Why The World Relies On ASML For Machines That Print Chips

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  • Опубликовано: 26 сен 2024

Комментарии • 3,1 тыс.

  • @JeroenBouwens
    @JeroenBouwens 2 года назад +2360

    The incredible level of accuracy these machines achieve cannot be overstated. Saying it's "like hitting a coin on earth from the moon with a laser" is a nice analogy and to get an idea of the engineering challenges involved, consider this: If your laser on the moon moves a microdegree (one-millionth of a degree), you will miss your coin by 10 meters. Not only do ASML's machines hit this coin, they do it over and over again, 24/7, millions of times a day, with people walking around, trucks driving by outside, changing temperatures etc. At that scale and level of accuracy EVERYTHING influences your machine. That is ASML's real technical achievement.

    • @seekter-kafa
      @seekter-kafa 2 года назад +86

      for me, that mirror analogy was even more impressive (if it0s true) that 1 meter mirror if up-scaled to size of a country, the greatest bump would be only one millimeter high

    • @dimitrygornomelikov3146
      @dimitrygornomelikov3146 2 года назад +29

      We need to make more of this machine in China. ASML is not allowed to have a monopoly on this.

    • @joeschmoe3665
      @joeschmoe3665 2 года назад +1

      @@dimitrygornomelikov3146 Don't worry the chinese is great at intellectual property theft, I'd rather keep it in western countries not communist dictatorships

    • @Obsidian-Nebula
      @Obsidian-Nebula 2 года назад +215

      @@dimitrygornomelikov3146 Definitelt not in china my dude

    • @nerobernardino88
      @nerobernardino88 2 года назад +130

      @@dimitrygornomelikov3146 Definitely not in China.

  • @lessdatesmoreonmyplates1457
    @lessdatesmoreonmyplates1457 Год назад +119

    This is truly insane, I can't even imagine the level of pride and satisfaction the engineers working at ASML have.

  • @aaronfirtz2963
    @aaronfirtz2963 2 месяца назад +599

    Exciting times for semiconductor stocks TSMC, AMD and NVDA. which are all experiencing a surge in value. It's interesting to watch the competition develop, given these stocks are major contributors to Al chip growth. On the increase of my personal holdings, I've witnessed amazing impact on my shares.

    • @ericgrinwis1630
      @ericgrinwis1630 2 месяца назад +2

      Intel and AMD will definitely have their share of the market. TSMC is at max capacity and investing in other semiconductor companies will be an absolute power move, Different chips are good at different things and Nvidia has been very specialised, which leaves other aspects of Al open.

    • @paulhelfer8145
      @paulhelfer8145 2 месяца назад +1

      This is the type of in-depth detail on the semiconductor market that investors need, also the right moment to focus on the rewarding AI manifesto.

    • @aaronfirtz2963
      @aaronfirtz2963 2 месяца назад +1

      certainly, i had bought NVDA shares at $300, $475 cheap b4 the 10 for 1 split and with huge interest I keep adding, i’m currently doings the same for PLTR, POET and AMD constructively. Best possible way to get ahead, is participating behind top experienced performers.

    • @kaylagarrison9267
      @kaylagarrison9267 2 месяца назад

      I agree, i own three business, right now I'm compiling and picking stocks that l'd love to hold on to for a few years before retirement, do you think these stocks would do better over the years? My goal is to have at least $2 million saved for retirement.

    • @andrescastillo2043
      @andrescastillo2043 2 месяца назад

      Amazingly, people are starting to get the uniqueness of Palantir.

  • @AmrishKelkar
    @AmrishKelkar 2 года назад +1035

    Worked in the semiconductor industry in silicon valley for 13 years before leaving in 2020. I remain convinced that chip manufacturing is by the far the greatest scientific achievement in terms of what humans are capable of building. It is just reality defying that we are able manufacture features that measures several tens of nanometers across (not one, not two -- but billions of them on a chip the size of your thumbnail, and millions of such chips) , and then have the whole thing do what we actually set out to do, consistently, that too! The semi industry is chock full of extremely intelligent people (absolute nerds) who are hard to find and don't come by that easily. Every day was extremely challenging and stressful , but very very rewarding because I got to address technical problems that only a few get the chance to solve.

    • @jellojoe00
      @jellojoe00 2 года назад +10

      I dunno....heart transplants are more interesting.

    • @zentechreal7485
      @zentechreal7485 2 года назад +120

      @@jellojoe00 even heart transplants, or even more artificial heart transplants require those machines to operate and function.

    • @moow950
      @moow950 2 года назад +57

      @@zentechreal7485 Indeed, the machines needed to do heart or brain surgery are very complex and have lots of chips inside them. Chips are the fuel of modern society.

    • @dag_of_the_west5416
      @dag_of_the_west5416 2 года назад +15

      I also spent 13 years in semiconductor industry, but left after 2006. Did get to travel the world a bit and work on process development for 300 mm wafers in the end.

    • @MICKEYISLOWD
      @MICKEYISLOWD 2 года назад +8

      Where does this all end? You can't keep getting smaller and so faster. There is a brick wall and not too far away where we reach a boundary for sure. What happens when reach the limits of what technology can do or offer you in terms of what you can actually build? I'm really interested in Quantum computing to answer big questions that no classical computer can ever achieve, predicting what molecules will do to develop new medicines, future farming with max efficiency, new materials, Climate Change modelling with staggering accuracy. It would change the world so enormously that if politicians truly understood; they would invest trillions just to get the ball rolling faster.

  • @guitarmeggedonit5232
    @guitarmeggedonit5232 2 года назад +755

    I work doing engineering drawings for installing these machines in chip factories. They are incredible. Hats off to the scientists and engineers building them!

    • @pilarmartin5051
      @pilarmartin5051 2 года назад +1

      They are going to putted these chips in human brain to controlled them very satanic.

    • @nickbell3546
      @nickbell3546 2 года назад +11

      @@pilarmartin5051 yeehaw!

    • @transformerstuff7029
      @transformerstuff7029 2 года назад +27

      the netherlands......only 17 million people.....the Netherlands is the 2nd largest food exporter in the world and only one who can deliver this chip tech?
      The world is in trouble......

    • @tonywilson4713
      @tonywilson4713 2 года назад +24

      @@transformerstuff7029 The world isn't in trouble. Anyone who doesn't have this technology is in trouble, because no matter what agreements they have they are at the mercy of the countries that have this technology.
      When your society requires a specific technology just to function you are at the mercy of who supplies that technology.
      Its why the Chinese captured and trapped the Rare Earths industry. Its why other countries have done the same in other spaces.

    • @Starship737
      @Starship737 2 года назад +12

      already too much technology.. we shud reduce electronics and tech as much possible embrace our family and friends. Excess of tech is enemy

  • @DHAiRYA2801
    @DHAiRYA2801 5 месяцев назад +48

    ASML has 100% market share in advanced photolithography machines. Domination

    • @Ctb1998
      @Ctb1998 2 месяца назад +7

      Which is terrible for innovation

    • @ddlog420
      @ddlog420 Месяц назад

      @@Ctb1998 And a prime target for every country if World War 3 were ever to break out!

