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MKS Instruments, Inc. (MKSI) Q2 2025 Earnings Call Transcript

MKS Instruments, Inc. (NASDAQ: MKSI) Q2 2025 Earnings Call dated Aug. 07, 2025

Corporate Participants:

Paretosh MisraVice President, Investor Relations

John T.C. LeePresident & Chief Executive Officer

Ramakumar MayampurathExecutive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Analysts:

Krish SankarAnalyst

Steve BargerAnalyst

Melissa WeathersAnalyst

Shane BrettAnalyst

Peter PengAnalyst

Joe QuatrochiAnalyst

Mark MillerAnalyst

Jim SchneiderAnalyst

David LiuAnalyst

Presentation:

Operator

Good day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the MKS Second Quarter 2025 Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] After the speaker’s presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions]

I would now like to hand the conference over to your first speaker today, Paretosh Misra, Vice President of Investor Relations. Please go ahead.

Paretosh MisraVice President, Investor Relations

Good morning, everyone. I’m Paretosh Misra, Vice President of Investor Relations, and I’m joined this morning by John Lee, President and Chief Executive Officer; and Ram Mayampurath, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer. Yesterday, after market close, we released our financial results for the second quarter of 2025, which are posted to our investor website at investor.mks.com.

As a reminder, various remarks about future expectations, plans, and prospects for MKS comprise forward-looking statements. Actual results may differ materially as a result of various important factors, including those discussed in yesterday’s press release, our most recent Annual report on Form 10K, and our most recent quarterly report on Form 10Q. These statements represent the company’s expectations only as of today and should not be relied upon as representing the company’s estimates or views as of any date subsequent to today, and the company disclaims any obligation to update these statements.

During the call, we will be discussing various non-GAAP financial measures. Unless otherwise noted, all income statement-related financial measures will be non-GAAP other than revenue and gross margin. Please refer to our press release and the presentation materials posted to the Investor Relations section of our website for information regarding our non-GAAP financial results and the reconciliations to our GAAP measures. Our investor website also provides a detailed breakout of revenues by end market and division.

Now I’ll turn the call over to John.

John T.C. LeePresident & Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Paretosh, and good morning, everyone. MKs delivered excellent results in the second quarter, highlighted by strong revenue performance and solid profitability. We executed well in delivering for our customers in a dynamic environment while continuing to manage our costs. And since our last earnings call, we made two additional prepayments on our term loan totaling $200 million, demonstrating our continued ability to use healthy free cash flow to delever the balance sheet.

Second quarter revenue of $973 million was above the high end of our guidance, driven by demand growth in our Semiconductor and Electronic & Packaging end markets. Net earnings per diluted share of $1.77 were at the high end of our guidance. Our gross margins, while in line with our guidance, reflect higher cost absorption due to tariffs. However, we held the line well and remain confident in our mitigation strategies. Ram will share more in his remarks.

I’ll turn now to Q2 performance in our three end markets, starting with our Semiconductor market. Revenue came in above the high end of our guidance. With customer inventories having largely normalized, we benefited from very strong NAND upgrade activity that drove continued sequential momentum in demand for our RF power solutions, and we saw sequential improvement in our vacuum products business as well.

We continue to gain traction with our remote plasma and gas delivery solutions for advanced logic applications. We also continue to execute well in our services business, which is seeing strong growth as our customers increasingly rely on our higher value solutions for reliability and uptime. Over the past couple of years, we have expanded our value-added services capabilities, and this, combined with our larger installed base, is resulting in higher levels of growth.

Services is a stable annuity like revenue stream that delivers margins above our corporate average. In the third quarter, we expect Semiconductor revenue to moderate on a sequential basis, mainly due to anticipated lumpiness and NAND upgrade activity. We believe it is still relatively early in the upgrade cycle, but customer indications suggest that the pace of conversions will fluctuate from quarter to quarter.

Our semi outlook represents a mid to high single-digit year-over-year growth rate for the quarter, putting us in a strong position to outperform WFE for the year based on available industry commentary and forecasts.

Electronic & Packaging revenue was well above the high end of our guidance. The better-than-expected result was driven by strength in both chemistry and chemistry equipment, which more than offset normalization of flexible PCB drilling equipment shipments following a strong Q1 as we noted on our last earnings call.

