1 Super Semiconductor Stock Down 36% You'll Wish You'd Bought on the Dip This Year

1 Super Semiconductor Stock Down 36% You'll Wish You'd Bought on the Dip This Year

Trade ACLS on Coinbase

The semiconductor industry has been red-hot over the last few years, and it isn't just Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices delivering substantial gains for investors. The digital economy is forever expanding, and more products and services require advanced chip hardware, which is creating pockets of opportunity for a number of companies.

Axcelis Technologies (NASDAQ: ACLS) is one of them. Shares of the semiconductor service company have rocketed higher by more than 440% over the last five years, even after accounting for the recent 36% decline from its all-time high.

Axcelis just reported its financial results for the 2023 full year, and it delivered record sales and earnings. Investors were disappointed by the company's forward guidance, but its stock has now fallen so far that it's trading at an absolute bargain valuation. Here's why it might be time to buy.

Axcelis is critical to the semiconductor industry

Axcelis Technologies is valued at just $3.9 billion, so it's tiny compared to the trillion-dollar giant that Nvidia has become. But Axcelis doesn't make chips, it makes ion implantation equipment that is critical to the fabrication process. Demand for chips continues to grow, so producers are expanding their manufacturing capacity and that requires more hardware from Axcelis.

In fact, the company is carrying a $1.2 billion order backlog right now, which is near a record high.

Axcelis' record year was driven by the power devices market. Power devices regulate the transfer of electrical energy between the source and the load -- for example, from a battery to the electric vehicle (EV) it powers. EVs are an enormous source of demand, especially when it comes to silicon carbide chemistries, which allow for lighter and more energy-efficient power devices. Axcelis is a specialist in that area.

The company expects the strong demand for EVs to continue, especially in China. But it's also bracing for a comeback in mature process markets like computer processors and memory (DRAM) and storage (NAND) chips. These have been weak since 2022 because the industry overproduced following the pandemic-driven supply chain disruptions, leading to a supply glut that suppressed prices.

Axcelis believes artificial intelligence (AI) could be a driver of the comeback. Senior Executive Doug Lawson said AI-enabled personal computers, for example, require significantly more DRAM than traditional computers, which means manufacturers will have to expand capacity to meet a new wave of demand. Axcelis expects this to become a tailwind in the second half of 2024 and into 2025, but chipmakers like Micron Technology and Advanced Micro Devices are showing signs the worst of the inventory and pricing problems are already over.