BE Semiconductor Industries has raised its long-term revenue and operating margin targets, signaling stronger confidence in demand for advanced chip assembly equipment linked to AI datacentres, photonics and next-generation packaging.
The Dutch semiconductor equipment group, also known as Besi, announced the updated targets on June 18, 2026 at its Investor Day in Amsterdam. The company lifted its long-term total revenue target to €1.7 billion–€2.2 billion, up from the €1.5 billion–€1.9 billion range set at its 2025 Investor Day. It also raised its long-term operating margin target to 45%–55%, compared with the previous 40%–55% range.
Richard W. Blickman, President and Chief Executive Officer of Besi, linked the upgraded model to improved market conditions and stronger order momentum since Q2-25. The company pointed to increased demand for 2.5D AI-related datacenter and photonics applications, as well as new use cases for hybrid bonding in logic, memory and co-packaged optics.
The update gives Besi a clear place in the AI infrastructure supply chain. Much of the public attention around AI investment focuses on model developers, cloud platforms and headline chip designers. Besi sits further inside the production chain, where packaging, bonding and assembly technology help determine how advanced chips are built, connected and scaled for higher-performance computing.
That makes the raised targets strategically relevant beyond a single investor presentation. AI hardware demand is no longer only about producing more chips; it is increasingly about how chips are packaged and connected to deliver higher bandwidth, lower power use and better performance. Hybrid bonding and advanced packaging have become key routes for pushing computing capability further when traditional scaling methods face physical and economic limits.
Besi’s new target model suggests management expects those technology shifts to translate into a larger and more profitable addressable opportunity. The revenue range increase is meaningful because it comes alongside a higher floor for operating margin, not just a bigger top-line ambition. Raising the lower end of the operating margin target from 40% to 45% indicates confidence that the company can scale while preserving stronger profitability.
The leadership challenge now is execution. Besi will need to convert AI-related customer demand into repeatable orders while managing the cyclicality that has long shaped semiconductor equipment markets. Demand from data centers, photonics and advanced packaging can be powerful, but customer qualification cycles, capital spending patterns and technology transitions can still create uneven revenue timing.
The updated guidance also carries a message for executive teams watching the AI build-out from outside the semiconductor sector. AI strategy depends on a deeper industrial base than software, cloud contracts and model access. Supply chains for equipment, packaging and advanced manufacturing will influence cost, availability and resilience as companies build AI capability into products, operations and infrastructure.
Besi’s Investor Day update shows how the AI investment cycle is reaching companies that enable the physical production of advanced computing. The next test will be whether stronger demand for hybrid bonding, photonics and AI-related assembly systems can support the higher revenue and margin profile now being presented to investors.
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