Our products and technologies play a key role in enabling the manufacturing of increasingly complex devices, and that is validated by the momentum we are seeing in advanced packaging and AI-related applications. This includes continued strong orders for our chemistry and chemistry equipment solutions for advanced multilayer boards and high-density interconnect boards related to AI applications, as well as several advanced packaging and AI-related chemistry designs.

The trends we’re seeing demonstrate our unique capabilities and how we collaborate with customers to solve their most complex problems. We expect revenue from our Electronic & Packaging market to be up on a sequential basis and up double digits on a year-over-year basis in Q3. This is particularly noteworthy in an environment where many analysts see fairly muted smartphone and PC growth, validating MKS’s position in a market where complex electronics applications like AI are driving growth.

We believe revenue from our chemistry solutions will increase sequentially, consistent with prior years. And we anticipate continued strength in our chemistry equipment business, where we’ve already seen four consecutive quarters of strong orders in what has historically been a lumpy business. We view equipment sales as a good leading indicator of future chemistry revenue, given our high attach rates.

Our specialty industrial market revenue was slightly above the midpoint of our guidance in Q2. Within this market, the life and health sciences and research and defense end markets showed modest sequential improvement and industrial remains steady. Notable orders in this business include dissolved gas delivery systems used in flat panel display manufacturing, highlighting how we are successfully leveraging our R&D for Semiconductor and Electronic & Packaging end markets into other areas of high technology. We also secured multiple design wins for applications in areas including research and defense, and life and health sciences. Looking ahead to Q3, we expect revenue in our specialty industrial market to be flattish.

Overall, we executed well and delivered strong financial results in Q2. Our integrated portfolio of power, vacuum, chemistries, and photonics remains well-positioned to capitalize on the advanced applications driving growth in our Semiconductor and Electronic & Packaging end markets.

I’d like to thank our global teams for their hard work in driving these results and our forward momentum in a dynamic market environment. An important pillar of our success is the culture we have built at MKS and I’m happy to see the broader recognition we have received. Recently, US News & World Report named us a best company to work for, and Time included us among America’s best mid-sized companies.

With that, let me turn it over to Ram to run through the financial results and third quarter guidance in more detail. Ram?

Ramakumar MayampurathExecutive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer

Thank you, John, and good morning, everyone. We delivered strong results in the second quarter, driven by healthy demand in our Semiconductor and Electronic & Packaging end markets, continued stability in our specialty industrial end market, and disciplined execution. Second quarter revenue was $973 million, up 4% sequentially and up 10% year over year. The result was about the high end of our guidance and reflected better-than-expected trends in key end markets.

Second quarter Semiconductor revenue was $432 million, up 5% sequentially and 17% year-over-year. This result exceeded the high end of our expectations. Sequential growth was driven by healthier demand in our vacuum solutions business, while year-over-year growth reflected continued demand in our broad portfolio of technologies enabling deposition and etch applications. Results also benefited from normalization of customer inventories and FX tailwinds.

Second quarter Electronic & Packaging revenue was $266 million, up 5% sequentially and above the high end of our guide. This was driven by growth in our chemistry and chemistry equipment business, partially offset by lower demand for flexible PCB drilling equipment, which, as we communicated on our last call, was lower after a strong growth in Q1. We believe a small portion of the sequential improvement in Electronic & Packaging revenue reflects tariff-related pull in demand. However, underlying demand trends remain favorable, especially as we gain traction in AI and more complex applications, as John noted.

On a year-over-year basis, sales were up 16% driven by growth in chemistry, chemistry equipment, and flexible PCB drilling equipment sales. Chemistry revenue was up 10% year-over-year, excluding the impact of FX and palladium pass-through, continuing the strong growth trend from last year. Chemistry is a large portion of our consumables and service revenue stream, which adds stability to our business and accounts for roughly 40% of our revenue.

In our Specialty Industrial business, second quarter revenue was $275 million, an increase of 2% sequentially and above the high end of our guidance midpoint. Revenue was down 5% on a year-over-year basis, primarily due to continued softness in the industrial market, partially offset by modest improvement in research and defense.

Moving down the P&L. Second quarter gross margin was 46.6%, just above the midpoint of our guidance. The sequential decline was largely driven by incremental costs related to tariffs. We estimate that incremental tariffs negatively impacted our gross margin by 115 basis points, which was slightly higher than expected, reflecting the volatility in the tariff landscape at the time of our projection in May.

