Previous Close | 13,332.50 |
Open | 13,201.00 |
Bid | 13,013.00 x N/A |
Ask | 13,065.00 x N/A |
Day's Range | 12,922.00 - 13,201.00 |
52 Week Range | 4,271.00 - 13,554.50 |
Volume | |
Avg. Volume | 493 |
Market Cap | 26.813T |
Beta (5Y Monthly) | 1.60 |
PE Ratio (TTM) | 1.45 |
EPS (TTM) | 9,028.77 |
Earnings Date | N/A |
Forward Dividend & Yield | 42.00 (0.32%) |
Ex-Dividend Date | May 24, 2023 |
1y Target Est | N/A |
With the change in how advanced chips are made, chip manufacturing companies must invest in new equipment. Lam Research (NASDAQ: LRCX) and Applied Material (NASDAQ: AMAT) are at the forefront of this trend.
Applied Materials Inc. (AMAT) shares gained 15% in the month of May alone. The latest surge in potential A.I. related companies has helped. However, unusual buying in the shares has been a theme for months.
NORTHAMPTON, MA / ACCESSWIRE / May 23, 2023 / Applied Materials by Julie Lata As the semiconductor industry grows in the years ahead, so too does the opportunity for technology to shape a more equitable and sustainable world. At Applied Materials, ...
Its revenue has continued to grow even though production in the semiconductor industry has struggled
Applied Materials (AMAT) announces multi-billion-dollar investment in Equipment and Process Innovation and Commercialization (EPIC) Center for semiconductor innovation.
The following are the top stories in the Wall Street Journal. - TikTok Inc on Monday filed a lawsuit challenging the state of Montana's new ban on use of the Chinese-owned app, the first state to bar the popular short-video sharing service. - Activist investor TCS Capital Management has built a stake in Yelp Inc and is calling on the service-recommendation site to explore strategic alternatives including a sale, according to people familiar with the matter.
We managed to elude the so-called earnings 'cliff' many warned of, with many companies posting better-than-expected results and keeping sentiment in line.
U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris and Applied Materials CEO Gary Dickerson at the “Summit to Advance Semiconductor Leadership.” Applied Materials CEO Gary Dickerson hosted U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris and leaders from industry, academia and government at the Summit to Advance Semiconductor Leadership in Sunnyvale, Calif. Discussions throughout the day were focused on three critical topics: economic sustainability, national security and talent development to support the semiconductor industr
U.S. semiconductor toolmaker Applied Materials Inc on Monday said it plans to spend up to $4 billion on a research center in the heart of Silicon Valley to speed up advances in semiconductor manufacturing. The center based in Sunnyvale, California, will come on line in 2026 and create up to 2,000 engineering jobs, said Applied, the world's biggest maker of tools used in manufacturing chips. The facility will host about $25 billion of research work over its first decade, pulling together staff from research universities and chipmakers such as Intel Corp, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co and Samsung Electronics Co Ltd, among others.
After Nvidia partner ASML posted a 180% spike in earnings, ASML stock has gapped up into buy range with rising relative strength.
The largest chip-equipment maker in the world, Applied Materials, is building a new research-and-development center. It says the scale of the project is contingent on government funding.
The White House will be making some noise today on the Chips Act. Vice President Kamala Harris will visit our Action Alerts PLUS holding Applied Materials in Sunnyvale, California to highlight how the Biden-Harris Administration's Investing in America agenda is making investments in semiconductor manufacturing and research and development to support American innovation, create jobs, and advance America's competitiveness. The vice president is expected to share private companies have announced $470 billion in manufacturing and clean energy investments in the United States, including over $200 billion in semiconductor manufacturing.
