft.nl
  3. forum rang 10 voda 9 december 2022 16:04
    quote:

    SBMD schreef op 9 december 2022 14:38:

    [...]

    Nee vanwege de ppi
    14:30
    *VS producentenprijzen eindvraag +0,3% in nov, Consensus +0,2%
    14:30
    *VS PPI excl. voeding, energie +0,4% in nov, Consensus +0,2%
    14:30
    *VS PPI persoonlijke consumptie +0,3% in nov
    14:30
    *VS PPI eindvraag gewijzigd naar +0,3% in okt van +0,2%
  4. forum rang 10 voda 9 december 2022 17:47
    Deze staat zal ik verder wekelijks bijhouden. Handig om in één oogopslag de koersontwikkelingen te zien.

    Slotkoers 31 dec. 2021 706,70

    Slotkoers 07 jan. 2022 664,90 -41,80 = -5.91%
    Slotkoers 14 jan. 2022 642,20 -22,70 = -3.41%
    Slotkoers 21 jan. 2022 629,30 -12,90 = -2.01% Cijfers 4e kwartaal 2021/ jaarcijfers 2021.
    Slotkoers 28 jan. 2022 566,10 -63,20 = -10.04%
    Slotkoers 04 feb. 2022 564,20 -1,90 = -0.34%
    Slotkoers 11 feb. 2022 569,50 +5,30 = +0.94%
    Slotkoers 18 feb. 2022 570,40 +0,90 = +0.16%
    Slotkoers 25 feb. 2022 589,10 +18,70 = +3.28%
    Slotkoers 04 mrt. 2022 533,60 -55,55 = -9.42%
    Slotkoers 11 mrt. 2022 542,80 +9,20 = +1.72%
    Slotkoers 18 mrt. 2022 609,90 +67,10 = +12.36%!!!
    Slotkoers 25 mrt. 2022 620,20 +10,30 = +1.69%
    Slotkoers 01 apr. 2022 606,70 -13,50 = -2.18%
    Slotkoers 08 apr. 2022 569,30 -37,40 = -6.16% Zeer slechte week voor de chippers!
    Slotkoers14 apr. 2022 558,70 10,60 = -1.53%
    Slotkoers 22 apr. 2022 571,20 +12,50 = +2.24% Cijfers 1e kwartaal 2022.
    Slotkoers 29 apr. 2022 548,00 -23,20 = -4.06%
    Slotkoers 06 mei. 2022 524,40 -23,60 = -4.31%
    Slotkoers 13 mei. 2022 525,20 +0,80 = +0.15%
    Slotkoers 20 mei. 2022 500,70 -24,50 = -4.66%
    Slotkoers 27 mei. 2022 541,30 +40,60 = +8.11%
    Slotkoers 03 jun. 2022 525,50 -15,80 = -2.92%
    Slotkoers 10 jun. 2022 495,10 -30,40 = -5.78%
    Slotkoers 17 jun. 2022 449,15 -45.95 = -9.28% Op de hele beurs is het een slachting.
    Slotkoers 24 jun. 2022 484,85 +35,70 = +7.95%
    Slotkoers 01 jul. 2022 431,25 -53,60 = -11.05% Wat een slachting zeg. Jaar laagste punt.
    Slotkoers 08 jul. 2022 446,15 +14,90 = +3.46%
    Slotkoers 15 jul. 2022 465,40 +19,25 = +4.31%
    Slotkoers 22 jul. 2022 522,50 +57,10 = +12.27%!! Cijfers 2e kwartaal 2022.
    Slotkoers dec. 29 jul. 2022 555,40 +32,90 = +6.30%
    Slotkoers 05 aug. 2022 559,40 +4,00 = +0.72%
    Slotkoers 12 aug. 2022 553,20 -6,20 = -1.11%
    Slotkoers 19 aug. 2022 545,10 -8,10 = -1.46%
    Slotkoers 26 aug. 2022 521,40 -23,70 = -4.35%
    Slotkoers 02 sep. 2022 484,15 -37,25 = -7.14%
    Slotkoers 09 sep. 2022 497,70 +13,55 = +2.84%
    Slotkoers 16 sep. 2022 465,00 -32,70 = -6.61%
    Slotkoers 23 sep. 2022 442,15 -22,85 = -4.91%
    Slotkoers 30 sep. 2022 433,60 -8,55 = -1.93%
    Slotkoers 07 okt. 2022 447,25 +13,65 = +3.15%
    Slotkoers 14 okt. 2022 397,45 -49,80 = -11.13% Zwaarste verlies week dit jaar! (in%)
    Slotkoers 21 okt. 2022 459,55 +62.10 = +15.62%!! Cijfers 3e kwartaal 2022
    Slotkoers 28 okt. 2022 480,40 +20,85 = +4.54%
    Slotkoers 04 nov. 2022 464,40 -16,00 = -3.33%
    Slotkoers 11 nov. 2022 551,50 +87,10 = +18.76%!!!!
    Slotkoers 18 nov. 2022 571,40 +19,60 = +3.61%
    Slotkoers 25 nov. 2022 574,10 +2,70 = +0.47%
    Slotkoers 02 dec. 2022 574,70 +0,60 = +0.10%
    Slotkoers 09 dec. 2022 577,30 +2,60 = +0.45%

