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Hey there, bargain hunter.
When one of the most data-driven, quantitatively rigorous hedge funds on the planet sextuples a position in a single name, it is not a coincidence. It is a thesis. And right now, that thesis has a ticker: AMAT.
Citadel Investment Group — Ken Griffin’s machine — significantly increased its Applied Materials stake in late 2025. We are not talking about a modest top-up. A 600% increase in a position of this profile is a loud, deliberate signal. The question worth asking is not whether Citadel is right. The question is: what are they pricing in that the rest of the market has not fully figured out yet?
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The consensus view on AMAT is roughly this: solid company, strong market position, but the growth story is already priced in. Revenue grew only 4% in fiscal 2025. The Q4 quarter actually declined 3% year over year. China is a permanent headwind. The stock has already run hard.
That framing is not wrong. It is just incomplete. And that gap between the consensus framing and the actual setup is exactly where Citadel tends to hunt.
Here is the friction. The 4% annual revenue growth number obscures something important: the underlying business is getting structurally richer, not just bigger.
Applied Materials’ non-GAAP gross margin reached 48.8% in fiscal 2025 — the highest level in 25 years — driven by a richer mix of advanced systems and pricing power. Q1 fiscal 2025 saw a non-GAAP gross margin of 48.9%, also described as the highest quarterly margin since fiscal year 2000. The company is not grinding out incremental volume gains. It is selling more of the most complex, highest-value tools in the world, and the customers are paying for it.
Meanwhile, the revenue deceleration was largely a China story. China’s share of AMAT’s total systems and services revenues declined to 28% for the year and 25% in Q4 fiscal 2025. Export restrictions pulled roughly $400 million in incremental revenue out of the fiscal 2025 picture. Strip that out, and AMAT was growing faster than its peer group in every other geography.
That is not a broken business. That is a temporarily compressed one.
Here is what the market is missing.
Applied Materials sits at the intersection of every technology inflection that matters for AI-era chips: Gate-All-Around (GAA) transistors at 2nm and below, backside power delivery, High-Bandwidth Memory (HBM) stacking, hybrid bonding, and advanced packaging. These are not optional upgrades. They are the mandatory infrastructure for manufacturing the next generation of AI accelerators.
AMAT management made a striking disclosure: some customers are now providing more than one year — and in some cases, two years — of demand visibility. That is not normal for a cyclical equipment business. That is a structural shift in how customers are planning capacity. It means the volume ramp is already contracted. The equipment orders are already in the pipeline. The revenue is just not fully hitting the income statement yet.
Management guided to prepare operations for materially higher demand beginning in the second half of calendar 2026. That is the setup Citadel is loading up ahead of.
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This is where it gets genuinely interesting — and where the bull case requires intellectual honesty.
AMAT is not a screaming value stock by traditional metrics. A reverse DCF analysis implies the stock requires aggressive free cash flow growth of approximately 23.9% to justify current prices. That is a high bar. The stock has already run significantly from its 2025 lows, and valuation demands execution.
But here is the reframing: the market is pricing AMAT on its current-cycle earnings. Citadel and the institutional community loading up above 80% ownership are pricing it on the 2026-to-2027 volume ramp — a cycle that Morningstar forecasts will drive 8% annualized WFE market growth through 2029, and one where AMAT’s advanced-node positioning becomes structurally more valuable per wafer, not less.
The revenue opportunity per wafer at 2nm GAA nodes is estimated to be approximately 30% higher than older technology nodes. As the industry moves to high-volume manufacturing at 2nm — a transition SEMI identifies as the dominant capital spending driver for foundry and logic through 2027 — AMAT’s revenue per unit of capacity installed goes up. That is not a cyclical tailwind. That is a structural mix shift embedded in every dollar of future WFE spending.
The Citadel position is not a trade on next quarter. It is a multi-quarter thesis. Here are the specific signals that confirm or challenge it:
| Metric | Current Status | Watch For |
|---|---|---|
| Revenue growth | +4.4% FY2025 | Acceleration in H2 2026 |
| Non-GAAP gross margin | 48.8% (25-yr high) | Hold at or above 48% |
| GAA equipment revenue | ~$2.5B target (2024) | Doubling toward ~$5B in 2025 |
| Advanced packaging revenue | Target: $3B | HBM attach rate quarterly |
| WFE market (SEMI) | $115.7B in 2025 | $135.2B by 2027 (+9% 2026) |
| China revenue share | 25% in Q4 FY2025 | Stability; Nov. 2026 truce renewal |
| Analyst consensus | 26 of 34 Buy/Strong Buy | FY2027 EPS growth est. at +17.2% |
| Institutional ownership | >80% | Citadel and peers adding further |
| Customer demand visibility | 1-2 year forward visibility | Backlog and order commentary per Q |
| Market share (global WFE) | 17.4% | Outperform peer group ex-China |
If the AI infrastructure build-out continues at its current pace — and every hyperscaler capex plan on the planet suggests it will — then Applied Materials is one of the few companies that literally cannot be bypassed. You cannot build a 2nm GAA chip without deposition. You cannot stack HBM without advanced packaging tools. You cannot manufacture at scale without the kind of process control and materials engineering that AMAT has spent decades perfecting.
The H2 2026 demand acceleration management is telegraphing is either going to show up in the numbers or it is not. If it does, the current price will look very cheap in retrospect. If the China truce collapses in November 2026, the calculus changes materially.
Citadel’s 600% position increase is a bet on the former. The data, the customer visibility disclosures, and the WFE market trajectory all support that read.
The market is still debating whether the cycle is real. The smart money already decided.
This editorial is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. All investing involves risk, including the potential loss of principal. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Always conduct your own due diligence before making any investment decision.