While the situation remains dynamic, we have implemented a range of mitigation strategies over the past few months that we anticipate will be effective in limiting the tariff impact moving forward.

Second quarter operating expenses were $251 million, slightly favorable to our guidance, demonstrating our continued focus on managing our opex as we balance investing for growth with driving profitability. Second quarter operating income was $202 million with an operating margin of 20.8%. This reflects the strong revenue performance and opex discipline that I highlighted.

Second quarter adjusted EBITDA was $240 million and above the high end of our expectations with adjusted EBITDA margin of 24.7%. Net interest expenses was $46 million, slightly favorable to our guidance. The second quarter effective tax rate was 18.2% which is consistent with our guidance.

Second quarter net earnings were $119 million or $1.77 per diluted share, and at the high end of our guidance, reflecting our strong financial performance.

Free cash flow, a defining strength of our company, was up sequentially and year-over-year to $136 million, representing over 100% of our net earnings and 14% of our revenue. We invested $29 million in capital expenditures in the quarter. We continue to expect full-year capex to fall within 4% to 5% of our revenue.

We closed the quarter with approximately $1.3 billion of liquidity, comprised of cash and cash equivalent of $674 million and our undrawn revolving credit facility of $675 million.

We made a voluntary principal prepayment of $100 million in June and another $100 million prepayment earlier this month. We remain focused on executing our long-term capital allocation priorities of investing in organic growth opportunities while reducing our leverage through principal prepayment and working with our banking partners to reduce our interest expenses as market opportunities arise.

We exited the quarter with gross debt of $4.5 billion and a net leverage ratio of 4 times based on our trading 12-month adjusted EBITDA of $945 million. Our net leverage ratio improved slightly from the end of the prior quarter, reflecting our strong free cash flow and higher year-over-year adjusted EBITDA results.

Finally, during the second quarter, we paid a dividend of $0.22 per share or $15 million.

Let me now turn to our third quarter outlook. The guidance we are providing represents our best estimate based on the dynamic trade environment in which we are operating. We expect revenue of $960 million plus or minus $40 million. We believe our technology is integral to our customers’ success, and we are designed into many of the advanced applications our products support.

By end market, we expect Semiconductor revenue to be $405 million, plus or minus $15 million. Revenue from Electronics & Packaging market is expected to be $285 million, plus or minus $10 million, and revenue from our Specialty Industrial market is expected to be $270 million, plus or minus $15 million.

We are guiding gross margin of 46.5% plus or minus 100 basis points. Our estimated tariff impact is expected to be below 100 basis points, marking an improvement from Q2. As I noted earlier, we have largely implemented our short-term mitigation strategies based on the current trade environment. This environment has remained fluid, but we are committed to optimizing our performance and offsetting these costs.

We expect third-quarter operating expenses of $252 million, plus or minus $5 million, and adjusted EBITDA of $232 million, plus or minus $24 million. We expect a tax rate of approximately 18% in the third quarter. We expect our full-year tax rate to be at the lower end of the 18% to 20% range we provided previously.

The new US tax bill was passed subsequent to quarter-end. We are currently evaluating the impact of this legislation, which is not reflected in our guidance. We expect third-quarter net earnings per diluted share of $1.80, plus or minus $0.29.

We are pleased with our performance in the first half of the year. Despite trade-related challenges, our revenue earnings per share and free cash flow in the first half of the year are up significantly relative to the prior year.

In the second half, we will continue to work on capitalizing on opportunities as we collaborate closely with our customers, maintain a disciplined cost structure, and keep our focus on strong cash generation that will allow us to make the investments necessary to support our long term growth and to continue to lower our leverage.

With that, operator, please open the call for Q&A.

Questions and Answers:

Operator

Thank you. At this time, we will conduct a question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from Krish Sankar from TD Cowen. The floor is yours.

Krish Sankar

Yeah, hi. Thanks for taking my question. John, I had a couple of them. Number one is when I look past the September quarter, even if I try to flatline semis in December, it looks like you might probably grow 10% year over year, which is better than WFE. I’m just kind of curious how to think about semi revenue trends beyond September. And are there anything that we need to keep in mind? Kind of like what you mentioned, there’s some QOQ volatility with NAND, et cetera.

John T.C. Lee

Yeah. Good morning, Krish. Thanks for the question. I think the way to think about it is that the basic WFE portfolio that we have is growing year over year. We believe it’s growing faster than the market, so that’s good. And the way I think about it is that there’s a NAND upgrade overlay over that. You saw that result in a really strong Q2, but it can be lumpy, and certainly our customers are going to tell us when they need it.