    Jaarrendement t.o.v. van 31 december 2021 -129,70 = -18.31%

    Maandrendementen: (t.o.v. slot vorige maand)

    Slotkoers 31 jan. 2022 594,20 -112,50 = -15.92%
    Slotkoers 28 feb. 2022 598,90 +4,70 = +0.79%
    Slotkoers 31 mrt. 2022 610,00 +11,10 = +1.85%
    Slotkoers 29 apr. 2022 548,00 -62,00 = -10.16%
    Slotkoers 31 mei. 2022 536,00 -12,00 = -2.19%
    Slotkoers 30 jun. 2022 455,85 -80,15 = -14.95%
    Slotkoers 29 jul. 2022 555,40 +99,55 = +21.84%!!
    Slotkoers 31 aug. 2022 484,65 -70,75 = -12.74%
    Slotkoers 30 sep. 2022 433,60 -51,05 = -10.53%
    Slotkoers 31 okt. 2022 478,00 +44,40 = +10.24%
    Slotkoers 30 nov. 2022 561,10 +83,10 = +17.38%!!
    Slotkoers 09 dec. 2022 577,30 +16,20 = +2.89%
  5. Chrisss 9 december 2022 17:49
    Taiwan Semiconductor's Arizona Fab Could Mean Big Wins for 2 Other Chip Stocks
    By Nicholas Rossolillo – Dec 9, 2022 at 7:05AM

    KEY POINTS
    Taiwan Semiconductor will be investing $40 billion in the state of Arizona to boost chip production.
    The numbers are big, but the two new Arizona facilities will be a drop in the global chip production bucket.
    Some of the best ways to play this movement could be chip equipment providers Applied Materials and ASML.
    Taiwan Semi's expansion to the U.S. is a big deal, but there are ways to profit during construction.
    There's plenty of worry out there about what would happen to the global economy if China ever made a more aggressive military push to take back the island of Taiwan. Amid this worry, many companies and government organizations have been pushing Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing (TSM 1.48%) -- far and away the largest chip foundry on the planet and a recent addition to Warren Buffett's stock portfolio -- to diversify production into other countries.

    Lo and behold, Taiwan Semi just announced a second fab (a chip manufacturing facility) in the state of Arizona, over a year before its first facility there is complete. The total investment in the two fabs will be in the ballpark of $40 billion.

    This sounds like fantastic news for Taiwan Semi, as well as for chip designers Apple (AAPL 1.34%) and Nvidia (NVDA 1.42%), which will be among the first customers of the new fabs down in the southwestern desert. But two lesser-known names could be the best way for investors to profit: Applied Materials (AMAT 0.42%) and ASML Holding (ASML 0.09%).
    Lots of silicon, but a lot of equipment to fill a fab with first
    Taiwan Semi said its first fab will begin cranking out silicon wafers (those big circular discs you see being held by someone in a lab suit above) in 2024, using an enhanced version of its 5-nanometer manufacturing technology (the nanometers referring to the size of the transistors within a chip, with smaller sizes representing more powerful chips). The second fab will start production in 2026 using 3-nanometer tech. Together, the company said it could produce 600,000 silicon wafers a year at max capacity.

    For reference, Taiwan Semi's 5-nm and 3-nm manufacturing processes create 300-millimeter wafers (just shy of 12 inches in diameter). Each wafer thus has 113 square inches of surface area (high school geometry here: ?? x 6" radius squared), meaning Taiwan Semi could produce nearly 68 million square inches of silicon wafers every year. Sound like a lot? It is. But bear in mind some 14.7 billion square inches of wafers will be shipped in 2022 alone (according to industry association SEMI). That number is expected to increase by about a mid-single-digit percentage over the next few years.

