Behind highly secured doors in a giant lab in the Netherlands, there’s a machine that’s transforming how microchips are made. ASML spent nearly a decade developing High NA, which stands for high numerical aperture. With a price tag of more than $400 million, it’s the world’s most advanced and expensive chipmaking machine.
CNBC went to the Netherlands for a tour of the lab in April. Before that, High NA had never been filmed, even by ASML’s own team.
Inside the lab, High NA qualification team lead Assia Haddou gave CNBC an exclusive, up-close look at the High NA machines, which she said are “bigger than a double-decker bus.”
The machine is made up of four modules, manufactured in Connecticut, California, Germany and the Netherlands, then assembled in the Veldhoven, Netherlands, lab for testing and approval, before being disassembled again to ship out. Haddou said it takes seven partially loaded Boeing 747s, or at least 25 trucks, to get one system to a customer.
The world’s first commercial installation of High NA happened at Intel‘s Oregon chip fabrication plant, or fab, in 2024. Only five of the colossal machines have ever been shipped.
High NA is the latest generation of ASML’s Extreme Ultraviolet, or EUV, machines. ASML is the exclusive maker of EUV, the only lithography devices in the world capable of projecting the smallest blueprints that make up the most advanced microchips. Chip designs from giants like Nvidia, Apple and AMD can’t be manufactured without EUV.
ASML told CNBC that High NA will eventually be used by all its EUV customers. That includes other advanced chipmakers like Micron, SK Hynix and Rapidus.
“This company has that market completely cornered,” said Daniel Newman of The Futurum Group.
High NA chipmaking machine in Veldhoven, Netherlands, on April 24, 2025.
Magdalena Petrova
CNBC asked CEO Christophe Fouquet what’s stopping ASML from setting the price of its machines even higher. He explained that as machines advance, they make it cheaper to produce the chips themselves.
“Moore’s law says that we need to continue to drive costs down,” Fouquet said. “There is a belief that if you drive costs down, you create more opportunity, so we need to be part of this game.”
Two major customers have confirmed that High NA has shown big improvements over ASML’s previous EUV machines. At a conference in February, Intel said it had used High NA to make about 30,000 wafers so far, and that the machine was about twice as reliable as its predecessors. At that same conference, Samsung said High NA could reduce its cycle time by 60%, meaning its chips can complete more operations per second.
‘A very risky investment’
High NA can drive chip prices down because of these improvements in speed and performance. High NA also improves yield, meaning more of the chips on each wafer are usable.
That’s because it can project chip designs at a higher resolution. High NA uses the same process as EUV machines but with a larger lens opening that allows for projection of smaller chip design in fewer steps.
“High NA means two things. First and foremost, shrink. So there’s more devices on a single wafer,” said Jos Benschop, ASML’s executive vice president of technology. “Secondly, by avoiding multiple patterning, you can make them faster and you can make them with higher yield.”
Benschop joined ASML in 1997, two years after it became a publicly traded company. Benschop then helped drive the decision to go all in on EUV. The technology took more than 20 years to develop.
ASML executive VP of technology Jos Benschop gave CNBC’s Katie Tarasov a look at High NA chipmaking in Veldhoven, Netherlands, on April 24, 2025.
Magdalena Petrova
“We barely made it. I think sometimes people forget that,” Fouquet said. “It’s been a very risky investment because when we started, there was no guarantee the technology would work.”
By 2018, ASML proved the viability of EUV and major chipmakers started placing big orders for the machines. The idea, which seemed impossible to many two decades ago, was to create large amounts of tiny rays of extreme ultraviolet light, projecting it through masks with increasingly small chip designs, onto wafers of silicon treated with photoresist chemicals.
To create the EUV light, ASML shoots molten tin out of a nozzle at 50,000 droplets per second, shooting each drop with a powerful laser that creates a plasma that’s hotter than the sun. Those tiny explosions are what emit photons of the EUV light, with a wavelength of just 13.5 nanometers.
About the width of five DNA strands, EUV is so small that it’s absorbed by all known substances, so the whole process has to happen in a vacuum. The EUV light bounces off mirrors that aim it through a lens, much like how a camera works. To solve for EUV getting absorbed by mirrors, German optics company Zeiss made specific mirrors just for ASML that are the flattest surfaces in the world.
ASML’s older generation DUV machines use less precise rays of deep ultraviolet light with a wavelength of 193 nanometers. ASML still makes the machines — competing against Nikon and Canon in Japan on DUV — but it is the only company in the world that’s succeeded at EUV lithography.
The Dutch company began developing the $400 million High NA machines around 2016. High NA machines work the same as DUV, with the same EUV light source. But there’s one key difference.