    • @popbogdanemilian1
      @popbogdanemilian1 Месяц назад

      ​@@Ctb1998 let USA tell us how to make this tech..... oo I forgot you dont have one what you have nothing but bulshit software that kills people or stolen data for AI .

    • @turboleggy
      @turboleggy 17 дней назад

      ​@@Ctb1998and awesome for national security. This innovation was only possible because of a multi national effort....eat it china.

  • @d.kersten8793
    @d.kersten8793 2 года назад +815

    @ASML is a good company to work for. When I started, the first Twinscan was being created with 300mm wafers and a dual stage which allows simultanious measurement of one wafer and doing the actual lithography on the other one. Customers were so eager to have a machine that could handle 300mm wafers, that the first machines were single stage Twinscans. These 22 years have been incredible and more (Moore) is to come!

    • @Zt3v3
      @Zt3v3 2 года назад +27

      I see what you did there ;-)

    • @skepticalmechanic
      @skepticalmechanic 2 года назад +12

      I like what you did with Moore! 😂

    • @moonboy5851
      @moonboy5851 2 года назад +4

      I like the pun.

    • @Crashed131963
      @Crashed131963 2 года назад +5

      Need "Neon" to make chips and the Ukraine has 95% of the planet's supply.
      These machines will be idle.

    • @mayanksoni9046
      @mayanksoni9046 2 года назад +2

      I think moore is not to come because moores law is collapsing as we r reaching size of atoms.

  • @mattyktatermattyktater796
    @mattyktatermattyktater796 2 года назад +160

    Incredible. I'm an engineer for medical lasers and thought that I had the be incredibly precise with my optical alignments. This is magnitudes more precise.

    • @dag_of_the_west5416
      @dag_of_the_west5416 2 года назад +12

      The purity of semiconductor chemicals and gases was always at the leading edge of what was possible, medical grade was the next step down after semiconductor grade.

    • @bromine_35
      @bromine_35 2 года назад +3

      I know that a other (now former) medical laser engineer now works at ASML
      What medical laser company do you work for?

    • @bromine_35
      @bromine_35 2 года назад

      @footballcoreano Yes i've herd the company zeiss go around when talking to that guy

    • @dag_of_the_west5416
      @dag_of_the_west5416 2 года назад +3

      Calling it a lens is misleading, it is a "virtual lens" formed from mirrors. Also 95% of the EUV light is wasted.

    • @kevinkanter2537
      @kevinkanter2537 2 года назад +1

      @@dag_of_the_west5416 good context - thanks for both of your posts on gases and amount of EUV light used in process.

  • @p382742937423y4
    @p382742937423y4 2 года назад +96

    Can you believe the Dutch? Such a small nation. In the top twenty of almost anything in the world, from sport to education, agriculture, trade, technology... Its incredible.

    • @archilife2555
      @archilife2555 7 месяцев назад +5

      They are incredible.

    • @Milo-nf1pm
      @Milo-nf1pm 6 месяцев назад +3

      And a narco state

    • @carloschu7127
      @carloschu7127 6 месяцев назад +6

      Dutch ( ASML ) plus Taiwan ( TSMC ) .

    • @TheErichos
      @TheErichos 5 месяцев назад

      @@Milo-nf1pmYes, but they also have to be able to stay creative

    • @FrankHeuvelman
      @FrankHeuvelman 5 месяцев назад

      @@Milo-nf1pm The real narco state is the US. The difference is that in the US the pharmaceutical industry who distributes the dope. This is the one and only goal of the so-called 'War On Drugs.' Keeping the monster profits within the family.

  • @roygrimm
    @roygrimm 2 года назад +77

    Great Job CNBC.. I was with ASML from 1988 to 2013 and your piece here is very good. Also great job Mike!

    • @DingChavez-m1x
      @DingChavez-m1x 8 месяцев назад

      I've been buying shares of asml for about a year now every paycheck best investment ever made

    • @bruceleehiiiyaaa
      @bruceleehiiiyaaa 6 месяцев назад

      hope you have some equity lol

  • @einstijn138
    @einstijn138 2 года назад +21

    Started R&D in 2000, didn't even know if they would succeed in 2015, and delivered in 2019
    Now that is some courage, confidence and tenacity

  • @roundhouse4201
    @roundhouse4201 11 месяцев назад +10

    I work as an electrician in the Intel FAB in Hillsboro, Oregon, there are like 8 of these machines sitting side by side and it is the most incredible thing ever to witness. And we're starting to make room for even more which is just mind blowing.

    • @johnmcentegart007
      @johnmcentegart007 8 месяцев назад +3

      The U.S. represents an Existential threat for all of Eurasia and Africa... Western Europe is presently U.S. occupied so are parts of Asia... Such as Japan, South Korea and various island chains. These locations are to serve as staging grounds for further U.S. adventurism and exceptionalism. Many countries in the Middle East are bombed out. This has caused the European Migrant Crisis.

    • @1fadf23f
      @1fadf23f 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@johnmcentegart007 COOKOOOOOOOO

    • @johnmcentegart007
      @johnmcentegart007 8 месяцев назад

      @@1fadf23f I bet a million Rubles that you are an American dude commenting on European affairs from your bunker in the U.S. You can tell that the Internet was weaponized from the Google search results. The manner in which information is listed is a dead give away. Google has been fined heavily for prioritized listings. That is going to happen again.

    • @johnmcentegart007
      @johnmcentegart007 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@1fadf23f I will bet a million Rubles that you are an American dude commenting on European affairs from your bunker in the U.S.

    • @johnmcentegart007
      @johnmcentegart007 8 месяцев назад

      @@1fadf23f Pritzker was born in Palo Alto, California on January 19, 1965. He is the son of Donald Pritzker and Sue (Sandel) Pritzker. A member of the Pritzker family, a Jewish family prominent in business and philanthropy during the late 20th century, Pritzker is named after both of his father's brothers, Jay Pritzker and Robert Pritzker. Pritzker's grandfather, Abe Pritzker, was a business lawyer. The Pritzkers have consistently been near the top of the Forbes "America's Richest Families" list since …

  • @srikanthramanan
    @srikanthramanan 2 года назад +602

    Thanks CNBC for the exclusive footage and content. This technology is so mind-blowing and feels like sorcery every time I learn about it.

    • @lifeisneverthesame910
      @lifeisneverthesame910 2 года назад +7

      hopefully India can copy this machine with much cheaper price..

    • @kamolhengkiatisak1527
      @kamolhengkiatisak1527 2 года назад +49

      @@lifeisneverthesame910 Not India nor China could do as it involves so many suppliers/exclusive technologies. Listen carefully and you will know.

    • @transformerstuff7029
      @transformerstuff7029 2 года назад +18

      the netherlands......only 17 million people.....the Netherlands is the 2nd largest food exporter in the world and only one who can deliver this chip tech?
      The world is in trouble......

