Let's get one thing straight. Every time I see a headline about ASML’s stock climbing another few percentage points, I can almost hear the low hum of servers in a thousand different hedge funds, algorithms silently deciding to pile into the "sure thing." On October 15th, it was another 2.71% jump. Wall Street celebrated. Analysts polished their rosy projections, with headlines asking, Is ASML Stock a Buy Before Oct. 15?. And I just sat here, staring at my screen, thinking one thing: are you all completely insane?
The market is treating ASML like it’s a tech company. It’s not. ASML is a monopoly, plain and simple. It’s the only company on planet Earth that can build the extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography machines required to make the world’s most advanced chips. This isn’t a competitive advantage; it’s a geopolitical chokepoint with a stock ticker.
Think of it this way: ASML isn't a company building a better car. It's the one entity that owns the patent on asphalt. If you want to build a road—any road to the future—you have to pay their price. Taiwan Semiconductor, Samsung, Intel... they all line up, checkbooks in hand, because there is no other option. And now, ASML is rolling out its next-generation "high-NA" EUV systems, which is just a fancier, more expensive grade of asphalt that everyone will be forced to buy. So, offcourse, the stock is up nearly 40% this year. When you're the only game in town, business is good. But is it a healthy business, or just a beautiful, fragile bottleneck?
Here’s the part of the story that gets conveniently glossed over in the bullish reports. Remember 2024? When ASML’s sales growth flatlined at a pathetic 3% and earnings actually fell? The magic carpet ride hit a nasty patch of turbulence. The demand for regular, non-AI chips softened, and the company was already feeling the squeeze from sales restrictions to China. The monopoly looked a little less invincible then, didn't it?
Then came the savior: AI. Suddenly, the demand for high-powered DRAM memory chips to fuel our new robot overlords went through the roof, and ASML was back. Just look at the numbers. A 92.9% EPS jump in the first quarter of 2025. It’s a spectacular recovery. No, ‘spectacular’ doesn’t cover it—it’s a resurrection fueled by a single buzzword. The entire investment thesis for a company trading at 34 times next year's earnings now rests on the perpetual, unceasing, and ever-accelerating expansion of the AI market.
This is a bad idea. No, 'bad' doesn't cover it—this is a five-alarm dumpster fire of concentrated risk. We’ve pinned the valuation of Europe’s largest company on one trend. It’s like a national economy based entirely on selling one single, popular toy. What happens when the hype cycle crests? What happens when the AI buildout slows to a more sustainable, less manic pace?

And all of this ignores the giant, glaring geopolitical time bomb. The U.S. government is actively barring ASML from selling its best gear to China. Meanwhile, China is rattling its saber by threatening to restrict access to the rare earth elements needed to build the damn machines in the first place. This company is walking a tightrope between two superpowers who are itching for a fight, and the market is acting like it’s a leisurely stroll in the park. They expect us to believe this is all fine, and honestly...
Then again, maybe I'm the crazy one. The stock is up, the analysts are projecting 16% annual earnings growth through 2027, and my smart toaster just tried to sell me an AI-powered "bread-browning optimization" subscription. Perhaps this is just the world now.
Let's talk about that price. 34 times forward earnings. In a market where a stiff breeze can knock 10% off a stock, that valuation isn't just optimistic; it’s priced for absolute, flawless perfection. It assumes no geopolitical missteps. It assumes the AI revolution never hits a speed bump. It assumes no new technological breakthrough from a competitor, however unlikely that seems today. It assumes the monopoly on asphalt lasts forever.
I’m not saying ASML is a bad company. It’s a marvel of engineering, a testament to human ingenuity. But the stock? The stock is a bet. It’s a bet that the future will unfold exactly as the most optimistic PowerPoint presentation predicts. It’s a bet that the tightrope walker will never stumble, that the wind will never blow.
The bears say too much AI hype is baked in. I’d argue it’s not just the hype; it’s a fundamental misunderstanding of what this company is. It’s not a growth stock in the traditional sense. It's a utility. A fantastically profitable, monopolistic utility, but a utility nonetheless. And when you pay a growth-stock price for a company that’s one trade war away from a crisis, you’re not investing. You’re gambling. The real question isn't whether ASML will keep making money—it will. The question is, what happens when the world reminds everyone that even monopolies can break?
Let’s be real. Everyone is so mesmerized by the beautiful, intricate clockwork of ASML's technology that they're ignoring the fact that it's strapped to a bomb. The market sees a rocket ship fueled by AI, but I see a company caught in the crossfire of a new cold war. The price tag demands a perfect future, but the reality is a messy, unpredictable, and dangerous present. Buying ASML stock at these levels isn't a bet on innovation; it's a bet that global politics will stay conveniently quiet. And that's a sucker's bet if I've ever seen one.
I just read a press release that, on the surface, is about a mining company in Alaska. And I can’t s...
Dr. Thorne's Take: Alibaba's AI Leap -- A Glimpse into Tomorrow's Commerce Alibaba. The name echoes...
So You Think the Fed Controls Your Mortgage Rate? Think Again. Let me guess. You saw the headlines i...
Verizon’s New CEO Isn’t About 5G. It’s About a Quiet Panic. The market’s reaction to the news was, i...
The Analog Crime in a Digital World When I read about the recent allegations against Vincent Ferrara...
I was listening to the financial news the other day—a habit I keep not for stock tips, but for cultu...