Singaporean chip tool maker sees AI opportunities amid DeepSeek boom after stock plunge
ASMPT CEO Robin Ng said DeepSeek’s models are ‘good for the industry’ because cheaper AI means more applications and greater chip demand

The company, which supplies tools for semiconductor and electronics manufacturing, reported on Wednesday a 94.4 per cent decline in net profit for the fourth quarter, to HK$4.2 million. Revenue for the December quarter remained steady at HK$3.4 billion compared with the same period in 2023.

ASMPT CEO Robin Ng said at a Hong Kong briefing that the company’s non-AI-related businesses are under pressure amid a sluggish economy. The company is shifting investment and resources towards AI-related segments to leverage growth opportunities, he added.
The low-cost, high-performance large language models developed by Chinese start-up DeepSeek are “good for the industry as a whole”, according to Ng. “As AI gets cheaper, there will be more proliferation of applications, and that means more demand for AI chips,” he said.
Strong capital expenditure by Big Tech firms on AI infrastructure such as data centres is driving significant demand for components, packaging services and tools. ASMPT stands to benefit from the trend, as its business is closely tied to the number of chips that need packaging.