    • @srikanthramanan
      @srikanthramanan 2 года назад +47

      @@transformerstuff7029 Its not that simple to associate one country. ASML is a multi national company headquartered in the Netherlands. ASML has a huge presence in the US and East Asia and has lots of critical suppliers globally. For instance Zeiss the only maker of lenses are headquartered in Germany. But ASML as a company does enjoy a monopoly with EUV.

    • @lifeisneverthesame910
      @lifeisneverthesame910 2 года назад +3

      @@srikanthramanan India can easily make this thing a lot cheaper.

  • @jascrandom9855
    @jascrandom9855 2 года назад +262

    ASML is one of the best examples of a "Hidden Champion".

    • @jdr4674
      @jdr4674 2 года назад

      It is so hidden that 350k people have watched a 19 minute documentary by CNBC about it..

    • @jascrandom9855
      @jascrandom9855 2 года назад +24

      @@jdr4674 How many people knew about them before the documentary? or before the pandemic?
      Hidden Champions are small-ish companies that in the Top 5 in a niche global market, and are not very well known outside of that market.
      Or course, ASML isn't small anymore.

    • @TheYah00netstar
      @TheYah00netstar 2 года назад +2

      *Or...hideous...Nikon(the leader in the sector) have accused them in the past for 7 counts of patent infringements...and asked the U.S Gov to intervene halting the sale of some of their machines in America...perhaps for a strong reason discretion about business was a must...*

    • @marczhu7473
      @marczhu7473 2 года назад

      @@jascrandom9855 simple at the trade war huawei and this one was in the spotlight.

    • @krashd
      @krashd 2 года назад +7

      @@TheYah00netstar Japan and the Netherlands have a long history of electronic rivalry, when it's not Nikon accusing ASML of something it is Sony accusing Phillips of something else.

  • @NKhalaileh
    @NKhalaileh Год назад +25

    I think more credit should be given to Carl Zeiss for creating the EUV light in the first place. They provide the Heart of this fascinating machine.

    • @therealdutchidiot
      @therealdutchidiot Год назад +1

      I hate to go "well actually" on you, but well actually, EUV light was first developed in a US university using different methods, the double shot method is used in EUV machines by ASML.

    • @Arsenic71
      @Arsenic71 Год назад +8

      @@therealdutchidiot Well actually EUV has always existed in the universe, so nobody developed or invented it. The technology may have been developed in the US but Zeiss is ,I believe, the only company in the world that can deliver the optics, i.e. lenses and mirrors, at those levels of precision. I assume double shot refers to the vaporization of tin droplets - that technology is absolutely jaw-dropping (just like pretty much everything in semiconductor manufacturing). To even think of it, much less think it could be done realistically AND reliably... incredible.

    • @therealdutchidiot
      @therealdutchidiot Год назад +2

      @@Arsenic71 The technology was actually developed by the US army. Unwilliing to develop it further due to cost ASML took over the project.
      The only thing Zeiss has to do with it when it comes to these machines is the lense and mirror assembly.

    • @Arsenic71
      @Arsenic71 Год назад +5

      @@therealdutchidiot Exactly. The "only" thing...

    • @therealdutchidiot
      @therealdutchidiot Год назад +2

      @@Arsenic71 The part that isn't relevant for EUV in the slightest. It comes *after* the EUV stage.

  • @einstien2409
    @einstien2409 2 года назад +126

    This truely shows the sheer inginuity of engineers. Mad respect for being the very driving force of society.

    • @uvwuvw-ol3fg
      @uvwuvw-ol3fg 2 года назад +1

      So far aren't they just increasing the population size and net inequality? Seems like inherent optimism bias and terror management theory will always help regardless of ideologies such as antinatalism based on consent and efilism.

    • @mfst100
      @mfst100 2 года назад +7

      And yet young people look up to sport stars... or even (I am guilty of it too) to drunk and drugged music stars.

    • @2hotflavored666
      @2hotflavored666 2 года назад +8

      @@uvwuvw-ol3fg Here, you dropped your tin foil hat alongside your sleeping meds. Sleep well!

    • @khalidalali186
      @khalidalali186 2 года назад

      Hahaha 🤣 good one dude, well played lol.

    • @mikiallen7733
      @mikiallen7733 2 года назад

      I wish it could have been carbon-free though !

  • @davidbosak7503
    @davidbosak7503 2 года назад +41

    I just want to recognize all the people on this comment board (and everywhere) who have worked in this industry and contributed to this amazing technology. You have literally changed the course of human history, and made everyone's lives so much better. Thank you for your intelligence, perseverance and hard work!

  • @TheSendersa
    @TheSendersa 5 месяцев назад +9

    One of the reason why asml is a successful company. Because it's leaders focus on technology, science and innovation. They are not McKinsey or Boston consulting group type of people.

    • @JH24821
      @JH24821 5 месяцев назад +3

      Very well said. ASML has over 50 years of experience, and their founders took a risk back then by going in a different direction others were not willing to take; and they're being rewarded for it ever since.

    • @yurichtube1162
      @yurichtube1162 5 месяцев назад +2

      On their web page, they say diversity is the reason for their succes. Damn blackrock.

    • @semiramisubw4864
      @semiramisubw4864 Месяц назад

      @@yurichtube1162 well it actually is. They needed alot of stuff from other companys which were world wide, well later they bought alot of them but still. They have labs in alot of countrys aswell, making it natural diverse.

    • @roch145
      @roch145 18 дней назад

      Donald Douglass of aircraft fame said he knew it was time to retire from aircraft manufacturing when he realized the majority of the executives were either lawyers or accountants. Boeing needs to shed a bunch of their non technical leadership.

  • @spinningjenny1629
    @spinningjenny1629 2 года назад +172

    With everything going on in the world, i think this is the peak of human performance and intelligence. Machines which are so complex that only the best mathematicians, physicists and engineers know how to develope and build the damn thing. Only for us to use the chip to watch a movie on our smartphones

    • @davidb6576
      @davidb6576 2 года назад +11

      It is amusing, isn't it? Literally - apex technology used FOR amusement...

    • @neonraytracer8846
      @neonraytracer8846 2 года назад +25

      @@davidb6576 Well yea, but it's also in satellites, the infrastructure grid (power, internet, logistics).
      Phones are just a way to make money and further technology, it's not really for amusement. It says more about what people wanna spend their time on more than aything else.

    • @theonlywalkingpotato
      @theonlywalkingpotato 2 года назад +4

      and then you have the other peak of human intelligence where some clown is telling a company on the other side of the globe not sell to certain countries... but i guess thats nothing new in todays politics

    • @davidb6576
      @davidb6576 2 года назад

      @@theonlywalkingpotato And speaking of intelligence (or lack of it): You get folks who are agents for a country that's committing atrocities against a neighboring country. Why, folks like that even argue against sanctions on the murderous invader. Who could be so immoral as to support a dictator like putin?

    • @neonraytracer8846
      @neonraytracer8846 2 года назад +4

      @@theonlywalkingpotato lol, people don't like aggression. They punish aggression. If you think that's weird or a sign og bad intelligence, please go be voliolent against yourself.

