Register D | Research date: 2026-04-26 | Data sources: company IR, stockanalysis.com, DBS research, The Edge Singapore, NextInsight, Smart Investor SG, TheStar
Register D | Research date: 2026-04-26 | Data sources: company IR, stockanalysis.com, DBS research, The Edge Singapore, NextInsight, Smart Investor SG, TheStar
AEM Holdings Ltd (SGX: AWX) is Singapore’s leading semiconductor test equipment company. It builds the infrastructure that chip makers rely on to validate reliability before products ship: burn-in handlers, system-level test (SLT) cells, and thermal management equipment that stress-test processors under real-world operating conditions. Without this equipment, chips that pass wafer-level electrical testing can still fail in customer devices — AEM’s solutions catch those failures in the factory, not the field.
The business model is hardware-plus-services: AEM sells capital equipment (handlers, test cells, thermal systems), consumables (test contactors, sockets), and ongoing support contracts to semiconductor manufacturers. Revenue is one-time on the equipment side but recurring on consumables and service. Margins are modest relative to pure-play ATE names because AEM is a handler/system integrator rather than a tester OEM; gross margins run 25-27%, versus 50%+ for Teradyne or Advantest.
| Segment | What it does | Est. revenue share (FY2024) |
|---|---|---|
| Test Cell Solutions (TCS) | Burn-in and SLT handlers, complete test cell systems including thermal control hardware and software. Primary revenue driver. | ~60-65% |
| Instrumentation (INS) | Specialty wafer-level test; cryogenic wafer probers for quantum computing; specialty test equipment | ~10-15% |
| Contract Manufacturing (CM) | Electronic manufacturing services for third parties | ~20-25% |
| Other | Engineering services, rapid prototyping | ~5% |
Note: AEM does not disclose precise annual segment revenue splits in all periods. The TCS segment is dominant; in 2H2024 alone, TCS contributed S$131.2M (63.4% of group revenue). CM contributed 37.7% in Q1 2025.
Revenue recognition: Equipment revenue is recognized upon delivery and acceptance; service/consumable revenue is recognized over contract period. The mix skews heavily toward one-time equipment. Intel’s purchase cycles create lumpiness — orders pulled from 2025 into 2H2024 illustrate this dynamic.
Geographic mix: The majority of revenue is external, driven by sales to Intel’s manufacturing network (Malaysia, Ireland, US, Israel). AEM operates production sites in Singapore (HQ), Malaysia (Penang), Vietnam (HCMC), Indonesia (Batam), and Finland (Lieto). R&D centers in Singapore, Malaysia, Finland, France, and the US.
| Facility | Location | Function | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| HQ + manufacturing | Singapore (Serangoon North) | Main production, engineering, HQ | Operating |
| Manufacturing | Penang, Malaysia | Volume manufacturing | Operating |
| Manufacturing | HCMC, Vietnam | Assembly and manufacturing | Operating |
| Manufacturing | Batam, Indonesia | Assembly | Operating |
| R&D + Wafer Test | Lieto, Finland | Specialty wafer probe, cryogenic test, quantum computing applications | Operating |
| R&D | France | Specialty test solutions | Operating |
| Application/sales | US, Ireland, Germany, Korea, China, Costa Rica, UK | Customer proximity | Operating |
Asset-light by semiconductor equipment standards — capex runs S$5-13M/year against a revenue base of S$380-870M. AEM is an assembler and systems integrator, not a fab. Physical footprint ties directly to proximity to Intel’s back-end test operations.
AEM-Intel Foundry partnership: Not a formal JV, but the dominant commercial relationship. AEM and Intel Foundry have co-developed one of the world’s most extensive burn-in and SLT ecosystems over 15+ years. AEM provides device-specific configurable test units, handlers, PiXL Active Thermal Control (ATC) systems, and software for Intel Foundry’s customer base. Intel (NASDAQ: INTC) accounts for 60-70% of AEM revenue; the two companies have over 40,000 SLT sites in production together.
Bluefors (Finland): Technology partnership for cryogenic wafer probing for quantum computing. Bluefors is the industry leader in Dilution Refrigerators. AEM and Bluefors co-developed quantum wafer probers capable of testing at sub-2 Kelvin; AEM holds patent portfolio from this collaboration.