Applied Materials Inc (NASDAQ: AMAT) disclosed an investment of around $4 billion for creating the world's largest and most highly advanced research facility, Equipment and Process Innovation and Commercialization (EPIC) Center, in Silicon Valley. The company expects to invest over the next seven years in building the EPIC center at its campus and expects subsidies from the government under the CHIPS and Science Act. The new innovation center is expected to finish by early 2026 and will host aro
(Bloomberg) -- Applied Materials Inc. is planning to spend as much as $4 billion on a new research-and-development center near its California headquarters, embarking on a now-rare building project in the heart of Silicon Valley. Most Read from BloombergApple Plans to Turn Locked iPhones Into Smart Displays With iOS 17McCarthy Signals Debt Deal Optimism as US Put on Credit WatchUS Credit Rating at Risk of Fitch Cut on Debt-Limit ImpasseWorld’s Biggest Nuclear Plant May Stay Closed Due to Papers L
President Joe Biden and House Speaker Kevin McCarthy will meet today in a another effort to avoid a default and the European Union issued a record data privacy fine to Facebook parent Meta Platforms. Here’s what investors need to know today.
SANTA CLARA, California (Reuters) -U.S. semiconductor toolmaker Applied Materials Inc on Monday said it plans to spend up to $4 billion on a research center in the heart of Silicon Valley to speed up advances in semiconductor manufacturing. The center based in Sunnyvale, California, will come on line in 2026 and create up to 2,000 engineering jobs, said Applied, the world's biggest maker of tools used in manufacturing chips. The facility will host about $25 billion of research work over its first decade, pulling together staff from research universities and chipmakers such as Intel Corp, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co and Samsung Electronics Co Ltd, among others.
U.S. semiconductor toolmaker Applied Materials Inc on Monday said it plans to spend up to $4 billion on a research center in the heart of Silicon Valley to speed up advances in semiconductor manufacturing. The center, which will be based in Sunnyvale, California, will come on line in 2026 and create up to 2,000 engineering jobs, said Applied, which is the world's biggest maker of the tools used in manufacturing chips. The facility will host about $25 billion of research work over its first decade, pulling together staff from research universities and major chipmakers such as Intel Corp, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co and Samsung Electronics Co Ltd, among others.
Rendering of the future Applied Materials Equipment and Process Innovation and Commercialization (EPIC) Center Applied Materials is making a landmark investment to build the world's largest and most advanced facility for collaborative semiconductor process technology and manufacturing equipment R&D. The new Equipment and Process Innovation and Commercialization (EPIC) Center is planned as the heart of a high-velocity innovation platform designed to accelerate development and commercialization of
WASHINGTON— Applied Materials said it would invest up to $4 billion in a new California facility to conduct research on tools for making semiconductors, adding to a wave of chip-industry projects in the U.S. spurred on by federal government subsidies. The Santa Clara, Calif.-based company, a leading maker of machines used to make advanced chips increasingly seen as crucial to modern economies and geopolitical power, will invite chip makers and universities to collaborate and experiment with its equipment at the facility, which is expected to be complete by 2026. As the drive to make faster-calculating chips by shrinking transistors and packing more of them on chips runs up against physical barriers, chip makers are turning to new materials and creative engineering to advance the industry.
Deere's fiscal second-quarter earnings and sales beat Wall Street estimates, while Foot Locker slashed its fiscal-year outlook, sending the stock sharply lower. Morgan Stanley CEO James Gorman said he'll be stepping down within the next 12 months.
Semiconductor equipment maker Applied Materials beat targets for its fiscal second quarter and guided higher than views for the current period.
Applied Materials' (AMAT) second-quarter fiscal 2023 results reflect strength across Semiconductor Systems and Applied Global Services.
Wall Street has been telling investors for months to buy chip stocks on the hope an upturn in demand was imminent. According to Citi Research, PCs represent 32% of semiconductor end demand, while wireless accounts for 20%.
Deere's fiscal second-quarter earnings and sales beat Wall Street estimates, while Foot Locker slashes its fiscal-year outlook, sending the stock sharply lower. Morgan Stanley CEO Gorman says he'll be stepping down within 12 months.
Applied Materials, Inc. ( NASDAQ:AMAT ) stock is about to trade ex-dividend in 4 days. Typically, the ex-dividend date...