  • @maxwellfox
    @maxwellfox 2 года назад +65

    Thanks CNBC! That was very informative and well done!

  • @webdivers1996
    @webdivers1996 2 года назад +6

    I worked for 27 years in the public restrooms cleaning industry. A dirty job but I can fully confirm that ASML tech knowhow implemented the approach to the cleaning process

  • @davidb6576
    @davidb6576 2 года назад +130

    Very well presented! I did a small amount of design for a version of lithography equipment at MIT back in the 90's, the rate of progress is staggering to me...

  • @markknoop6283
    @markknoop6283 2 года назад +638

    38 years in business and 97% of machines sold is still operating 😤🤯
    There are some industries that don't get those number's.

    • @gobimurugesan2411
      @gobimurugesan2411 2 года назад +27

      They cutting edge in everything. Even exceeding military grades.

    • @waleed8530
      @waleed8530 2 года назад +103

      @@gobimurugesan2411 isn't military grades = the bare minimum, cheapest.

    • @markknoop6283
      @markknoop6283 2 года назад +27

      @@waleed8530 the military gave us www, touchscreen, jet engines, dokters, micrwaves and a lot more.

    • @mwanikimwaniki6801
      @mwanikimwaniki6801 2 года назад +9

      @@waleed8530 It is lol

    • @tomaszszupryczynski5453
      @tomaszszupryczynski5453 2 года назад +7

      looks like they dont know about planned obsoletence that everybody else do, but hey they are so pro ecology

  • @JongJande
    @JongJande 2 года назад +75

    One of the reasons for their success next to their technical capabilities is the fact tha AMSL works together with other companies worldwide. I think AMSL can be regarded as an example to the whole world how we should work together to our common benefit instead of making war and loose everything.

    • @psycronizer
      @psycronizer 2 года назад +1

      amen to that !

    • @d.o.g573
      @d.o.g573 Год назад

      If people abide laws - yes
      If no - then no
      I hope you get 😉 it

  • @markmoreno7295
    @markmoreno7295 2 года назад +227

    When I was in high school I worked in a clean room and helped produce microchips for Western Electric and other buyers. It was amazing to see silicon crystals growing. We also shot chromium onto very flat glass plates. These plates were coated with various layers but a photo emulsion finished. The target was shot with the circuit image and after acid washes a micro circuit was created for sandwiching inside an IC chip. I made my first photovoltaic cell using a damaged wafer of silicone. After my introduction to clean rooms I later worked in dirtier places- surgical suites.

    • @KangJangkrik
      @KangJangkrik 2 года назад +11

      Wow you're so lucky to graduate from that high school

    • @andylines8040
      @andylines8040 2 года назад +1

      What high school was that?

    • @OriginalPuro
      @OriginalPuro 2 года назад +1

      @@andylines8040 Which* .p

    • @anonymousAJ
      @anonymousAJ 2 года назад +3

      Is it desirable that surgical suites be made cleaner? And if so, are there cost effective mechanisms that could be borrowed from industrial clean rooms?

    • @Alex19781986
      @Alex19781986 2 года назад +4

      In Asia we have bachelors and masters do the same things you did as a high schooler,
      so unnecessary and inefficient...

  • @chriskim7123
    @chriskim7123 2 года назад +304

    I like how confident the CEO is about the product ASML makes. That divorce line was just perfect 🥰

    • @masternobody1896
      @masternobody1896 2 года назад +7

      i will take asml stock so i can make more nvidia gpu xD

    • @panchociarer
      @panchociarer 2 года назад +27

      i actually didnt like that bit at all. it means it would be incredibly hard for any competitor to show up. even if they knew how to make a EUV machine they wouldnt be able to have access to most if not all the suppliers they need. i get that EUV machines are a massive geopolitical item and its in the best interest of the current order to preserve the status quo, but still, i would like more than one company to be able to make them

    • @maltlickytexas
      @maltlickytexas 2 года назад +25

      @@panchociarer Not if you hold ASML shares.

    • @aravindc102
      @aravindc102 2 года назад +13

      Nokia CEO was this confident once..,

    • @briangronski
      @briangronski 2 года назад +7

      @@panchociarer Gigaphoton tried to make an EUV source and bailed out (they were having supposed success as well) - but the Suppliers they are talking about are Zeiss and TRUMPF. Without either, they would never be making EUV, just very high precision paper weights.

  • @georgiyvishnyakov4549
    @georgiyvishnyakov4549 23 дня назад

    Your are the only one mentor who talks about the real market and teached us a very best analysis . Love you and take care.

  • @mediasurfer
    @mediasurfer 2 года назад +110

    This is an extremely well made and well researched piece of journalism!

  • @guye94
    @guye94 2 года назад +153

    Excellent insight into this crucial piece of equipment at the frontier of technology 👏🏾

    • @dreanor3699
      @dreanor3699 2 года назад

      Sadly, this part of science is never mentioned or praised enough. How many people know inventor of transistors? Or people responsible for technology mentioned in video? All we hear is garbage from "great" scientists about pseudo black holes, pseudo evolution theory etc. Whereas they brought nothing useful to humanity. It is very clear what corrupted, derranged and wicked people are governing west for years

  • @artemorehov1013
    @artemorehov1013 23 дня назад +1

    Your video was just the push I needed to finally start my trading journey. Thank you for the motivation!

  • @JiangsuYzmSteelProductsCoLtd
    @JiangsuYzmSteelProductsCoLtd 2 года назад +24

    Such incredible innovation, hats off to the engineers!!.As a company in the field of raw steel materials,this is a thumbs up.

  • @davidcahan
    @davidcahan 2 года назад +12

    This is one of the most interesting and informative technology videos I've watched maybe ever! Great job!

  • @ПересветСафонов-б4п

    Thanks for the indicator settings, now everything is much clearer

  • @siddharthg8801
    @siddharthg8801 2 года назад +6

    As a Asionemetry subscriber I am happy that CNBC is making people aware of tsmc and asml

  • @naguoning
    @naguoning 2 года назад +47

    ASML in the Netherlands and TSMC in Taiwan... bizarre that 2 not so huge countries, 2 companies basically dominate the supply of chips that power everything that is modern.

    • @profiler9293
      @profiler9293 2 года назад +22

      Both co-founded by Philips of the netherlands

    • @frits191
      @frits191 4 месяца назад

      As a dutch person that amazes me too still haha, we are quite a small country I can tell you that, I have read of some heavy us envolvement to make these deals happen tho in the past, that, and the the dutch had a temporary colony established on taiwan during the east indies days/end of colonialism so that some roots remained is not weird at all.

    • @JupiterThunder
      @JupiterThunder 3 месяца назад

      @@profiler9293 There's not much else left of Philips now

  • @NõmmikRose
    @NõmmikRose 2 месяца назад

    just became a member of your VIP group, and I can already tell that it's going to be a game-changer for me. Thank you for all the incredible resources and guidance!

