ASML’s blowout third-quarter orders tell the real story of the global economy right now. The world is not slowing down — it’s retooling itself for the AI age.
The Dutch company, which makes the advanced lithography machines needed to produce the most powerful AI chips, reported €5.4 billion in new bookings for the quarter, well above forecasts.
This figure matters far beyond Europe’s borders. It signals that hundreds of billions of dollars in AI infrastructure investment are now translating into physical demand — chips, data centres, power, and bandwidth.
This is what an industrial revolution looks like in real time.
The implications could be immense for investors. The centre of economic gravity is shifting again, and this time it’s being driven by silicon, not oil. The surge in demand for chip-making tools shows how deeply embedded AI has become in corporate and national strategy.
OpenAI alone has reportedly struck deals for data centres and chips exceeding $1 trillion. Its partners, from Microsoft to Broadcom, are scaling up as if the digital economy were being rebuilt from the ground up. In many ways, it could be.
This momentum helps explain why European technology stocks have rallied and why the AI buildout is reshaping global markets faster than policymakers can react. The demand for computer power, storage, and advanced chips is unlikely to be cyclical; it looks structural. It marks a once-in-a-generation reallocation of capital toward the infrastructure of intelligence itself.
But investors should resist the temptation to see this as a simple technology boom. It is also a geopolitical contest. The world’s most advanced chip-making tools are as strategically sensitive as they are commercially valuable.
They sit at the centre of a tug-of-war between Washington and Beijing, with the US restricting what can be sold to China and Beijing threatening supply lines with rare-earth export controls. Last week, a US House committee accused semiconductor-equipment suppliers of “supporting China’s military capacity.” These are not the headlines of a normal earnings season.
This tension shows that the AI arms race is not only about speed but also control. The nations that can design, produce, and supply the most advanced semiconductors will set the tempo of technological progress for the next decade. The equipment enabling that production has become essential infrastructure — and a strategic choke point.
For Europe, that brings opportunity and responsibility. The continent now hosts arguably the most strategically important technology manufacturer in the world. Its success underscores the fact that European equities are more relevant to the global growth story than they have been in years, though they are also increasingly exposed to policy risk.
From an investment standpoint, the signal is that the AI economy could be moving from abstraction to execution. The capital already committed to computer capacity is driving a new wave of industrial investment, not just in chips but across energy, materials, logistics, and cybersecurity.
The multiplier effect will ripple through supply chains, capital markets, and national growth models. The most interesting opportunities may emerge among firms that enable or secure this expanding ecosystem.
There is, however, a line between conviction and concentration. The scale of capital chasing a small cluster of semiconductor names has created a narrow market. Valuations now assume a near-perfect continuation of AI investment. That may hold, but the path will not be smooth. Regulatory intervention, export restrictions, and resource constraints could puncture exuberance at any point.
Still, the direction of travel seems clear. Every new dataset, every algorithm, every generative AI model requires more computational power, and that demand is reshaping the global economy. The chip sector sits at the heart of that shift, and its supply chain will likely continue to define the rhythm of innovation and growth.
This moment offers both a warning and an opportunity. The AI investment wave could be vast, but it will not reward complacency. The next phase will favour those who understand the strategic stakes as well as the financial ones.
ASML’s results capture more than a quarterly surge. They reflect how the geography of global investment could be shifting.
The Netherlands, once peripheral to the tech supercycle, now finds itself at the heart of the AI economy. It’s a reminder that the next trillion in investment may not flow where it once did, but to where innovation, precision, and strategic importance now converge.
Nigel Green is deVere CEO and Founder
Also published on Medium.
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