NEW YORK, May 30, 2026, 16:04 EDT
- Lam Research ended Friday at $318.18, just 0.06% higher. The stock picked up around 4.2% in the holiday-shortened week after finishing at $305.35 on May 22.
- S&P 500 climbed 1.4% this week and the Nasdaq Composite added 2.4%, both closing up on Friday.
- Lam’s CFO Doug Bettinger is set to speak Tuesday at Bank of America’s Global Technology Conference, giving investors a new look at the company.
Lam Research shares wrapped up the week close to highs for May. Investors kept buying up semiconductor equipment names with AI exposure, despite some late-week volatility.
U.S. markets stayed closed Saturday and didn’t open Monday for Memorial Day, trimming trading to four days. Lam climbed early on Tuesday, pulled back midweek, and settled at $318.18 Friday, up 18 cents for the session, historical price data shows.
Lam’s business is making wafer-fabrication tools, the gear chipmakers use on silicon wafers to make chips. Its stock has turned into one way for investors to play the factory part of the AI boom, rather than just the chip designers that usually get the headlines.
S&P 500 notched a seventh day up on Friday and finished with a ninth straight weekly win. Nasdaq Composite picked up 0.2% for the session, closing at 26,972.62, according to the Associated Press.
Lam’s main U.S. equipment rivals finished mixed on Friday. Applied Materials traded slightly higher at $450.06. KLA eased to $1,921.71. The moves show traders weren’t just buying every chip-tool stock.
Lam’s recent earnings report set up the bull view. The company posted March-quarter revenue of $5.84 billion, with non-GAAP earnings coming in at $1.47 per share. For the June quarter, Lam guided revenue to $6.60 billion, give or take $400 million. CEO Tim Archer said, “AI-driven demand reshapes the semiconductor industry.” Lam Research Investor Relations
Lam is putting more sensing and AI tech into its chipmaking gear, Archer told Reuters this month. “The more data you collect from the machine itself, or from the wafer, the better your models can be,” he said. Reuters
That’s what is behind the share move: customers are looking for more output with less waste from costly chip plants. Basically, Lam’s tools let chipmakers get more usable chips out of every wafer.
Lam doesn’t have much new earnings news this week, but there is something on the calendar. Bettinger is set to speak June 2 at 9:20 a.m. Pacific. Investors will be watching for any signals on spending from customers, memory-chip demand, and how margins are looking.
Traders are bracing for macro data. The U.S. May jobs report drops June 5, with ISM manufacturing and services surveys on deck the same week. These could shift rate bets. Chip stocks, especially the fast growers, tend to sink when yields jump.
LRCX doesn’t look cheap anymore by sentiment. WSJ has the average analyst target at $319.07, median at $315, not far from Friday’s $318.18 close. That narrows the margin if orders, AI spending or memory demand drop.
Lam faces its own set of risks. The chipmaker pulled in 34% of March-quarter revenue from China and says that trade policy, export controls, tariffs, and geopolitical troubles could weigh on sales or profits.
Lam is getting a vote from the market for its spot in this phase of the chip cycle. Next up is whether management can hold the line on that story without stoking expectations that are already heated.