  • @marcvandervelsen
    @marcvandervelsen 2 года назад +155

    AMSL is a Dutch champion. Philips is a Dutch champion of missed opportunities, they could have had everything and could have been the Apple of Europe.

    • @DouwedeJong
      @DouwedeJong 2 года назад +15

      Their mistake, not lobbying American politicians enough.

    • @marcvandervelsen
      @marcvandervelsen 2 года назад

      @@DouwedeJong How exactly do you mean?

    • @Felix-zb6mc
      @Felix-zb6mc 2 года назад +10

      Eh, in the medical world they are no?

    • @marcvandervelsen
      @marcvandervelsen 2 года назад +23

      @@Felix-zb6mcThey are, but their revenue is declining every single year since it peaked in 2000. I just said it because every single asset they sold, is now more worth than Philips itself.
      I mean, just look at ASML which used to be part of the Philips group.
      ASML market cap 2022: 251 Billion USD
      Philips market cap 2022: 26.77 Billion USD
      By market capitalisation ASML is now almost 10 times bigger than Philips.
      Philips could have lead the way in consumer electronics, chip manufacturing et cetera. This is why I said that combined they could have been the Apple Inc. of the EU / Netherlands.
      But they are not and Apple is haha.

    • @mimimotor
      @mimimotor 2 года назад +11

      Phillips' spin-offs are very successful though.

  • @bakedbrotatoes
    @bakedbrotatoes 2 года назад +13

    Energy and computer chips make the world turn. Continued funding and research are critical to modern living. Kudos to cnbc for bringing some light to the subject!

  • @waltermessines5181
    @waltermessines5181 2 года назад +5

    Philips company is said to make 80% of their profit on Industrial Patents. It seems to take huge amounts of production to come up with a really clever idea, then get it patented and make money off of others producing what you invented. Philips has always been a great company to work for; they build schools, houses, hospitals etc for their employees. Frits Philips used to ride his bicycle through Eindhoven and chat with anyone about his pet project PSV.

  • @tomr164
    @tomr164 2 года назад +26

    "Dutch company with US Roots"; it started off in a shed at Philips - Eindhoven (This is also the Netherlands!)

    • @adoatero5129
      @adoatero5129 2 года назад +10

      Yes, I noticed the same. They bought some US companies, which make important components to the chipmaking machines, but that's of course a different thing.

    • @johanness6545
      @johanness6545 2 года назад +7

      @@adoatero5129 they also bought companies from others countries, so by no way an American company

    • @objectivethinker3225
      @objectivethinker3225 2 года назад +4

      I think this refers to some of the technology being used is American (invented by the US Military i believe). I've heard this several times in videos on a Chanel (Asianometry) that goes in dept on the industry. Apparently the US government has/had some say so in who can get ASML's machines.

    • @johanness6545
      @johanness6545 2 года назад

      @@objectivethinker3225 and so does the Netherlands, Germany. They have hundreds of suppliers

    • @mrseriousman100
      @mrseriousman100 2 года назад +1

      @@adoatero5129 The technology base was developed in US military lab that is what they meant by saying US roots .

  • @MarcelHuguenin
    @MarcelHuguenin 2 года назад +8

    Great video. Proud to have such an important company in my country 😎

  • @YuriK1006
    @YuriK1006 2 года назад +15

    I'm proud to work for ASML 💪

    • @KashifShaazad
      @KashifShaazad Год назад

      Mi fewhartt campani asml 😢mi luck is not good no mani. 😢 i. M. Pakistan😢😢😢

  • @oxide9717
    @oxide9717 2 года назад +37

    This is why I love CNBC'S content on all thing except when it comes to cars particular Tesla this is a really good video ❤️

    • @sazzad7558
      @sazzad7558 2 года назад +3

      Because some of us know much more about tesla, we can find the mistakes.

    • @ehsankabirirahani9733
      @ehsankabirirahani9733 2 года назад +2

      I work for ASML. Tesla has no technology compared to ASML. Why people dont know ASML, because it is not American company

  • @nripenshenoy3238
    @nripenshenoy3238 2 года назад +21

    Good to know these facts.
    ASML doing great in technology field 🙏👏

  • @PinnacleNL
    @PinnacleNL Год назад +7

    This company is so often overlooked and it's in part because they liked it that way for a long time.
    Everyone thinks windmills and tulips and then you have people who show interest who know a whole lot more about infrastructure and water management etc, but almost no foreigner knows about this key role in modern global society. It's only since some years that the company itself is positioning itself a little bit more in the spotlight. That's not because they didn't deserve it before, but because they liked to act behind the scenes.

  • @shawnbegay4966
    @shawnbegay4966 2 года назад +73

    I used to work for a supplier that built the same machines for one of ASML's divisions, Cymer. I was a highly regarded technical writer documenting how the machines were to be assembled. It was definitely fun and interesting. I would later go on to work for Intel documenting how to maintain their AMHS equipment. I am working for a telemedicine workstation company in Scottsdale, but I am feeling the pull of the semiconductor capital industry.

    • @caleb2242
      @caleb2242 2 года назад

      Do you know how to design and build ASIC miners from scratch re AZ location

    • @mendoblendo321
      @mendoblendo321 2 года назад

      Following

    • @MrSenorhappy
      @MrSenorhappy Год назад

      Can i email you? Im in az and have a couple questions for you. Thanks

    • @shawnbegay4966
      @shawnbegay4966 Год назад +1

      @@MrSenorhappy I can be found on LinkedIn. My profile lists my Retronix/Intel and UCT experience.

  • @jmlinden7
    @jmlinden7 2 года назад +87

    9:55 the typical method to aim light is to use lenses to refract it. There are no lens materials that are transparent enough to EUV light for this method to work which is why they have to rely 100% on mirrors reflecting it.

    • @femto505
      @femto505 2 года назад +4

      I seen a journal that plasma can also be used as mirrors, but I don't recall it propertiites at the 13nm wavelegnths.

    • @madsam0320
      @madsam0320 2 года назад +7

      It’s not that there are no materials transparent enough, but the ability to bend them enough that restricted their usefulness as lenses.

    • @MatthijsvanDuin
      @MatthijsvanDuin 2 года назад +4

      @@madsam0320 Everything I've read says otherwise, e.g. from newport's page on EUV photolithography: "there are no optical materials that are transparent at 13.5 nm"

    • @jmlinden7
      @jmlinden7 2 года назад +3

      @@MatthijsvanDuin Optical materials means materials that can bend the beams, so while some transparent materials may exist, you can't make lenses out of them

    • @MatthijsvanDuin
      @MatthijsvanDuin 2 года назад +2

      @@jmlinden7 Well in the context I was quoting from it was discussing why a reflective rather than transmissive mask needs to be used, so bending light is not relevant for that. It adds, "In theory, transmission masks could be used if the substrate was less than 100 nm thick, but this is not a practical solution."
      Another quote from the same article, "The entire optical system is maintained under high vacuum since 13.5 nm light is strongly absorbed by all solids, liquids, and gases."
      Do you have an example of a EUV-transparent material?