    At any rate, though Taiwan Semi's $40 billion investment will add little to the total global chip production capacity, it's still an incredibly high-value project. These days, the most advanced chips require incredibly complex manufacturing equipment to produce. That's where Applied Materials and ASML come in. As Taiwan Semi constructs its two new fabs, it will be filling up those facilities with advanced machinery from its longtime partners Applied and ASML, with some pieces of equipment (specifically, ASML's extreme ultraviolet lithography machines) costing a couple hundred million dollars apiece.

    In other words, new fabs like the ones being built in the Grand Canyon State mean more growth for Applied Materials and ASML now while Taiwan Semi shareholders wait for that new output to go live.

    Another boom in chip demand is coming
    In 2022, global chip sales (the actual end product, not the wafers themselves) are expected to be around $600 billion. That's up from just over $400 billion in 2019 before the pandemic. The booming demand for silicon-based devices isn't going away anytime soon, though. Analyst and industry estimates now point toward global chip sales surpassing $1 trillion no later than 2030.

    It won't be a straight-uphill growth trend. For example, the value of chips sold is expected to dip slightly in 2023. However, big-ticket consumer goods like automobiles and home appliances are joining the digital era and will look a lot more like your smartphone in the coming years. Something similar is happening in the industrial world, where equipment of all sorts is getting hooked up to a network connection. 5G network infrastructure construction is ongoing, as are data center build-outs to support artificial intelligence and other high-end computing in the cloud.

    Besides supporting new fabs in Arizona, Applied Materials and ASML will also be involved in the construction of other sites like Intel's (INTC 0.84%) planned mega-fab in Ohio. Dozens of other facilities, like the other 17 fabs that Taiwan Semi owns in Taiwan and China (and one small fab in Washington state), will also need upgrades. Fab equipment also gets old and needs replacing, which also means ongoing sales for Applied and ASML, not to mention ongoing service and software fees.

    Taiwan Semi, Intel, and others will get some government assistance via legislation like the U.S. CHIPS Act during this boom in capital spending. However, it remains unknown how profitable these companies will be along the way -- or how profitable they'll be once this boom is all said and done.

    Fab equipment sales, though, tout high margins and cost what they cost, regardless of consumer and business end-demand for chips (which impact manufacturer profit margins). As these machines get more complex, the price tag on them goes up too, which is boosting Applied's and ASML's margins.

    As of this writing, Applied Materials and ASML shares trade for a respective 14 and 40 times trailing-12-month earnings (or a respective 20 and 25 times trailing-12-month free cash flow). Both had a tough year in 2022 due to supply chain issues and shifting government restrictions on sales to China, but both have managed to continue growing anyway. With years of boom time ahead for the chip fabrication industry, shares of these two companies look like a solid value -- and one of the best ways to profit from the coming explosion in fab spending.
    www.fool.com/investing/2022/12/09/tai...

  6. forum rang 7 *voetnoot 9 december 2022 18:05
    quote:

    Chrisss schreef op 9 december 2022 17:49:

    Taiwan Semiconductor's Arizona Fab Could Mean Big Wins for 2 Other Chip Stocks
    By Nicholas Rossolillo – Dec 9, 2022 at 7:05AM

    KEY POINTS
    Taiwan Semiconductor will be investing $40 billion in the state of Arizona to boost chip production.
    The numbers are big, but the two new Arizona facilities will be a drop in the global chip production bucket.
    Some of the best ways to play this movement could be chip equipment providers Applied Materials and ASML.
    Taiwan Semi's expansion to the U.S. is a big deal, but there are ways to profit during construction.
    There's plenty of worry out there about what would happen to the global economy if China ever made a more aggressive military push to take back the island of Taiwan. Amid this worry, many companies and government organizations have been pushing Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing (TSM 1.48%) -- far and away the largest chip foundry on the planet and a recent addition to Warren Buffett's stock portfolio -- to diversify production into other countries.

    Lo and behold, Taiwan Semi just announced a second fab (a chip manufacturing facility) in the state of Arizona, over a year before its first facility there is complete. The total investment in the two fabs will be in the ballpark of $40 billion.