No other material disclosed JVs.
| # | Customer | Ticker | Est. Revenue Share | Relationship Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Intel | INTC | ~55-60% (declining from ~70%) | Equipment OEM — burn-in handlers and SLT systems for Intel’s back-end test ops |
| 2 | Unnamed AI/HPC customer | — | Rising; est. to become #1 by end-2026 | New — CPU/GPU burn-in and SLT equipment |
| 3 | Memory tier-1 customer | — | Production ramp targeted late FY2026 | Evaluation-stage; production delivery in late FY2026 |
| 4 | Other AI/HPC | — | Growing | Multiple smaller AI compute customers |
Concentration risk: Intel alone was ~70% of revenue through FY2022-2023. That figure has declined as the new AI/HPC anchor ramps, but Intel still represents well over 50% through FY2025. Single-customer concentration at this level is the defining investment risk. AEM’s revenue fell 56% (FY2022-2024 combined) primarily because Intel’s demand collapsed.
The new unnamed AI/HPC customer: management and analysts widely speculate it is AMD (NASDAQ: AMD) or NVIDIA (NASDAQ: NVDA), described as a “fabless AI/HPC company driving massive volume in CPU and GPU testing flows.” AEM has not disclosed the identity; per SGX listing rules, it is under NDA.
Dependency flag: Intel remains a customer AND is pursuing its own foundry services transformation (18A), which creates both opportunity (higher test volumes) and risk (Intel could theoretically internalize or diversify test handler supply if its foundry business scales with different partners).
Why it matters: Every advanced semiconductor must pass reliability testing before it reaches a server, PC, or consumer device. As chip power density rises (AI accelerators now exceed 1,000W per package), and package sizes surpass 200mm x 200mm, the thermal and electrical challenges of testing have made AEM’s specialized burn-in and SLT capabilities non-replicable by standard ATE vendors. AEM’s PiXL Active Thermal Control technology precisely manages thermal conditions during stress testing at power levels exceeding 2,000 watts — specifications no off-the-shelf handler achieves.
End-use applications: - Advanced CPU burn-in and system-level test (Intel, AMD-class processors) - AI accelerator and GPU package testing - HPC chip validation - Cryogenic wafer probe for quantum computing R&D - Specialty wafer-level test (compound semiconductors, power devices)
TAM: The global semiconductor test equipment market was valued at USD 15.1B in 2025, projected to reach USD 21.6B by 2031 (CAGR ~6.1%; Fortune Business Insights). The semiconductor assembly and testing services market (which AEM’s equipment enables) is projected to grow $48.4B by 2030. AEM’s addressable slice — burn-in and SLT handlers — is a niche within this; no third-party firm has published a standalone burn-in handler TAM figure publicly.
SAM: AEM competes primarily for burn-in and SLT handler spend from advanced logic chip manufacturers. Given 40,000+ SLT sites already in production, AEM has demonstrated deep penetration with Intel. The new AI/HPC customer opens a second large revenue pool.
Secular tailwinds: - AI accelerator volumes scaling: higher power and thermal requirements create longer test times and more test cells - Intel 18A ramp: technology transition drives new test infrastructure investment - Chiplet and advanced packaging: heterogeneous integration requires package-level system test rather than die-level test only - Quantum computing: nascent but growing demand for cryogenic probing - Memory test expansion: AEM is entering this market in FY2026-2027
| Name | Title | Tenure | Background |
|---|---|---|---|
| Samer Kabbani | CEO | Jul 2025 – present | >25 yrs semiconductor test; was AEM CTO since 2020, President since 2022; previously Division President at Delta Design (Cohu); EVP at Astronics Test Systems (now Advantest); ~40 patents in thermal management and test automation; McGill BSc Engineering; Kellogg executive programs |
| Chua Tat Ming | COO | — | Semiconductor operations background; long-tenured AEM executive |
| Kwek You Cheer | CFO | — | Finance background; details not publicly disclosed |
| Mark Yaeger | SVP Sales | — | Commercial leadership |
| Samir Mowla | Chief of Staff | — | — |
| Samson Mah | General Counsel | — | — |
| Tan Chee Keong | VP, Group Head HR | — | — |
CEO history note: Amy Leong (former CCO at FormFactor; MSc Materials Science, Stanford; BS Chemical Engineering, UC Berkeley) was appointed CEO 1 Jul 2024, following Chandran Nair’s departure. Leong resigned after a comprehensive leadership board review effective 27 Jul 2025. Kabbani, who architected AEM’s diversification into AI/HPC customers as CTO/President, assumed the role. The transition signals a deliberate pivot to prioritize technical product leadership over commercial expansion.
