Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
World's largest probe card maker; ~$850M revenue. MEMS-based and cantilever probe cards are essential for wafer-level electrical test before dicing for advanced SoCs and memory.
FormFactor was founded in 1993 in Livermore, California and has grown into the world's largest manufacturer of probe cards—precision electromechanical assemblies that contact wafer-level die during semiconductor manufacturing to perform electrical parametric and functional tests before the wafer is diced. Probe cards are a consumable in semiconductor production: each card handles millions of probe contacts before being replaced, creating a recurring revenue model.\n\nFormFactor serves foundries (TSMC, Samsung), IDMs (Intel, Samsung, Micron), and memory manufacturers (Hynix, NAND makers) with MEMS-based probe cards for leading-edge SoC and logic testing, high-density cantilever cards for memory testing, and vertical probe cards for high-power devices. As chips shrink to 3nm and 2nm nodes with tighter pad pitches and as 3D chiplet architectures multiply the number of electrical connections to test, probe card complexity and average selling prices are increasing.\n\nFormFactor reported approximately $850 million in annual revenue and benefits from the same AI chip investment cycle as Teradyne: AI GPU wafers (NVIDIA H100/H200/B200) require advanced probe cards for wafer sort. The company also provides systems for failure analysis and materials characterization through its Systems division. FormFactor's strong market position in advanced logic probe cards makes it a direct proxy for leading-edge semiconductor manufacturing volume.
ASML (ASML) reported EUR 28.3B revenue in FY2024, up 3%. Market cap ~$350B. 43,000+ employees. Headquartered in Veldhoven, Netherlands. Founded 1984. Sole supplier of extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography machines.
ASML Holding was founded in 1984 as a joint venture between Philips and ASM International in Veldhoven, Netherlands, and has since become one of the most strategically important companies in the global technology supply chain. ASML holds a complete monopoly on extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography machines — the equipment required to manufacture the most advanced semiconductors at 7nm and below. No other company in the world produces EUV machines, making ASML an irreplaceable chokepoint in the production of chips that power AI, mobile devices, and data centers.\n\nASML's product portfolio centers on its EUV and deep ultraviolet (DUV) lithography systems, which use light to etch circuit patterns onto silicon wafers with nanometer precision. The company sells machines to every major chip foundry in the world — TSMC, Samsung, Intel, and SK Hynix — and its latest High-NA EUV systems enable the manufacturing of chips at angstrom-scale dimensions. Each EUV machine contains over 100,000 parts, takes years to build, and costs in excess of $200M, reflecting the engineering complexity that creates ASML's durable competitive moat.\n\nASML reported EUR 28.3B in revenue for full-year 2024 and employs over 43,000 people globally. With a market capitalization of approximately $350B, ASML ranks among the largest technology companies in Europe. Its monopoly position has drawn geopolitical attention — the Netherlands, under US pressure, has restricted ASML's ability to export advanced EUV machines to China — underscoring how central ASML's technology has become to global semiconductor competition and national security strategy.
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