
Applied Materials shares fall 13% after forecast hit by China pause, export‑licence woes
US President Donald Trump's ongoing tariff negotiations and certain export restrictions to China have made it more difficult to forecast where the economy is headed, weighing on new orders for chipmaking tools suppliers such as Applied Materials.
Dutch firm ASML , the world's biggest supplier of chipmaking equipment, warned earlier in July that it may not achieve revenue growth in 2026 as chipmakers building factories in the US await clarity on the potential impact of tariffs.
'We are expecting a decline in revenue in the fourth quarter driven by both digestion of capacity in China and non-linear demand from leading-edge customers given market concentration and fab timing,' Applied's chief financial officer Brice Hill said in a statement.
Tightened export controls on advanced semiconductor manufacturing equipment to China prevent these companies from selling their most cutting-edge tools to Chinese customers.
In China, chipmakers are pausing new equipment orders to absorb recently added capacity for older-generation, mainstream chips used in cars, industry and other everyday electronics, the company has said.

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