But longer term, of course, the NAND upgrade cycle is great for MKS, given our long history in providing high aspect ratio dielectric etch — power dielectric edge. So I think that’s the way to think about it. Krish, kind of the base is pretty strong, growing year over year for us. And then the NAND upgrades can be lumpy and can make a quarter much higher or flatter.

Krish Sankar

Got it. Thanks for that, John. As a quick follow-up. On the E&P side, I think your PCB business, three months ago, you said they might be a little slightly weaker than June because of pull-ins of the tools in March, but then looks like June came in better. I’m wondering if some of the PCB strength you’re seeing has to do with more of downstream smartphone pull-ins, or how to think about the PCB business going forward.

John T.C. Lee

Yeah, I think we saw a little bit of pull-ins. It’s hard to tell, but it’s pretty minimal. Krish, I think Q2 was just strong because a lot of it was driven by AI, both the equipment and the chemistry. And our guidance in Q3 is higher, and as you know, typically Q3 is higher due to the consumer product cycle that we have in chemistry, and equipment — for chemistry remains very strong.

So I think there probably was a little bit of pull in EP. We don’t think there was any pull-in for semi, but Q3, we’re still guiding higher.

Krish Sankar

Thanks a lot, John. Thank you.

John T.C. Lee

Thanks, Krish.

Operator

Thank you for your question. Our next question comes from line of Steve Barger from KeyBanc Capital Markets. The floor is yours.

Steve Barger

Thanks. Good morning. Hey John, I’m going to stick with the chemistry equipment orders and some of the momentum there. Does it feel like that’s the beginning of a sustainable trend? And what are you hearing from substrate manufacturers in terms of capacity utilization and how they’re viewing growth, whether it’s from traditional products or AI-related products?

John T.C. Lee

Yeah, maybe I’ll take the last one first, Steve. The substrate makers, they are seeing high utilization rates, and we’re seeing that in our chemistry business, and it’s fundamentally driven by AI. So no mystery there really, Steve.

I think your question about equipment, traditionally, historically, it’s been a pretty lumpy business. We’ve seen now four straight quarters of sustained, relatively high bookings, and then the shipments I follow for chemistry equipment. And we believe most of that is related to demand for AI capacity, not necessarily packaged substrates, but in HDI and MLB that support that AI need.

And so having this really broad portfolio is really helpful for MKS. When EMP goes up, we benefit from that, especially given semi could be a little lumpy. Also having the broad portfolio of chemistry and chemistry equipment really helps us deliver solutions faster and more completely to our customers.

Steve Barger

Yeah, thanks for that. That’s Good detail. And I suspect you all have been engaged in strategic planning for next year, and certainly, with things feeling maybe a little bit better than last year, any high-level thoughts on where you want to point the company, what your operational priorities are, or anything in the portfolio that we should be thinking about?

John T.C. Lee

Well, I think some of the areas that we talked about that we’re focused on to outgrow in semi, for instance, world-class optics power for high aspect ratio edge, both in dielectric and conductor. Those remain, and then certainly our efforts in Electronics & Packaging, giving that a complete solution of chemistry, chemistry equipment, as well as laser equipment.

So I don’t think those priorities really change. Those have been well thought-out long-term priorities, and you’re starting to see some of that benefit as those markets come back.

Steve Barger

Great, thank you.

John T.C. Lee

Thanks, Steve.

Operator

Thank you for your question. Our next question comes from Melissa Weathers from Deutsche Bank. The floor is yours.

Melissa Weathers

Hi there. Thank you for taking my question. I wanted to go back to the NAND piece within the semis business and talk about that lumpiness. I totally understand we’re in the early innings on that upgrade cycle, but I also know there was a pretty large inventory overhang in that business. So could we see some inventory replenishment on that side of the business, or is it really just that customers are just pulling what they need and nothing more than that, so it should move pretty closely in line with demand?

John T.C. Lee

Yeah, I think I would characterize it as a latter, Melissa, just because inventory has burned as you — as we have said in the past. Also, lead times are much better now in general, getting the chips to make our power supplies normalize lead times. And so given that, then I think it’s probably going to be more tied together rather than a buildup of inventory. Of course, during a large ramp, very large ramp, then of course you could see some buildup of inventory. But right now it feels like because our lead times are relatively back to normal, we expect that we’d be shipping to demand.

