Semiconductors & Electronics
•126 stocks
•
Total Market Cap: Loading...
Price Performance Heatmap
5Y Price (Market Cap Weighted)
All Stocks (126)
| Company | Market Cap | Price |
|---|---|---|
|
TYGO
Tigo Energy, Inc.
MLPE involves semiconductors/electronics; tagging Semiconductors & Electronics aligns with components in product.
|
$97.95M |
$1.50
-5.66%
|
|
ULBI
Ultralife Corporation
Ultralife's advanced communication and amplifier technologies align with Semiconductors & Electronics.
|
$94.04M |
$5.59
+0.63%
|
|
SILC
Silicom Ltd.
FPGA-based acceleration cards and related electronics place Silicom in semiconductors and electronics.
|
$87.01M |
$15.15
+1.07%
|
|
INVE
Identiv, Inc.
RFID/BLE hardware and related wireless electronics place Identiv in the semiconductors/electronics category for devices and components.
|
$83.26M |
$3.48
+1.02%
|
|
GCTS
GCT Semiconductor Holding, Inc.
Core business is designing and supplying semiconductor chips and electronics.
|
$79.32M |
$1.39
-4.48%
|
|
NA
Nano Labs Ltd
Nano Labs operates in the semiconductor/electronics space, covering integrated circuits and related tech.
|
$69.35M |
$3.01
+0.33%
|
|
AMPG
AmpliTech Group, Inc.
Proprietary LNAs/MMICs and related RF/microwave semiconductor devices core to AMPG's products.
|
$68.30M |
$3.35
-3.32%
|
|
NLST
Netlist, Inc.
Broader semiconductor/electronics focus to encapsulate Netlist's memory-related hardware and IP activities.
|
$63.96M |
$0.72
|
|
LINK
Interlink Electronics, Inc.
Core electronics and sensor technology positions Interlink within the broader semiconductors & electronics category.
|
$53.41M |
$3.57
-0.56%
|
|
SYPR
Sypris Solutions, Inc.
Semiconductors & Electronics covers defense electronics and high-rel electronic manufacturing.
|
$47.90M |
$2.08
+0.24%
|
|
CPSH
CPS Technologies Corporation
Semiconductors & Electronics; CPSH's products serve electronic power modules, IGBT bases and thermal management for electronics.
|
$47.79M |
$3.32
-1.78%
|
|
DFLI
Dragonfly Energy Holdings Corp.
Battery manufacturing and electronics context places the company under Semiconductors & Electronics broadly.
|
$46.29M |
$0.77
-4.18%
|
|
UEIC
Universal Electronics Inc.
Semiconductors & Electronics: broad category covering electronics and related components.
|
$43.21M |
$3.23
-1.37%
|
|
LASE
Laser Photonics Corporation
Semiconductors & Electronics: laser-based processes for microelectronics, wafer marking, and precision engraving in electronics manufacturing.
|
$39.83M |
$2.83
-2.91%
|
|
PXLW
Pixelworks, Inc.
Company operates in the semiconductor/electronics domain, its primary business.
|
$36.87M |
$6.87
-0.51%
|
|
GUER
Guerrilla RF, Inc.
Guerrilla RF is a fabless semiconductor company focused on RF/mmic technology, i.e., semiconductors & electronics.
|
$29.09M |
$2.75
|
|
MOBX
Mobix Labs, Inc.
Semiconductors & Electronics underpins the company’s True5G chipsets and RF front-end tech.
|
$28.99M |
$0.55
+1.03%
|
|
EBON
Ebang International Holdings Inc.
Semiconductors & Electronics reflects EBON's hardware/IC design and manufacturing roots.
|
$23.03M |
$3.69
+4.86%
|
|
CVV
CVD Equipment Corporation
Systems enable microelectronics fabrication and SiC crystal growth (200mm wafers), aligning with Semiconductors & Electronics.
|
$22.85M |
$3.35
+1.18%
|
|
SELX
Semilux International Ltd. Ordinary Shares
Chip-level photonic/semiconductor technology used in LiDAR systems.
|
$22.46M |
$0.68
|
|
IEHC
IEH Corporation
The company's products sit within broader semiconductors & electronics ecosystems as interconnect components, warranting this broader category.
|
$21.95M |
$9.30
|
|
SMTK
SmartKem, Inc.
