Trung Phan Profile picture
Aug 18 21 tweets 9 min read
ASML is the most important company you've never heard of.

The $220B Dutch firm makes the machines that make semiconductors. Each one costs $150m and access to them are a huge geopolitical flashpoint.

Here's a breakdown 🧵
What *exactly* does ASML sell?

Its key product is an extreme ultraviolet lithography (EUV) machine, which uses advanced light technology to "print" tiny circuits onto Silicon wafers.

Only ~40 are made a year and ASML has a near monopoly on the machine technology.
You def know ASML's main clients: Intel, Samsung and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC).

They need EUV to keep Moore's Law ("# of transistors on microchips doubles every 2 years") alive and continue to advance computing.

Total ASML sales in 2021 = ~$20B.
The ASML story begins in 1984, as a joint venture between Dutch conglomerate Philips and an electronics maker called Advanced Semiconductor Materials Int.

The project had a very humble start: it was launched in a shed behind a Philip's building in Eindhoven, Netherlands.
The venture's first product was called the PA 2000 stepper (think a slide projector "projecting" designs on silicon).

For years, the product failed to make headway against leading Japanese competitors (Nikon, Canon) and, in 1990, ASML was spun out as its own company.
ASML scored its 1st hit product in 1991, giving it momentum to IPO in 1995.

Soon after, it acquired a # of US lithography firms and -- by the end of 1990s -- it had comparable market share to Nikon and Canon.

From there, ASML made 2 big bets that separated it from the pack.
Both bets were made to keep up with Moore's law.

First: In 2006, ASML released its TWINSCAN system using immersion lithography (it utilizes water as lens to shrink the laser's wavelength = more circuits on chip).

It was ASML's first market-leading product.
Also in the mid-2000s, ASML started spending huge R&D on EUV technology.

It was a massive risk, though: EUV lithography would require Samsung, Intel and TMSC to completely rebuild and redesign their fabrication plants.

From 2008-14, ASML put $5B+ into EUV research.
The science behind EUV was established in the late 1980s. It was a US-led effort between the Dept. of Energy and industry (e.g. AMD, IBM, Intel).

ASML licensed EUV tech in 1999. Canon elected not to pursue it due to financial problems while Nikon chose to develop older tech.
How EUV works today:

◻️ A tin droplet drops into a vacuum
◻️ It's pulsed by a high-power laser
◻️ Tin atoms are ionized, creating plasma
◻️ A mirror captures EUV radiation emitted by plasma
◻️ Mirror transfers EUV to wafer (wavelength=13.5 nanometers, basically X-ray level)
The potential of EUV was so great that Intel, Samsung and TMSC -- all competitors -- jointly acquired 23% of ASML.

Intel put up the most: €2.5B for a 15% share (today, the firms have sold down most their stakes).

The first production-ready EUV machine was released in 2016.
Why are EUVs so expensive?

ASML plays a role similar to Boeing for airplanes (also $100m+ products): it's an integrator of 4750 global high-value parts suppliers:

◻️Tooling equipment (US)
◻️Chemicals (Japan)
◻️Lens (Germany)

(Nikon/Cannon do most production in-house)
Why can ASML only make ~40 EUVs a year? Each take 12-18 months and it has to:

◻️Co-ordinate 1k+ suppliers (hard to do, like plane manufacturing)
◻️Each EUV is custom (30+ variables to choose from)
◻️Long lead times (speciality parts like the Zeiss lens takes 40 weeks to produce)
The delivery process is nuts, too:

◻️Each EUV weighs 180 tons
◻️A disassembled EUV takes up to 40 shipping containers
◻️Shipping it (mostly to Asia) takes 20 trucks and 3 Boeing 747s
◻️ASML teams must be on-the-ground to maintain them
◻️The minimum spend to house EUVs is $1B
In 2021, ASML shipped 268 DUVs and 42 EUVs (only 140 ever have been sold) -- this is ~90% of the semi lithography industry.

ASML has a $50B+ order backlog and its nearest competitors are a decade behind the EUV tech. Meanwhile, it’s already working on the next-gen (High NA-EUV).
With chips needed in everything (data centres, AI, autos, mining), semis are the OIL of the 21st century.