Melissa Weathers

Got it, thank you. And then on the gross margin outlook, I don’t know if this is for John or for Ram, but I know the chemistries piece does typically carry higher gross margins, and the EMP business is supposed to grow pretty nicely. So, the moving pieces on that gross margin outlook, why wouldn’t you see more of an uplift just from that higher chemistries mix in the third quarter?

Ramakumar Mayampurath

Hi, Melissa, this is Ram. I’ll take that. So we did see — we do see seasonality pick up and better chemistry in Q3, and we are seeing the benefit of that margin. However, we are also seeing higher equipment sales, which, as you know, comes with a lower gross margin. But we are very happy to have equipment business because it commits to future chemistry orders with high margins. So that equipment orders will sort of offset some of the mixed advantage we get from chemistry.

Tariffs are a bit better, as I noted in Q3, compared to Q2, but then our volume is slightly lower than Q2. So we are guiding margins relatively at the same levels.

Melissa Weathers

Got it. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you for your question. Our next question comes from Shane Brett from Morgan Stanley. The floor is yours.

Shane Brett

Thank you for letting me ask a question. Firstly, on E&P, if I take your Q3 guide, you’re tracking about 20% year-over-year growth through Q3, which is well ahead of the GDP plus 300 basis points you spoke about at your 2022 Analyst Day. Just given the AI strength that you’re seeing, maybe in some revenue synergies with Atotech, have your growth expectations for this business materially changed since the Analyst Day? Thank you.

John T.C. Lee

Shane. Thanks for the question. I think it hasn’t really changed. We’re not updating our five-year model yet, but I would say that we are seeing that advantage driven by AI. I think we’re seeing a unique advantage for MKS, which is that we’re providing more complete solutions. So the chemistry revenue — organic chemistry revenue, we believe, is also outgrowing some of our competitors quarter on quarter, year over year.

But also in addition to that, we have equipment in which most of our competitors, not all, don’t have that, and that equipment we’re finding is incredibly crucial for our customers to be able to deliver the more complex HDI and MLB processes needed for AI. So we’re benefiting from both of those right now. And then — so we’re in a great position to hit our long-term models.

Shane Brett

Got it. Thank you. And as for my follow-up, so this might be a bit of a long shot question, but there has been talks that the big GPU customer may move from COAS to COPOs. But just including this inflection, how should sort of this inflection, or are there any other inflections that may sort of significantly impact your business for the E&P side going forward? Thank you.

John T.C. Lee

Yes. So I think what you’re talking about is, COAS moving potentially to CO Op. I guess I don’t know how we say this anymore, but that S used to be substrated — stands for substrate, and the P stands for PCB. So the idea of CO WOP is that you remove and you skip the substrate, as you know, going right to the PCB, which is the HDI and the MLB.

Traditionally, we have had a very strong position in HDI, not only in chemistry, but in equipment, as you know. And we’re seeing that as well, driven by AI. So if the industry were to skip the substrate or some part of the industry were to skip the substrate, we believe that’s actually a tailwind for us because of our historic position there and because our tools are uniquely enabling for that HDI layer.

And this goes back to the longer thesis that we had for the acquisition of Atotech. If that were to happen, the HDI boards would have to become much more sophisticated. Smaller lines, smaller features, many more layers. And the whole idea there is in order to do that, you need that, we believe, combination of chemistry knobs and equipment knobs to get there.

So the industry is very flexible. They will always look for the most economic solution. And this is certainly an area of interest for some companies.

Shane Brett

Got it. Thank you very much.

John T.C. Lee

Thanks, Shane. Thank you for your question. Our next question comes from Peter Peng from J.P. Morgan. The floor is yours.

Peter Peng

Hey guys, thanks for taking my question. Within your semiconductors, can you kind of provide some color on how the lithography and inspection applications are doing? I think last you updated us, you guys were kind of in this $300 million revenue run rate. Any color on that?

John T.C. Lee

Yeah, Peter, I would say that we’re not immune to cycles in world-class optics, either for lithography, metrology, inspection. So as you know, it’s been a little more muted than it has been in the past.

I would say this, that the cycles there are a little more muted. So I would say that $300 million range is still intact, and maybe it might be pushed out a little bit in terms of growing from that. But we’re really happy with the design wins. We continue to participate with our customers. We’re designed in, as you know, into the most advanced pieces of equipment in that market. And so when the market returns, we’ll enjoy that growth.