SMTK operates in the semiconductor/electronics space through organic transistor materials and OTFT technology.
|
$6.91M |
$1.52
|
|
TAIT
Taitron Components Incorporated
Fits within the semiconductors/electronics domain given component focus and ODM design/manufacturing.
|
$6.62M |
$1.08
-1.82%
|
|
MKDW
MKDWELL Tech Inc.
Semiconductors & Electronics: The core vehicle electronics focus implies involvement with semiconductor devices and broad electronics components integral to automotive systems.
|
$4.94M |
$0.20
-1.09%
|
|
MAXN
Maxeon Solar Technologies, Ltd.
Solar PV cells and modules are semiconductor/electronic components, aligning with semiconductors/electronics as a product category.
|
$4.52M |
$3.01
+0.67%
|
|
AMIX
Autonomix Medical, Inc. Common Stock
Developing a microchip-enabled sensing array/ASIC for integration into the device (semiconductors & electronics).
|
$4.35M |
$0.84
-2.94%
|
Showing page 2 of 2 (126 total stocks)
Loading company comparison...
Loading industry trends...
# Executive Summary
* The semiconductor industry is undergoing a profound transformation, with explosive demand from Artificial Intelligence (AI) and High-Performance Computing (HPC) now serving as the primary growth engine, projected to drive the global market to approximately $697 billion in 2025.
* Persistent geopolitical tensions, particularly U.S.-China trade policies, are forcing a strategic realignment of global supply chains, creating both significant risks and targeted opportunities.
* In response, companies are allocating unprecedented levels of capital towards building a more resilient and geographically diverse manufacturing footprint, especially within the United States.
* Financial performance is bifurcating sharply between companies exposed to the secular AI boom, which are seeing triple-digit growth, and those facing cyclical headwinds and inventory corrections in industrial and automotive markets.
* Technological leadership in advanced process nodes, connectivity solutions, and packaging is the key differentiator, allowing leaders to command premium pricing and superior margins.
## Key Trends & Outlook
The primary force shaping the semiconductor industry in 2025 is the unprecedented and accelerating demand for Artificial Intelligence (AI) and High-Performance Computing (HPC) infrastructure. Hyperscale providers like Meta, Microsoft, and Alphabet are collectively investing over $250 billion in AI infrastructure between 2025 and 2026, creating a massive and durable demand signal. This directly translates into higher revenue and margins for companies at the core of this buildout, as demand shifts to higher-value, leading-edge wafers and complex connectivity solutions. Foundry giant Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Limited (TSM) projects its full-year 2025 revenue will grow approximately 30%, primarily fueled by doubling AI accelerator revenue. Meanwhile, specialized players like Astera Labs Inc (ALAB) are seeing revenue surge 104% year-over-year in Q3 2025 by providing the critical connectivity hardware for these AI systems.
This AI-driven boom is occurring within a landscape of significant geopolitical friction, primarily the U.S.-China tech war. U.S. export controls are creating direct revenue headwinds for exposed companies, with equipment maker KLA Corporation (KLAC) estimating a $300-$350 million impact for calendar 2026 due to these restrictions. This is forcing the entire industry to fundamentally rethink its global manufacturing strategy, prioritizing supply chain resilience over pure cost optimization.
The primary opportunity lies in capturing share within the AI value chain, from foundational manufacturing to specialized components. The most immediate risk is the ongoing macroeconomic pressure and inventory normalization in non-AI segments, which continues to dampen overall industry growth, as seen in the results of industrial and auto-focused firms like STMicroelectronics N.V. (STMEF), which experienced "unexpectedly weaker end demand and higher level of inventories" in 2024, leading to a revenue decline. This is compounded by the strategic risk of navigating escalating trade restrictions.
## Competitive Landscape
The semiconductor industry, while intensely competitive, is characterized by distinct strategic models, with a few large players holding significant market power. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Limited (TSM) alone controls roughly 62% of the global chip market. Companies compete using several distinct strategic approaches to capture market share and drive innovation.
One dominant strategy is dominance through leading-edge manufacturing scale. Companies employing this model act as pure-play foundries, leveraging massive scale and technological superiority in the most advanced process nodes to manufacture chips for the world's leading fabless companies. The key advantages include unmatched economies of scale, a technological moat that creates high barriers to entry, pricing power on advanced nodes, and a neutral position that attracts all fabless customers. TSM exemplifies this model, with its control of approximately 62% of the global foundry market and its indispensable role in producing AI accelerators for NVIDIA and other leading innovators.