  • @svatn255
    @svatn255 Год назад +3

    Very informative and detailed.
    There should not be any barriers to share the knowledge which eases the human life.
    I think, this informative video should be circulated in local language , especially in schools, which will support in increasing the eagerness of learning new technologies.
    Thanks for the video and ASML staff .
    Good luck.

  • @HersheysHotCocoa
    @HersheysHotCocoa 2 года назад +39

    Great Vid! I currently work at ASML! Awesome company to work for. Although they’ll squeeze your brain out for ideas.
    “Any Ideas? Any Ideas? Any Ideas?……….. Any Ideas?”
    *Goes to the coffee machine, Poof! We have an idea!!* Next thing you know, it’s getting patented.

    • @arjanvanraaij8440
      @arjanvanraaij8440 2 года назад +2

      Your lucky, there thousends of tech companies that work the opposite way.

  • @merovingian688
    @merovingian688 2 года назад +7

    Very informative. Knowing the company that’s behind the chipmakers. Investing in companies that have a monopoly isn’t a bad strategy

  • @daryasamoylova7220
    @daryasamoylova7220 13 дней назад

    thanks for breaking down complex concepts into easy-to-understand pieces.

  • @edwardgrigoryan3982
    @edwardgrigoryan3982 2 года назад +9

    This was a much needed documentary. Nice job identifying a crucial knowledge gap for many and filling it.

  • @ehubbar
    @ehubbar 2 года назад +56

    Just got hired at ASML. I need this

    • @BrandonshanesProductions
      @BrandonshanesProductions 2 года назад +4

      How hard was it and what degree did you need?

    • @happyisblue
      @happyisblue 2 года назад +6

      Congrats ✌

    • @ehubbar
      @ehubbar 2 года назад +25

      @@BrandonshanesProductions I applied on their website. They truly are growing so there are a ton of openings. The interview wasn’t bad. An initial one on one interview then a panel interview. Mine is mechanical engineering.

    • @gabor6259
      @gabor6259 2 года назад +2

      @@ehubbar Congratulations.

    • @M.s.l.e.
      @M.s.l.e. 2 года назад +2

      Good luck in the new position, say hello to my wife who works there as well.

  • @mohamedfaizan9844
    @mohamedfaizan9844 2 года назад +54

    As someone who works for Philips - this was the one that got away.

    • @johnl.7754
      @johnl.7754 2 года назад +6

      Yeah a shame that Philips sold all their shares long time ago.

    • @leihtory7423
      @leihtory7423 2 года назад +6

      But also getting an EUV machine doesn't mean you can make chips. btw. lol
      ASML sent EUV machines to Taiwan and South Korea.
      Taiwan has 90% efficiency. South Korea has 30% efficiency, btw that's a fail and not economical.
      The same machines, but there are some ADDITIONAL "Process" that are unique to each company TSMC vs SAMSUNG.
      Why Intel gave up on EUV. EUV a machine which USA Intel helped developed.
      South Korea Samsung with the brightest minds, larger resource, bigger company. Could not perfect the technology.
      But it was Taiwan TSMC that perfected EUV use.

    • @johnl.7754
      @johnl.7754 2 года назад +6

      @@leihtory7423 Philips owned a lot of equity in ASML (because they founded the company) not that we think they should produce chips.

    • @Hans-gb4mv
      @Hans-gb4mv 2 года назад +2

      This is probably one of those situations where the sum of the parts is bigger than the whole.

    • @mohamedfaizan9844
      @mohamedfaizan9844 2 года назад +8

      Not many people may know, but over the years Philips has hived off its consumer lifestyle, semiconductor, lighting and recently domestic appliances businesses to focus on becoming a health tech company.

  • @juantelle1
    @juantelle1 2 года назад +31

    I highly reccomend the youtube channel Asianometry, they describe the semiconductor indsutry in a deeper level

    • @platoscavealum902
      @platoscavealum902 2 года назад +2

      👍 I’m a fan of Asianometry as well.
      (I think that this CNBC video particularly stands out for being detailed and highly informative - the type of quality we normally enjoy at Asianometry.)

  • @SabaDhutt
    @SabaDhutt Год назад +6

    Samsung is building a semiconductor plant close to where I live in Austin, Texas and the whole thing will cost about $17 Billion. What's shocking is that the plant will only cost $1 billion. The other $16 Billion will be these huge machines, some of them cost $500 Million each! BTW, now they're down to 2 NANOMETERS. Insanely small.

  • @Sam-rf8yh
    @Sam-rf8yh 2 года назад +9

    This is absolutely fascinating.

  • @airplayn
    @airplayn 2 года назад +26

    After I was a USAF pilot, in the early 80's I worked in a 100mm wafer line down in San Diego as a Photo-lithography and etch process engineer where I used the great great granddaddy of these systems. Never thought I'd become nostalgic about those times and that job LOL

    • @platoscavealum902
      @platoscavealum902 2 года назад +2

      🇺🇸 Thank you for your service, sir.

    • @airplayn
      @airplayn 2 года назад +10

      @@platoscavealum902 You're welcome, but I'd rather you go thank a teacher! That's who I thank for their much more important service

    • @mwanafalsafa3613
      @mwanafalsafa3613 2 года назад +1

      What would it take for a third world country to manufacture these systems? I mean the oldest ones having no restrictions?

    • @hughjassstudios9688
      @hughjassstudios9688 2 года назад +1

      I would say that 100 nm (130 nm mfg. started in '01) would be alien tech in the early 80s, but 1000nm (1.0 μm) makes much more sense for the given time period

    • @wgmskiing
      @wgmskiing 2 года назад +2

      @@hughjassstudios9688 He likely meant a 100mm wafer fab. 4 inch wafers.

  • @robertmarmaduke186
    @robertmarmaduke186 Год назад +2

    Kudos to CNBC for a well scripted, well narrated, jump-cut one-up speaker presentation.

  • @vergelab3399
    @vergelab3399 2 года назад +6

    VERY interesting, i've just been recruited to work for them, looks like a great company

  • @johnedwards3621
    @johnedwards3621 2 года назад +6

    About 50 years ago, I was asked to evaluate a new IC for possible use in a military minicomputer that Raytheon was developing for Naval sonar systems. That IC, the Intel 4004, could have fit nicely into a new physical architectural standard designed by the Navy (NAFI) to accommodate the pace of technological change. However, it was only a 4-bit slice of an Arithmetic Logic Unit in a 16-bit minicomputer that used about 60 similar cards. The technology was part of a rugged & cool running minicomputer that would soon be obsolete.
    Something the size of a microwave would soon shrink to the size of a postage stamp ==and eventually to a speck while covered with a protective layer of quartz.

  • @AdamBegs
    @AdamBegs 2 месяца назад

    you are truly the goat, me and my partner have learnt so much from you and we’re truly grateful for the work you put in and the lessons that you teach! Changing lives!

  • @sharpfocus5
    @sharpfocus5 2 года назад +12

    How utterly inspiring. Just genius.