The higher numerical aperture of High NA means it has a larger lens opening, increasing the angle at which the light is captured by the mirrors. More light coming in from steeper angles allows High NA machines to transfer increasingly small designs onto the wafer in one step. By comparison, lower NA machines require multiple projections of EUV light, through multiple masks.
“When the number increases, it gets very complex process-wise and the yield goes down,” Fouquet said.
Resolution improves as NA increases, bringing down the need for multiple masks and exposures, saving time and money. The cost of the High NA machine, however, goes up.
“The bigger the mirror you have to use and therefore the bigger the system,” Fouquet said.
These machines also take up a huge amount of power.
“If we don’t improve the power efficiency of our AI chips over time, the training of the models could consume the entire worldwide energy and that could happen around 2035,” Fouquet said. That’s why ASML has reduced the power needed per wafer exposure by more than 60% since 2018, he said.
ASML’s Assia Haddou shows CNBC’s Katie Tarasov a High NA chipmaking machine in Veldhoven, Netherlands, on April 24, 2025.
Magdalena Petrova
China, tariffs and U.S. growth
ASML is known for its groundbreaking EUV machines, but its older DUV machines still made up 60% of business in 2024. ASML sold 44 EUV machines last year, with a price tag starting at $220 million. DUV machines are far cheaper, ranging from $5 million to $90 million, but ASML sold 374 of the legacy machines in 2024.
China is a major buyer of those DUV systems, making up 49% of ASML’s business in the second quarter of 2024. Fouquet told CNBC this peak in sales to China came because of a “huge backlog” in orders that ASML wasn’t able to fill until last year. He said business in China should be back to the “historical normal” of between 20% and 25% in 2025.
U.S. export controls prevent ASML from selling EUV to China. It’s a ban that started under the first Trump administration. Newman of The Futurum Group said it’s a “real long shot” that China could develop its own EUV machines, instead making devices like smartphones using the most advanced chips possible with DUV.
U.S. concern over advanced tech making its way to China has accelerated amid the generative artificial intelligence race. That boom has also sent chip stocks soaring, including ASML’s, which hit an all-time high in July.
ASML’s share price has declined more than 30% since, as the chip industry faces key uncertainties such as President Donald Trump‘s tariffs.
Benschop told CNBC that ASML simply doesn’t know how tariffs will impact the company. With about 800 global suppliers, tariff implications for ASML are complex.
Making a single High NA machine requires many steps of imports and exports. The machine’s four modules are made in the U.S., Netherlands and Germany, then they’re shipped to the Netherlands for assembly and testing, where they’re disassembled again for shipment to chip fabs in places like the U.S. or Asia.
For years, Asia has made up more than 80% of ASML’s business. The U.S. share sat around 17% in 2024 but is growing fast. ASML has 44,000 employees globally, and 8,500 of them are based in the U.S. across 18 offices.
Many of ASML’s 2024 High NA shipments went to Intel, which is building new fabs in Ohio and Arizona. The U.S.-based chipmaker has struggled in recent years, but Fouquet said that Intel remains a “formidable partner” for ASML and that it’s “very critical” for U.S. semiconductor independence.
Taiwan-based TSMC is far ahead of Intel in advancing chip nodes. CNBC recently visited TSMC’s new fab north of Phoenix, which is now in volume production. As the most advanced chip fab on U.S. soil, the need for High NA there will likely come soon.
ASML, meanwhile, is building its first U.S. training center in Arizona. Fouquet told CNBC it will open in the “next few months” with a goal of training 1,200 people on EUV and DUV each year. It’s “a capacity that will not only meet what is needed in the U.S., but will be used also to train even more people worldwide,” he said.
The Dutch company plans to further increase the numerical aperture on its next machine, Hyper NA.
Fouquet told CNBC that ASML has some draft optical designs for this next machine, and that, “it’s not necessarily a difficult product.” He expects the need for Hyper NA to come “between 2032 and 2035.” He wouldn’t speculate on price.
For now, ASML is focused on meeting demand for High NA. It plans to ship at least five more systems this year and ramping to a production capacity of 20 machines in a few years.
A Waymo autonomous self-driving Jaguar electric vehicle sits parked at an EVgo charging station in Los Angeles, California, on May 15, 2024.
Patrick T. Fallon | AFP | Getty Images
Waymo said it will begin testing in Philadelphia, with a limited fleet of vehicles and human safety drivers behind the wheel.
“This city is a National Treasure,” Waymo wrote in a post on X on Monday. “It’s a city of love, where eagles fly with a gritty spirit and cheese that spreads and cheese that steaks. Our road trip continues to Philly next.”
