Applied Materials (AMAT) Preview: Buy The Semiconductor Stock Ahead Of Earnings?

 | Feb 07, 2020 01:03AM ET

Applied Materials (NASDAQ:AMAT) has topped quarterly earnings estimates in the trailing four periods to help the stock jump 55% in the last 12 months. Now, let’s dive into why investors might want to buy the semiconductor equipment firm heading into its Q1 fiscal 2020 earnings release on Wednesday, February 12.

Industry Overview

The semiconductor industry is historically cyclical, and last year was rough as companies saw their earnings and revenues fall against hard-to-compare periods. Despite the top and bottom line declines, many chip stocks surged in 2019 after a 2018 selloff devalued the firms that will continue to help fuel the technology market for years to come from Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) to Microsoft (OTC:MFST) .

Semiconductor stocks also climbed in 2019 because companies were set to report growth in 2020 after a down year. And some early 2020 results do indeed show that the chip market looks poised for a comeback. Industry heavyweights Samsung (OTC:SSNLF) , Intel (NASDAQ:INTC) , and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (NYSE:TSM) have already posted solid quarterly results this year and raised their outlooks.

AMAT’s Pitch

Applied Materials is a leading semiconductor equipment company. Its offerings help produce new chips and advanced displays. AMAT executives expect to benefit from the continued expansion of the big data age and see the emergence of Artificial Intelligence and other new computing tech as key longer-term growth drivers.

Applied Materials is also focused on figuring out what’s next as classic Moore's law scaling slows. This is why the firm has focused on what it calls the new playbook for semiconductor design and manufacturing, which includes five main elements: “New architectures, new devices and 3D structures, new materials, new ways to shrink the feature geometries, and new ways to connect chips together.”

In the fourth quarter, management upped their Q1 2020 guidance, citing growth in key areas such as foundry logic. The Santa Clara, California-based company also pointed to innovations within data centers, growing cloud computing demand and the roll out of 5G. “While we are carefully managing all non-R&D spending, we're investing more than ever in new capabilities and products to accelerate the new playbook,” CEO Gary Dickerson said on AMAT’s Q4 earnings call.