| Name | Role | Independent? | Background | Committee |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Loke Wai San | Non-Executive Chairman | No | Co-founder and Managing Director, Novo Tellus Capital Partners; transformed AEM from regional automation company to global semiconductor test platform since 2011 acquisition; >27 yrs technology management and PE | Nominating |
| Alice Lin | Independent Director | Yes | Former CFO, Oracle Asia Pacific (multi-billion dollar regional finance and M&A); founding board member, Asian University for Women Support Foundation; director, Green Mountains Investments | Audit & Risk (Chair) |
| Russell Tham | Non-Executive, Non-Independent | No | Head of Strategic Development, Temasek International (early-stage science & tech ventures); former President, Applied Materials Southeast Asia (2009-2018) — represents Temasek’s 12.46% stake | — |
| Loh Kin Wah | Independent Director | Yes | 30+ yrs semiconductor industry; former CEO Qimonda AG; former EVP Global Sales, NXP Semiconductors; former Vice Chairman, Ampleon BV; member Supervisory Board, AMS AG | Audit & Risk, Technology |
| James Toh Ban Leng | Non-Executive, Non-Independent | No | Founding director, Novo Tellus Capital Partners; former MD of ACT Holdings; represents Novo Tellus | — |
| André Andonian | Independent Director | Yes | 34 years McKinsey; former Managing Partner McKinsey Japan and Korea; 30+ yrs consulting semiconductors, industrials, electronics | Nominating (Chair) |
| Chok Yean Hung | Non-Executive, Non-Independent | No | Former CEO with 30+ yrs semiconductor industry; recognized for building start-ups to listed companies | — |
Average board tenure: 5.3 years.
Direct competitors:
| Competitor | Ticker | Focus | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Teradyne | TER (NASDAQ) | ATE (semiconductor automated test equipment), SLT | ~US$18B market cap; dominates logic and memory tester market; AEM’s system-level test competes peripherally |
| Advantest | 6857 (TSE) | ATE dominant; SoC and memory | ~US$55B mcap; commands ~58% global SoC tester market share; Advantest is building SLT capability |
| Cohu | COHU (NASDAQ) | Handler and test contactor | ~US$893M mcap; most direct handler competitor; less advanced thermal capability vs AEM |
| Aehr Test Systems | AEHR (NASDAQ) | Wafer-level burn-in for SiC, GaN | Focused on EV/power semis rather than advanced logic; different application set |
| Xcerra (part of Cohu) | (acquired) | Handler solutions | Integrated into Cohu |
AEM’s competitive position: AEM occupies a specialized niche rather than competing head-to-head with Teradyne/Advantest in the ATE market. Its moat is:
Risks to moat: Intel’s shift to Intel Foundry Services could mean new customers who have no preference for AEM. Advantest is building SLT capability and has far greater R&D scale. Cohu competes on price in the handler segment.
Porter’s Five Forces (snapshot): - Rivalry: Moderate-high; Teradyne/Advantest compete in adjacent areas; Cohu competes directly on handlers. AEM has deep customer lock-in but limited pricing power in mature segments. - New entrants: Low threat; capital intensity and customer qualification cycles create high barriers. - Substitutes: Moderate; chip makers could bring test in-house or use different test architectures; AEM’s thermal solutions are hard to replicate. - Buyer power: High; Intel represents 60%+ of revenue — single buyer has significant leverage. - Supplier power: Low; AEM sources standard electronic components; no single critical supplier.
Data as of 26 April 2026. All figures in SGD million unless noted.
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Share price | S$6.06 (24 Apr 2026) |
| Market cap | S$1.91B |
| Enterprise value | ~S$1.85B (net cash position) |
| P/E (TTM) | 113x |
| Forward P/E | 49x |
| EV/EBITDA (TTM) | 44x |
| P/FCF | 14.9x (based on FY2025 FCF of S$128M) |
| P/S | 4.8x |
| FCF yield | ~6.7% (on FY2025 FCF of S$128M) |
| Dividend yield | 0.2% (S$0.013/share FY2025 final) |
| 52-week range | S$1.15 – S$6.15 |
| Shares outstanding | 314.9M |
Note: Stock surged >90% in 2026 YTD as of late April; at S$6.06, valuation reflects substantial forward expectations.