The US has even blocked Dutch exports of EUV-licensed tech to China. As the Tech Cold War heats up, expect to hear more of ASML: the $220B+ giant that started in a shed.
If you enjoyed that:

1. Follow @TrungTPhan for smart threads 1-2x a week
2. Check out my Saturday newsletter that does similar deep dives on business and tech topics

trungphan.substack.com
Sources

NYT: nytimes.com/2021/07/04/tec…

Wired: wired.com/story/asml-ext…

CNBC:

YouTube series from Asianometry is GREAT:

Pt 1.
Pt 2.
Here’s a sped-up video showing the entire ASMl design and delivery process. Bonkers.

🔗
This is the only funny semiconductor meme could find.
Perhaps the most insane fact of ASML’s EUV machine: “The technology is theoretically precise enough to hit your thumb with a laser pointer from the moon.”

🔗 protocol.com/amp/intel-euv-…

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Trung Phan

Trung Phan Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @TrungTPhan

Aug 17
Growing up, the one item I always wanted to gift myself was a Rolex Explorer.

After a few lucky investments in the past year, I am happy to announce that I paid for a subscription to Getty Images and pulled this amazing photo of the watch: Image
For more business insights (and more photos from Getty images…it’s an annual license), check out my newsletter: trungphan.substack.com

PS. Here’s my actual “Rolex”. Image
this ad speaks to me Image
Read 4 tweets
Aug 12
In 1998, Microsoft became the most valuable firm and Bill Gates owned 27%.

That stake would now be $574B (more than Bezos + Musk combined).

But Gates’ buddy Buffett told him to sell MSFT and buy non-tech assets. Today, he is only worth $113B.

LESSON: Choose your friends wisely Image
On a related note: I write a Saturday newsletter on business and tech.

Tomorrow’s email is about how Bill Gates and Microsoft once owned 5% of Apple and helped save the company from bankruptcy.

Sub here to get it in your inbox: trungphan.substack.com
All jokes aside: the wildest part of Gates and Buffett friendship is that Buffett barely ever owned any MSFT despite his long friendship with Gates.

🔗 trungphan.substack.com/p/buffetts-152… Image
Read 4 tweets
Aug 12
The world’s 3 best business models:

1. Google search ads
2. Visa payment network
3. Selling a single banana at the gas station for $0.99
Stanley Druckenmiller def thinks Google’s core search is the best business ever when I asked him about FAANG last year (didn’t get a chance to ask bananas)

🔗 trungphan.substack.com/p/year-in-revi…
Check out some of these gas station margins (surprised perishable groceries is 40% but the bananas are def 100% margin).
Read 4 tweets
Aug 11
Walt Disney Co. just surpassed Netflix in total streaming subs (221.1m vs. 220.7m). And it did so in less than 3 years since launching Disney+.

How? By combining great content with a technology it acquired from the MLB (yes, Major League Baseball) for $2.6B.

Here’s the story🧵
Walt Disney Co's total paying streaming subscribers includes:

• Disney+ (152.1m)
• Hulu (46.2m)
• ESPN+ (22.8m)

The three streaming services — based on pricing and bundling — are not an exact comparison to Netflix. But remember, Disney+ only launched in November 2019.
Now, let's rewind to 2000: the height of Dotcom.

MLB Commissioner Bud Selig wants to consolidate digital rights and create websites for the league's 30 teams.

To make the project "fair" for every team, he creates an independent arm: MLB Baseball Advanced Media (BAM).
Read 19 tweets
Aug 10
ME: Wow, Twitter is turning into Linkedin.

LINKEDIN: Hold my beer. Image
“Why is Linkedin so Cringe” will be the most evergreen piece of content I’ll ever write in my life: trungphan.substack.com/p/why-is-linke…
Read 5 tweets
Aug 9
A Redditor explains how he makes $1.2m working 7 jobs. Very actionable advice:
The r/OverEmployed comments are lit

🔗 reddit.com/r/overemployed…
The Green Screen Guy doing squats while on a “Zoom call” might be the greatest gag ever
Read 4 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us on Twitter!

:(