  • @TheEvertw
    @TheEvertw 2 года назад +73

    The real reason for AMSL's success is that they took Moore's Law as fact, and work back from that to determine what needs to be done to make it reality. And then be absolutely ruthless in doing what needs to be done.
    Take Zeiss for example. ASML management discovered that Zeiss management lacked commitment to achieving what was necessary. So they took over the relevant department, and turns out it was possible -- if you are committed.

    • @artpost854
      @artpost854 2 года назад +19

      The reason that Zeiss was able to develop EUV technology at a time when competitors had abandoned the idea as unrealistic is that Zeiss is a company with a very devirced business - consumer optical products, industrial measurement and research technologies, medical technologies and chip lithography technologies. All this has allowed a decades-long funding of EUV research, at the expense of revenues from other fields, without going bankrupt. ASML is just extremely fortunate to have such a company as Zeiss as a partner. 😉

    • @d.bcooper2271
      @d.bcooper2271 Год назад

      *_China is overtaking it_*

  • @JasonClifford-o2e
    @JasonClifford-o2e 16 дней назад

    you are a Genius I've been following you for a few years close to ten to be exact I appreciate you Boss keep being a Blessing to this Community

  • @LuqmanAhmedTK
    @LuqmanAhmedTK 2 года назад +11

    Feels like it is a holy grail of technology

  • @jimjohnson4122
    @jimjohnson4122 2 года назад +23

    As someone who owns stock in this company… I fully support this video 😆

  • @sandeepsharma82100
    @sandeepsharma82100 2 года назад +2

    This videos comment thread is some of the best comments all in one place, so much amazing history, details from folks who have been at ASML.and the industry. I have never seen so much positivity pride and joy in all comments and no BS, no snide remarks.. I love it 🙏

  • @gavincurtis
    @gavincurtis 2 года назад +14

    You should definitely get the extended service plan for these when you buy them.

  • @tioswift3676
    @tioswift3676 2 года назад +11

    Still blows my mind how a blast of UV light can create billions of transistors on a silicone wafer.

    • @Richard-bq3ni
      @Richard-bq3ni 2 года назад +1

      There is more to it.
      Metal layer depositions, etching, ion implanting, heat anneal steps etc.

  • @richvandervecken3954
    @richvandervecken3954 7 месяцев назад +1

    ASML is a huge international company that has bought out many of it's competitors over the years. How they have managed to avoid the laws to restrict monopolies would be an interesting legal investigation that every large international company could use to navigate the complexity of international law.

  • @jackxams
    @jackxams Год назад +4

    From ASML to Heineken. The Dutch make some good stuff.

  • @SIW808
    @SIW808 2 года назад +9

    I may be turning 34 this year, but it is still one of my dreams to one day work for ASML.

    • @jibranhayat8017
      @jibranhayat8017 2 года назад +1

      you certainly can , just go for it. Best of luck

    • @vanDeudekom
      @vanDeudekom 2 года назад +1

      sent theme a e-mail, if you good enough they will take you. But,.... they are Dutch, brutaly honnest and hard workers. Can you handle the heat... than just go for it. All the Best.

  • @EstherYermakova
    @EstherYermakova 27 дней назад

    I always find something new and useful in your videos. Thank you very much for your time and effort!

  • @antr9337
    @antr9337 2 года назад +8

    ASML is considered the greatest company in the Netherlands.

  • @wjhann4836
    @wjhann4836 2 года назад +72

    ASML is incredible. But I think there are other aspects: The chips produced in this top machines are the heart of any computer - BUT you also need much simpler /rougher chips around the central - and these "old" chips / designs are a big part of the shortage.
    IMHO a significant part of the shortage is that the production of that "old" "low level design" chips - that are still necessary - was neglected. I think we are getting more into the dependency of China since they still do that "low level production" but nearly nobody else.
    I remember older times. Some around 2000 I visited a train workshop in my hometown. We talked about circuits (Anti slip system) I saw some 7407 on the table and told I have some im my box. He immediately wanted me to sell these. In the 70th I bought them vor 14DM each. While these chips were still massive used, nearly nobody produced it any more. For me strange: it seemed nobody was interested to simply run a line with the old designs for some time.

    • @ph11p3540
      @ph11p3540 2 года назад +11

      Forgot to mention the shortage of neon used in some chip making processes such as 28 and 14 nanometer processes. It's used as a cleaning and decontamination gas. sadly half of the Neon comes out of Ukraine which has half it's manufacturing infrastructure destroyed. That leaves China at 40% and USA at 10% global market supply. We all understand the geopolitical complications of China as a source and that leaves only the US which is scrambling to trip it's neon production.

    • @Nafets-C
      @Nafets-C 2 года назад +7

      China already develop a lithography process that wont recquire EUV technology from asml. They were sanction las 2018 for purchasing this machine so they revolutionize their own.

    • @wjhann4836
      @wjhann4836 2 года назад

      @@ph11p3540 Uh - that might hit more than 'only' the top processes - I assume also processes over 120nm?

    • @kazedcat
      @kazedcat 2 года назад +9

      Old chips can be built with new machines you just need to spend engineering resources to port the designs. No one is doing this because it is cheaper to just build this old chips in old machines. Part of the reason of the shortage is that chip buyers cancel their orders for old chips so the chip makers upgraded their machines to newer machines. And when the buyers return to buy more old chips the old machines are no longer there. The chip buyers would now need to spend money to port their old chips so it can be built with new machines and they don't want to spend that money.

    • @wjhann4836
      @wjhann4836 2 года назад +1

      @@kazedcat And if there are still 'old machines' they only will be in China.

  • @thePronto
    @thePronto 2 года назад +1

    Quality reporting about a topic of which I was only vaguely aware after 30 years in hi-tech.

  • @Jopacob
    @Jopacob 2 года назад +4

    For sure this amazing and cutting edge technology. BUT and a HUGE BUT is that 99% of cars, other machines, phones etc etc do not NEED 7 or 5 or 4 Nm chips to work. 12, 24 or larger will be more than adequate. Remember pre x86 chips were used for space travel etc and top range i7 chips from 8 years ago (24nm) were at the bleeding edge of nuclear medicine etc. The application, cpu instruction set and other variables are the crucial elements

  • @hallmobility
    @hallmobility 2 года назад +15

    TMSC announced its chip plant in Arizona in May of 2020, after already deciding to build a vast US plant. Intel announced its Ohio plant in March of 2021. So the proposed US CHIPS Act is well behind the curve.

    • @Kemet3.0
      @Kemet3.0 2 года назад +2

      Not behind, they still need those Lithography machines to be created. As the announcement stated.

    • @dag_of_the_west5416
      @dag_of_the_west5416 2 года назад

      @hallmobility. You might want to check again, I believe there are 5 chip plants being built in Arizona right now.

    • @dag_of_the_west5416
      @dag_of_the_west5416 2 года назад

      By the way it is TSMC not TMSC.

    • @hallmobility
      @hallmobility 2 года назад

      @@dag_of_the_west5416 OK, so I said putting the cart before the horse, now it's putting the cart before FIVE horses. Same worthless politicians.

