NEW YORK, May 17, 2026, 05:21 EDT
- Ultra Clean ended Friday at $85.94, off 0.5% for the session and down 1.3% from where it closed the week before. Shares hit $88.37 during intraday trading on Monday.
- PHLX Semiconductor Index dropped 4.0% Friday, leaving the chip-stock index off about 1.6% for the week.
- Ultra Clean’s annual meeting is set for May 22, with two investor meetings coming the week after.
Ultra Clean Holdings Inc. slipped late in the week, closing just under its recent peak. The stock held up better than much of the chip-equipment sector on Friday as tech names fell broadly.
Ultra Clean shares are on hold as the company is now seen as a more direct AI hardware play. Ultra Clean supplies subsystems, parts and high-purity cleaning services to chip makers. Investors are tracking demand for wafer-fab equipment, which are the tools used to build chips, to see if that continues in the second half.
Ultra Clean finished Friday at $85.94, off from $86.38 on Thursday. The stock moved between $80.00 and $86.82 on bigger volume. For the week, shares dropped from $87.10, despite touching a new intraday high of $88.37 on Monday.
Nasdaq Composite dropped 1.5% Friday, with U.S. stocks slipping from records. Small-cap stocks and high-valuation tech names also fell, according to the Associated Press.
Ichor Holdings slipped 1.7%, Cohu ended down 3.8%, and Lam Research fell 4.9% on Friday. Ultra Clean shares saw a smaller move, signaling investors are still giving its earnings tailwind some credit, but it wasn’t immune to the broader sector pullback.
Ultra Clean’s late-April report is behind the bull case. For the first quarter, the company put up $533.7 million in revenue and non-GAAP EPS of 31 cents. Non-GAAP strips out certain costs. For Q2 it told investors to look for $565 million to $605 million in revenue and non-GAAP EPS in the 44 to 60 cent range.
Ultra Clean CEO James Xiao said the first quarter got a boost from “demand across our customer base.” He added that customer roadmaps were giving the company confidence it was still at the “early stages of a multi-year, AI driven expansion.” PR Newswire
Chief Financial Officer Sheri Savage told analysts Ultra Clean is building inventory “to meet near-term demand and support future growth.” She also said higher volumes and better product mix boosted gross margin. Investing
UBS started coverage on Ultra Clean with a Buy and set a $130 target last week, pointing to AI-driven demand for wafer-fab equipment. TD Cowen’s Krish Sankar also bumped his target to $100 after Ultra Clean’s earnings.
Governance is in focus this week, not earnings. Ultra Clean’s annual meeting happens May 22 at 12:30 p.m. Pacific. Clarence Granger plans to step down as chairman the same day. Director Tom Edman is set to become chairman if he wins re-election at the meeting.
Ultra Clean’s management will talk to investors at the TD Cowen technology conference on May 27 and at the Craig-Hallum Institutional Investor Conference on May 28. The company said both are for one-on-one meetings—no public presentation is planned.
The downside is clear. If demand for AI chip gear falters or higher yields keep weighing on tech stocks, Ultra Clean’s premium could shrink quickly. The company posted a GAAP net loss of $17.9 million and burned $33.3 million in cash from operations in Q1, as inventories jumped to $481.9 million from $390.9 million.
The stock isn’t busted but it isn’t a bargain, either. It’s trading as if investors expect the company to catch the next chip cycle, so there’s not much cushion if the week turns rough.