| Metric | FY2021 | FY2022 | FY2023 | FY2024 | FY2025 | FY2026E (guidance) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue (SM)|565.5|870.5|481.3|380.4|399.3|460–510||Revenuegrowth(YoY)|—|+53.9|Grossprofit(SM) | 186.7 | 273.7 | 129.3 | 97.6 | 102.5 | N/A |
| Gross margin | 33.0% | 31.4% | 26.9% | 25.7% | 25.7% | ~25-28% est. |
| Operating income (SM)|109.9|160.7|43.9|16.0|26.0|N/A||Operatingmargin|19.4|Netincome(SM) | 92.0 | 126.8 | (1.2) | 11.4 | 17.0 | N/A |
| Net margin | 16.3% | 14.6% | neg | 3.0% | 4.3% | ~10% (mgmt target at scale) |
| EPS (basic, S$) | 0.31 | 0.41 | (0.00) | 0.04 | 0.05 | N/A |
FY2026E based on company revenue guidance of S$460-510M; margin expansion toward 10% net margin is a management target if utilization scales with revenue, not a formal forecast.
| Metric | FY2021 | FY2022 | FY2023 | FY2024 | FY2025 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Operating cash flow (SM)|55.0|(31.4)|40.2|(17.5)|136.0||Capex(SM) | (4.3) | (12.8) | (7.7) | (5.9) | (7.7) |
| Free cash flow (SM)|50.7|(44.2)|32.4|(23.4)|128.2||FCFmargin|9.0|Totaldebt(SM) | 81.3 | 143.3 | 126.4 | 94.4 | 16.4 |
| Cash (SM)|216.2|127.8|101.9|43.8|77.3||Netcash/(debt)(SM) | 136.6 | (11.5) | (20.2) | (50.6) | 61.0 |
| Net debt / EBITDA | — | 0.1x | 0.5x | 1.2x | net cash |
| ROIC | 51.7% | 33.5% | (1.4%) | 2.6% | 4.3% |
| Book value per share (S$) | 1.29 | 1.56 | 1.50 | 1.55 | 1.57 |
FY2025 balance sheet transformation: Free cash flow of S$128M reflected substantial inventory drawdown (S$65.7M). Total debt fell from S$94.4M to S16.4M.NetdebtpositionreversedfromS(50.6)M to net cash of S$61.0M. This clean balance sheet is a meaningful positive entering FY2026 ramp.
FY2026E balance sheet and cash flow not available. EBITDA (FY2024): S$42.4M; (FY2025): S$48.0M.
What is driving growth today: 1. New AI/HPC anchor customer ramp — an unidentified fabless AI/HPC company (widely speculated to be AMD or NVIDIA) is scaling volumes so rapidly it is expected to surpass Intel as AEM’s largest customer by end-2026. This is the primary FY2026 revenue catalyst. 2. Intel relationship sustained — Intel 18A process ramp drives new burn-in and SLT equipment orders. Intel awarded AEM its 2026 EPIC Supplier Award (highest tier recognition, given to 41 of thousands of suppliers globally). 3. Memory test expansion — AEM is in customer evaluation with a tier-1 memory manufacturer. Production units targeted for late FY2026; full ramp in FY2027. This would open an entirely new revenue stream. 4. Intel Foundry Services customer access — AEM and Intel Foundry announced an agreement to make AEM’s SLT/burn-in ecosystem available to Intel Foundry’s external customers. This is a new commercial channel beyond the direct Intel relationship. 5. Margin leverage — with fixed cost base largely set, revenue scaling toward S$500M should drive meaningful margin expansion. Management has flagged a ~10% net margin target at appropriate revenue scale (FY2022 peak showed 14.6% net margin at S$870M revenue).
R&D: AEM does not separately disclose R&D as % of revenue but invests across Singapore, Malaysia, Finland, France and US centers. CEO Kabbani holds ~40 patents; innovation focus areas are thermal management (PiXL ATC), cryogenic test, and advanced SLT for high-power AI chips.
