Semicap surge signals FPGA demand
Lam Research, KLA and Applied Materials guided double-digit growth driven by AI, and Applied Materials forecasts ~20% system expansion—data points that signal continued investor and vendor focus on reconfigurable hardware like FPGAs. Analysts tie this semicap momentum to sustained demand for specialized silicon needed in ultra-low-latency and AI-accelerated trading stacks. (investing.com)
Bank of America’s Vivek Arya raised industry wafer‑fab‑equipment (WFE) spending forecasts to $140 billion for 2026, $171 billion for 2027 and $193 billion for 2028 in a recent research note. (morningstar.com) Lam Research set March‑quarter revenue guidance of $5.7 billion (±$300 million) and cited a WFE market view that could reach roughly $135 billion in 2026, pointing to second‑half weighted equipment demand. (fool.com) KLA reported $3.21 billion of revenue for its fiscal Q1 and provided second‑quarter guidance centered on $3.225 billion (±$150 million), with management explicitly linking results to AI infrastructure buildout. (prnewswire.com) Applied Materials posted $7.01 billion in Q1 revenue, guided the April quarter to about $7.65 billion (±$500 million) and told investors it expects its semiconductor‑systems business to grow more than 20% in calendar 2026. (manufacturingdive.com) SEMI’s industry forecast explicitly ties the current WFE uptick to DRAM and high‑bandwidth‑memory (HBM) investments, projecting front‑end equipment expansion and revising 2026 WFE upside on memory and advanced logic demand. (semi.org) FPGA market data and vendor product moves map to the semicap momentum: market forecasts peg global FPGA revenues near $8.9 billion in 2026, AMD’s Alveo UL3524 is marketed as a purpose‑built ultra‑low‑latency trading accelerator with sub‑3ns transceiver latency, and AMD documentation shows HBM‑enabled Alveo cards can deliver up to ~460 GB/s of memory bandwidth—features that directly serve AI‑heavy, ultra‑low‑latency trading pipelines. (futuremarketinsights.com) (ir.amd.com) (docs.amd.com)