Another strategic approach is vertically integrated control for dependable supply. Companies pursuing this strategy design and manufacture a broad portfolio of chips, primarily analog and embedded processing, in-house, controlling the entire process from design to production to packaging. This model offers greater control over the supply chain, lower manufacturing costs from proprietary processes like 300mm wafers, and the ability to offer customers "geopolitically dependable capacity." Texas Instruments Incorporated (TXN) is a prime example, with its $60 billion manufacturing megaproject across seven U.S. semiconductor fabs designed to provide "geopolitically dependable capacity."
A third prevalent model is fabless specialization in high-growth niches. These companies focus exclusively on designing high-performance, differentiated solutions for specific, high-growth applications, such as AI connectivity or power management, while outsourcing capital-intensive manufacturing to foundries. This capital-light model allows for high gross margins and a strong focus on research and development, agility to address emerging market needs quickly, and the ability to achieve best-in-class performance in a narrow domain. Astera Labs Inc (ALAB) perfectly illustrates this, with its 76.2% GAAP gross margin and 104% year-over-year revenue growth in Q3 2025, directly resulting from its fabless focus on solving critical connectivity bottlenecks in AI data centers.
The key competitive battleground is currently in enabling AI infrastructure, where technological differentiation in performance and power efficiency, alongside advancements in packaging solutions, is paramount. KLA Corporation (KLAC), for instance, projects its advanced packaging business to exceed $925 million in calendar 2025, representing a 70% year-over-year increase, highlighting the growing importance of this segment.
## Financial Performance
Industry revenue trends are sharply diverging based on exposure to the secular AI growth cycle versus cyclical industrial markets. Revenue growth ranges from over 100% year-over-year for AI-focused firms to double-digit declines for those exposed to inventory corrections. This bifurcation is driven directly by end-market exposure; companies providing critical technology for the AI infrastructure buildout are experiencing explosive growth. In contrast, firms more reliant on the industrial, consumer, and automotive sectors are facing a cyclical downturn as customers digest excess inventory built up in prior years. Pure-play AI infrastructure providers like Astera Labs Inc (ALAB) are seeing growth exceed 100%, with a 104% year-over-year revenue surge in Q3 2025. Meanwhile, diversified players like STMicroelectronics N.V. (STMEF) have experienced double-digit declines, with a 23.2% year-over-year revenue decline in FY24 amid inventory normalization.
{{chart_0}}
Profitability directly correlates with a company's technological moat and pricing power. Gross margins show significant divergence, ranging from over 75% for highly specialized leaders to below 40% for companies in more commoditized or competitive segments. The economic logic is clear: companies with unique, must-have technology for high-growth applications like AI command significant pricing power, leading to superior gross margins. This is particularly true for fabless companies with valuable intellectual property. Fabless specialists with critical AI solutions, such as Astera Labs Inc (ALAB), can achieve gross margins above 75%, reporting 76.2% GAAP gross margin in Q3 2025. In contrast, more diversified firms navigating market headwinds, like STMicroelectronics N.V. (STMEF), operate closer to the 30-35% range, with a 33.5% gross margin in Q2 2025, reflecting pressure from weaker end demand and inventory issues.
{{chart_1}}
The defining capital allocation trend is an unprecedented investment cycle aimed at enhancing supply chain resilience. Spurred by geopolitical risk and government incentives like the CHIPS Act, the industry's top strategic priority is securing long-term, geographically diverse manufacturing capacity. This has triggered a historic wave of capital expenditure focused on building new fabs in the U.S. and Europe. This is best exemplified by Texas Instruments Incorporated's (TXN) commitment to a $60 billion manufacturing megaproject across seven U.S. semiconductor fabs to provide customers with "geopolitically dependable capacity." Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Limited (TSM) further demonstrates this trend with its strategic global expansion, including a "giga fab cluster" in Arizona.
{{chart_2}}
The industry's leading firms generally maintain exceptionally strong balance sheets, allowing them to fund aggressive expansion. Market leader Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Limited (TSM), for instance, held $90 billion in cash and marketable securities in Q2 2025, providing ample flexibility for its strategic investments.