Pending M&A: No disclosed activity.
| Risk | Likelihood | Existing Mitigants | Mgmt De-risk Plan | Can It Be Closed? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intel concentration | High — Intel still >50% of FY2025 revenue | 15+ year relationship; deep switching costs; Intel 18A ramp creating pull-through demand | New AI/HPC anchor customer on track to become #1 by end-2026; memory test expansion | Partially closable — new customer diversification reduces but cannot eliminate Intel’s structural influence near term. Closable on a 3-5 yr horizon if memory + new HPC ramp as guided. |
| Intel execution / 18A ramp failure | Medium — 18A yields running ahead of targets as of Q1 2026, but Intel’s foundry track record has a history of delays | Intel committed to 18A as company survival play; yields ahead of schedule | AEM diversification reduces dependence on 18A being the sole driver | Cannot be fully closed — any Intel execution stumble would reduce AEM test equipment orders. Partially mitigated if non-Intel customers cover the gap. |
| New customer (AI/HPC) ramp risk | Medium — customer is unidentified; ramp schedules can slip | Management has visibility into order pipeline; 2H2025 revenue exceeded guidance, suggesting ramp credibility | CEO Kabbani’s CTO background gives technical credibility to delivery | Partially closable on ramp success; remains binary until volumes are in production |
| Margin compression | Medium-High — gross margins at 25.7% far below FY2021-22 peak of 33%; mix shift to new customers and CM segment dilutes margins | Variable cost structure limits downside; clean balance sheet reduces interest burden | Revenue scale target of S$500M+ expected to drive operating leverage; no guidance on gross margin expansion target | Structural — margins depend on revenue mix and Intel pricing dynamics. Closable only if new customers carry higher margin than Intel average. |
| CEO transition and execution | Medium — Amy Leong replaced after one year; Kabbani is third CEO in two years | Board acted decisively; Kabbani is internal, knows the product and customer base | No stated succession plan disclosed | Key-person risk manageable given Kabbani’s deep technical background; risk is volatility in external relationships during transition. |
FY2025 full-year results (announced 25 Feb 2026): - Revenue S$399.3M (+5.0% YoY); second-half 2025 revenue S$209.1M, above guidance range of S$170-190M - Net profit S$17.0M (+48.2% YoY); profit before tax S$21.3M (+51.6%) - Gross margin 25.7%, flat YoY - Free cash flow S$128.2M (vs. -S$23.4M in FY2024) — driven by S$65.7M inventory drawdown - Balance sheet: net cash S$61M (vs. net debt S$50.6M at end-2024); borrowings S$3.1M (from S$72.8M) - Dividend resumed: S$0.013 per share final dividend (first since FY2022) - FY2026 guidance: revenue S$460-510M, growth driven by new AI/HPC customer ramp
Intel EPIC Supplier Award (2026): AEM received Intel’s highest-tier supplier award — granted to 41 of thousands of suppliers globally. Signals relationship health despite Intel’s own restructuring.
CEO change (July 2025): Amy Leong (appointed Jul 2024) resigned following board review; Samer Kabbani (CTO/President) stepped up as CEO.
Intel Foundry partnership expansion (May 2025): AEM and Intel Foundry announced broadened access to AEM’s SLT/burn-in ecosystem for Intel Foundry external customers.
Next earnings date: Q1 2026 business update expected ~May 2026; 1H2026 results expected ~August 2026.
Stock performance: AWX +90% YTD as of late April 2026; 52-week range S$1.15–S$6.15. Current price at S$6.06 represents near the 52-week high.
| Holder | Type | Who They Are | % of Outstanding | Filing Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Temasek Holdings (via Tembusu, Napier, Venezio subsidiaries) | Government-linked institutional | Singapore’s sovereign wealth / state investor; represented on board by Russell Tham | 12.46% (39.0M shares) | SGX substantial shareholder disclosure |
| Employees Provident Fund Board (EPF) | Institutional (government pension) | Malaysian national pension fund; long-term institutional anchor | 9.51% (29.8M shares) | SGX substantial shareholder disclosure |
| abrdn plc | Institutional (active asset manager) | Edinburgh-based global active fund manager (formerly Aberdeen Standard); ~US$500B AUM | 5.93% (18.6M shares) | SGX substantial shareholder disclosure |
| Novo Tellus Capital Partners (Loke Wai San / James Toh) | PE / Insider | Founding PE firm; acquired AEM in 2011, transformed strategic direction; Loke is Non-Executive Chairman | Not separately quantified post-2011; board representation signals material stake | Insider / SGX disclosures |
Note: Ownership data above is from Dec 2024 filings. Significant price appreciation in early 2026 (stock ~3x from Dec 2024 level) means relative ownership percentages and implied values have shifted materially.
Sources: AEM IR | FY2025 Results Announcement | DBS Research Mar 2026 | The Edge Singapore | NextInsight | Smart Investor SG | stockanalysis.com/quote/sgx/AWX | GlobeNewswire — SLT/Burn-In Ecosystem