    • @dag_of_the_west5416
      @dag_of_the_west5416 2 года назад

      @@hallmobility but you see now all those chip plants that were already under construction can get fast-track environmental permits and govt money to finish the construction.

  • @aelaan12
    @aelaan12 Год назад +1

    Who has the mind to actually understand all of this? And then actually improve on it. Amazing!

  • @samtraveljunkie
    @samtraveljunkie 2 года назад +9

    Proud to work for ASML!

  • @mattwalter6207
    @mattwalter6207 2 года назад +4

    Gonna load up on stock tomorrow...wish i knew about this company sooner

  • @badmongo0
    @badmongo0 2 года назад +19

    "we can't get the chips to make the machines to make more chips" that's not good man

  • @picobyte
    @picobyte 2 года назад +9

    The Dutch also dominate agriculture and made their own country. Pretty impressive for a country site like that of bangladesh or any other river delta floodprone country.

    • @kentershackle1329
      @kentershackle1329 2 года назад +2

      Come on, u forget its colonial history?.

    • @wawaweewa9159
      @wawaweewa9159 2 года назад

      @@kentershackle1329 hahahahah

    • @GloryHoleBased
      @GloryHoleBased 2 года назад

      @@kentershackle1329 has nothing to do with this

  • @TheDen334
    @TheDen334 2 года назад +1

    I work as a Key Accountmanager that supplies al of the safety equipment for this Tech giant. Its crazy to see how they made such progression to become a world leader. And still are!

  • @valopf7866
    @valopf7866 2 года назад +9

    Watch Asianometry for more information on this topic. He has many videos on ASML and other semiconductor related topics.

  • @vlad2718
    @vlad2718 2 года назад +6

    It's very strange how I find myself so attached to this achievement... I am a physics student in NL, but born and raised in Romania. Yet, most of the greatest people I've met are from my university, some even working directly with ASML. It really sets the feeling of being what you do.

  • @ZoeHambleton
    @ZoeHambleton 2 месяца назад

    Your video is a real treasure trove of knowledge and support for beginners. Under your leadership, we are ready to reach the stars!

  • @bonopo
    @bonopo 2 года назад +14

    these machines are insane. very cool

  • @sepolopez6706
    @sepolopez6706 2 года назад +12

    Excelent company!! I have shares for more than four years ago.

    • @M.s.l.e.
      @M.s.l.e. 2 года назад +1

      Good choice, keep them in your portfolio 😉

  • @gerrylanter8109
    @gerrylanter8109 2 месяца назад

    Why The World Relies On ASML For Machines That Print Chips
    ruclips.net/video/iSVHp6CAyQ8/видео.html

  • @moonboy5851
    @moonboy5851 2 года назад +37

    Arguably the finest business on earth.

    • @naguoning
      @naguoning 2 года назад +1

      TSMC would be another candidate. They are however utterly intertwined.

  • @triadwarfare
    @triadwarfare 2 года назад +15

    ASML also requires input from their client for their machines. That's why TSMC's machines are different from Intel, and why TSMC was first but Intel had issues with theirs.

    • @David-Zita
      @David-Zita 2 года назад +5

      they are the same intel or TSMC what you are missing is the "circuit diagram designed by intel. not the machine.the problem boils down to circuit diagram engineers not the machine

  • @rientsdijkstra4266
    @rientsdijkstra4266 13 дней назад +1

    The roots of ASML are mainly in Phillips Natlab. The physics laboratory of Phillips electronics, the Electronics Giant from Eindhoven in the Netherlands, where mainy important electronic technologies and devices have been invented and developed.

  • @movax20h
    @movax20h 2 года назад +302

    These machines are beyond crazy. It is like Manhattan Project, Space Shuttle and Large Hadron Collider combined in terms of complexity. Making things precise once is one thing, making it work non-stop, be thermally stable, and repeatably accurate is few levels harder. Optical system, mechanics, thermals, cycling, positioning are quite crazy.

    • @edvardmunch6344
      @edvardmunch6344 2 года назад +26

      Yeah it is incredible, I am baffled by the complexity and the scale of production. It is truly a very beautiful and incredibly valuable industry. Dutch people can be very proud of ASML.

    • @alextallen8019
      @alextallen8019 2 года назад +4

      Here I thought my haas holding a thou was impressive!

    • @waltermessines5181
      @waltermessines5181 2 года назад +1

      @@edvardmunch6344 Hardly anyone knows around there.

    • @rientsdijkstra4266
      @rientsdijkstra4266 2 года назад +1

      @@waltermessines5181 That is not true.

    • @jan22150
      @jan22150 2 года назад +5

      don't worry the Chinese will find a way to copy these machines and make it cheaper!

  • @acash93
    @acash93 2 года назад +4

    Isn't it funny that the US chip indistry lobbied against the thriving Japanese chip industry in the 70s? This stopped the development of future chips from Japan, pretty much killed the Japanese chip industry and allowed the European chip industry to grow well.

    • @wawaweewa9159
      @wawaweewa9159 2 года назад

      Whitey comes first, then if there's room the barbarians can do something for themselves.

  • @lucinacassilano
    @lucinacassilano 2 месяца назад

    Your videos help me understand complex trading concepts. Thank you for making it so accessible!

  • @bruceli9094
    @bruceli9094 2 года назад +2

    United States needs to OWN ASML. Period.

    • @corneliskim
      @corneliskim 2 года назад

      why? Quite good that the heart of the company sits in a country which can be trusted not play for power

    • @japie8466
      @japie8466 7 месяцев назад

      Fun fact, one of ASML biggest shareholders (4.580%) is a US company.

  • @brianingarfill1773
    @brianingarfill1773 2 года назад +11

    What a great program and succinctly written and narrated for the "layman", thank you.
    Wonderful to read that it is the West that holds the manufacturing upper hand and that the US have taken the lead to manufacture there.

    • @milaong9618
      @milaong9618 2 года назад +3

      Brian Ingarfill
      It's wonderful that the west has the upper hand on the manufacturing..... Not at all wonderful. As seen from history, with all the west, esp USA, penchant on hegemonic politics, it will set the world back at least a decade on this much needed progress. As usual when monopolize by the west, the prices would be foreboding, only elite could afford. Market won't be as great so not much development will ensue. Note, if not for Asian and the then developing countries, IT won't be as it's today. We would still be in its stone age. Give credit where credit is due. Racist mindset is just not the order of natural law.

    • @preachingflamesthepreacher3894
      @preachingflamesthepreacher3894 2 года назад

      @@milaong9618 very soon China will take over, probably Southern Africa too. America politicising resources to stay a control freak

    • @bokiNYC
      @bokiNYC 2 года назад

      @@preachingflamesthepreacher3894 Yea, sure buddy, thanks for the laugh 😂😂

  • @РоманАнуфриев-х9ы
    @РоманАнуфриев-х9ы 25 дней назад +1

    Maximum respect for you, it cannot be denied that you are one of those who work the most in the recovery genre. I hope one day to be like you in the recovery moves, from Germany I will continue, blessings to all here.