The Alphabet-owned company confirmed to CNBC that it will be testing in Pennsylvania’s largest city through the fall, adding that the initial fleet of cars will be manually driven through the more complex parts of Philadelphia, including downtown and on freeways.
“Folks will see our vehicles driving at all hours throughout various neighborhoods, from North Central to Eastwick, and from University City to as far east as the Delaware River,” a Waymo spokesperson said.
With its so-called road trips, Waymo seeks to collect mapping data and evaluate how its autonomous technology, Waymo Driver, performs in new environments, handling traffic patterns and local infrastructure. Road trips are often used a way for the company to gauge whether it can potentially offer a paid ride share service in a particular location.
The expanded testing, which will go through the fall, comes as Waymo aims for a broader rollout. Last month, the company announced plans to drive vehicles manually in New York for testing, marking the first step toward potentially cracking the largest U.S. city. Waymo applied for a permit with the New York City Department of Transportation to operate autonomously with a trained specialist behind the wheel in Manhattan. State law currently doesn’t allow for such driverless operations.
Waymo One provides more than 250,000 paid trips each week across Phoenix, San Francisco, Los Angeles, and Austin, Texas, and is preparing to bring fully autonomous rides to Atlanta, Miami, and Washington, D.C., in 2026.
Alphabet has been under pressure to monetize artificial intelligence products as it bolsters spending on infrastructure. Alphabet’s “Other Bets” segment, which includes Waymo, brought in revenue of $1.65 billion in 2024, up from $1.53 billion in 2023. However, the segment lost $4.44 billion last year, compared to a loss of $4.09 billion the previous year.
White House trade advisor Peter Navarro chastised Apple CEO Tim Cook on Monday over the company’s response to pressure from the Trump administration to make more of its products outside of China.
“Going back to the first Trump term, Tim Cook has continually asked for more time in order to move his factories out of China,” Navarro said in an interview on CNBC’s “Squawk on the Street.” “I mean it’s the longest-running soap opera in Silicon Valley.”
CNBC has reached out to Apple for comment on Navarro’s criticism.
President Donald Trump has in recent months ramped up demands for Apple to move production of its iconic iPhone to the U.S. from overseas. Apple’s flagship phone is produced primarily in China, but the company has increasingly boosted production in India, partly to avoid the higher cost of Trump’s tariffs.
Trump in May warned Apple would have to pay a tariff of 25% or more for iPhones made outside the U.S. In separate remarks, Trump said he told Cook, “I don’t want you building in India.”
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Analysts and supply chain experts have argued it would be impossible for Apple to completely move iPhone production to the U.S. By some estimates, a U.S.-made iPhone could cost as much as $3,500.
Navarro said Cook isn’t shifting production out of China quickly enough.
“With all these new advanced manufacturing techniques and the way things are moving with AI and things like that, it’s inconceivable to me that Tim Cook could not produce his iPhones elsewhere around the world and in this country,” Navarro said.
Apple currently makes very few products in the U.S. During Trump’s first term, Apple extended its commitment to assemble the $3,000 Mac Pro in Texas.
In February, Apple said it would spend $500 billion within the U.S., including on assembling some AI servers.
CoreWeave founders Brian Venturo, at left in sweatshirt, and Mike Intrator slap five after ringing the opening bell at Nasdaq headquarters in New York on March 28, 2025.
Michael M. Santiago | Getty Images News | Getty Images
Artificial intelligence hyperscaler CoreWeave said Monday it will acquire Core Scientific, a leading data center infrastructure provider, in an all-stock deal valued at approximately $9 billion.
Coreweave stock fell about 4% on Monday while Core Scientific stock plummeted about 20%. Shares of both companies rallied at the end of June after the Wall Street Journal reported that talks were underway for an acquisition.
The deal strengthens CoreWeave’s position in the AI arms race by bringing critical infrastructure in-house.
CoreWeave CEO Michael Intrator said the move will eliminate $10 billion in future lease obligations and significantly enhance operating efficiency.
The transaction is expected to close in the fourth quarter of 2025, pending regulatory and shareholder approval.
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The deal expands CoreWeave’s access to power and real estate, giving it ownership of 1.3 gigawatts of gross capacity across Core Scientific’s U.S. data center footprint, with another gigawatt available for future growth.
Core Scientific has increasingly focused on high-performance compute workloads since emerging from bankruptcy and relisting on the Nasdaq in 2024.
Core Scientific shareholders will receive 0.1235 CoreWeave shares for each share they hold — implying a $20.40 per-share valuation and a 66% premium to Core Scientific’s closing stock price before deal talks were reported.
After closing, Core Scientific shareholders will own less than 10% of the combined company.