AI Chips News

Tokyo Electron says AI to drive ‘double-digit’ growth in chip tool market

ai chip market growth

Tokyo Electron says AI to drive ‘double-digit’ growth in chip tool market

Tokyo Electron reaffirmed its annual outlook and outlined plans to build a ¥104 billion ($681 million) plant, suggesting it expects sustained artificial intelligence spending.

The company, one of a handful of key chip gear-makers globally, revealed that expansion after posting better-than-expected earnings. The supplier to Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing and Samsung Electronics brought in operating profit of ¥199.6 billion in the December quarter from sales of machines used to prepare, etch and clean silicon wafers that are ultimately cut into memory or logic chips. That was up 51% from the previous year and compares with the average of analyst estimates of ¥174 billion.

Closely watched as an indicator of future spending on chips used for artificial intelligence development, Tokyo Electron did not hike its outlook, as compatriot Advantest did a week earlier. Indications from supply chain players have been mixed, as Dutch lithography supplier ASML Holding reported a surprisingly high number of orders while Arm Holdings and Advanced Micro Devices gave cautious forecasts that added to doubts about the sustainability of the free-spending trend in the market.

Tokyo Electron’s move to expand capacity with a plant in Miyagi Prefecture reflects demand from customers such as Samsung, TSMC and SK Hynix, which have indicated they’ll continue elevated spending on tools used to process wafers into semiconductors. Much of the investment in 2025 will come from cutting-edge logic-makers and high-bandwidth memory-makers hurrying to meet AI server demand, Tokyo Electron Chief Executive Officer Toshiki Kawai said on an earnings call.

That’s while the company expects a lull in chip gear purchases by Chinese customers, especially among new entrants to chipmaking, he said. China is expected to comprise a percentage in the mid-thirties of Tokyo Electron’s sales in the business year starting April, down from more than 40% in the current fiscal year,

He said,

We can’t deny that we’ve been affected

by U.S. restrictions on exports of chip-related technologies and other geopolitical factors, Kawai said.

Chinese startup DeepSeek’s low-cost and open-source AI model is raising concern that the tech sector will face far more price competition and less revenue for the likes of Nvidia than previously predicted. Still, AI industry leaders have argued that cheaper AI models would mean more new entrants that would further support demand for AI infrastructure over the long term.

Tokyo Electron is still evaluating DeepSeek and its impact, Finance Division Officer Hiroshi Kawamoto said during an earnings call. If lower-cost AI leads to an expansion of the market, it’s a positive,

He said,

It’s too soon for us to say.

READ the latest news shaping the AI Chips market at AI Chips News

Tokyo Electron says AI to drive ‘double-digit’ growth in chip tool market, Source

Add comment

Follow us on LinkedIn!

Join our weekly newsletter!

Please enable JavaScript in your browser to complete this form.

Your Header Sidebar area is currently empty. Hurry up and add some widgets.