    This sounds like fantastic news for Taiwan Semi, as well as for chip designers Apple (AAPL 1.34%) and Nvidia (NVDA 1.42%), which will be among the first customers of the new fabs down in the southwestern desert. But two lesser-known names could be the best way for investors to profit: Applied Materials (AMAT 0.42%) and ASML Holding (ASML 0.09%).
    Lots of silicon, but a lot of equipment to fill a fab with first
    Taiwan Semi said its first fab will begin cranking out silicon wafers (those big circular discs you see being held by someone in a lab suit above) in 2024, using an enhanced version of its 5-nanometer manufacturing technology (the nanometers referring to the size of the transistors within a chip, with smaller sizes representing more powerful chips). The second fab will start production in 2026 using 3-nanometer tech. Together, the company said it could produce 600,000 silicon wafers a year at max capacity.

    For reference, Taiwan Semi's 5-nm and 3-nm manufacturing processes create 300-millimeter wafers (just shy of 12 inches in diameter). Each wafer thus has 113 square inches of surface area (high school geometry here: ?? x 6" radius squared), meaning Taiwan Semi could produce nearly 68 million square inches of silicon wafers every year. Sound like a lot? It is. But bear in mind some 14.7 billion square inches of wafers will be shipped in 2022 alone (according to industry association SEMI). That number is expected to increase by about a mid-single-digit percentage over the next few years.

    At any rate, though Taiwan Semi's $40 billion investment will add little to the total global chip production capacity, it's still an incredibly high-value project. These days, the most advanced chips require incredibly complex manufacturing equipment to produce. That's where Applied Materials and ASML come in. As Taiwan Semi constructs its two new fabs, it will be filling up those facilities with advanced machinery from its longtime partners Applied and ASML, with some pieces of equipment (specifically, ASML's extreme ultraviolet lithography machines) costing a couple hundred million dollars apiece.

    In other words, new fabs like the ones being built in the Grand Canyon State mean more growth for Applied Materials and ASML now while Taiwan Semi shareholders wait for that new output to go live.

    Another boom in chip demand is coming
    In 2022, global chip sales (the actual end product, not the wafers themselves) are expected to be around $600 billion. That's up from just over $400 billion in 2019 before the pandemic. The booming demand for silicon-based devices isn't going away anytime soon, though. Analyst and industry estimates now point toward global chip sales surpassing $1 trillion no later than 2030.

    It won't be a straight-uphill growth trend. For example, the value of chips sold is expected to dip slightly in 2023. However, big-ticket consumer goods like automobiles and home appliances are joining the digital era and will look a lot more like your smartphone in the coming years. Something similar is happening in the industrial world, where equipment of all sorts is getting hooked up to a network connection. 5G network infrastructure construction is ongoing, as are data center build-outs to support artificial intelligence and other high-end computing in the cloud.

    Besides supporting new fabs in Arizona, Applied Materials and ASML will also be involved in the construction of other sites like Intel's (INTC 0.84%) planned mega-fab in Ohio. Dozens of other facilities, like the other 17 fabs that Taiwan Semi owns in Taiwan and China (and one small fab in Washington state), will also need upgrades. Fab equipment also gets old and needs replacing, which also means ongoing sales for Applied and ASML, not to mention ongoing service and software fees.

    Taiwan Semi, Intel, and others will get some government assistance via legislation like the U.S. CHIPS Act during this boom in capital spending. However, it remains unknown how profitable these companies will be along the way -- or how profitable they'll be once this boom is all said and done.

    Fab equipment sales, though, tout high margins and cost what they cost, regardless of consumer and business end-demand for chips (which impact manufacturer profit margins). As these machines get more complex, the price tag on them goes up too, which is boosting Applied's and ASML's margins.

    As of this writing, Applied Materials and ASML shares trade for a respective 14 and 40 times trailing-12-month earnings (or a respective 20 and 25 times trailing-12-month free cash flow). Both had a tough year in 2022 due to supply chain issues and shifting government restrictions on sales to China, but both have managed to continue growing anyway. With years of boom time ahead for the chip fabrication industry, shares of these two companies look like a solid value -- and one of the best ways to profit from the coming explosion in fab spending.
    www.fool.com/investing/2022/12/09/tai...

    Dank. Mooi verhaal. De komende jaren zitten we goed in onze chippers. Goed vasthouden en mee met de flow!
    Goed weekend!
9.199 Posts
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