Peter Peng

Got it. And then my follow-up on, in your Electronics & Packaging, if I look at from an absolute dollar year over year, you guys have kind of been almost growing like $40 million to $50 million in terms of absolute year over year. And you mentioned that the smartphone and PC markets are really [Indecipherable]. Can I kind of correlate that this is all driven by AI applications? This $40 million, $50 million, or is there any other stuff in there that’s driving that kind of year-over-year growth?

John T.C. Lee

Yeah, Peter, I think that’s the right way to look at it. We’re happy with the year-over-year growth despite the fact that it is well known that certainly PCs and smartphones are still muted. And we saw that a year ago. And AI was a part of our growth, but not as important or not as big as you see it now. So PCs, smartphones remain muted, but we’re outgrowing due to the fact that more and more of our business is targeted to AI. As I mentioned before, we not only have the chemistry, but we have the equipment that’s enabling AI.

Peter Peng

Perfect. Thank you.

John T.C. Lee

Thanks, Peter.

Operator

Thank you for your question. [Operator Instructions] Our next question comes from Joe Quatrochi from Wells Fargo. The floor is yours.

Joe Quatrochi

Hey, thanks for taking the questions. Maybe just to follow up on that. I guess as I think about the expectations for chemistry growth in 3Q, it sounds like relatively seasonal. So do we assume that — to get to seasonal, it’s because you’re seeing outperformance of AI, and your kind of traditional applications would be otherwise below seasonal growth?

John T.C. Lee

I think the way to think about it, Joe, is that the seasonal growth is driven by consumer products. So that’s kind of the PC smartphone market. And so that really hasn’t changed too much. We said a little earlier to — earlier question, it might be a little pull-in, but we’re still seeing an uptick Q3 versus Q2. Then overlaid on top of all that is just the growth in AI. So the seasonality is still driven by those consumer products, Joe.

Joe Quatrochi

Okay, but I guess the rate of growth is, I mean, is it better than normal seasonality, given that there’s added AI applications that are seeing incremental demand?

John T.C. Lee

Well, I think that’s true. The base — the foundation is much higher because there’s AI additive to it. So yes, I think that’s the way to think about it. And as a reminder, as you know, Joe, because of seasonality, Q4 for the consumer product cycle for chemistry is usually one of the lower quarters as well.

Joe Quatrochi

Yeah, that’s helpful. And maybe as a follow-up in the semi business, just outside of the NAND lumpiness, I mean, are you seeing customers — we’ve heard customers kind of focusing more on inventory optimization versus buying incremental new components or keeping inventory flat, just given kind of the tariff dynamics and trying to avoid some of those. Are you seeing that in your business as well?

John T.C. Lee

Yeah, no, I think we saw some peers say that. We hadn’t really seen any of that. Joe, because our lead times are very low. We believe our customers are buying to need rather than trying to optimize inventory. So we didn’t see any of that.

Joe Quatrochi

Thank you.

John T.C. Lee

Thanks, Joe.

Operator

Thank you for your question. Our next question that’s from M. Miller. The floor is yours. The next question comes from Mark Miller. The floor is yours.

Mark Miller

Thank you for your question. Some of the laser firms are reporting that after many sluggish quarters that their business is improving. I’m just wondering what you’re seeing in your laser segment.

John T.C. Lee

Yeah, no, I think our laser segment, we continue to gain some design wins in some of the key markets. I think we talked about HBM dicing in the past, but in general, industrial lasers, that remains relatively muted. Mark, that has really no change from the several quarters before. I think some of it is just customers being a little more cautious as well as you can see from the PMIs around the globe that it’s still relatively balanced between growth and contraction.

So, no, we haven’t really seen a lot of pickup there for lasers for industrial applications.

Mark Miller

In terms of your key component suppliers, are you seeing any price increases from them due to tariffs?

John T.C. Lee

We partner with our suppliers as well as customers, especially with tariffs. And so, we’re trying to find ways that both of us can reduce the impact of tariffs. So no one is trying to make money on this, obviously. So I think it’s been a collaborative working relationship with our suppliers, and we haven’t really seen any impact of tariffs and price increases from our partners there.

Mark Miller

Thank you.

John T.C. Lee

Thanks, Mark.

Operator

Thank you for the question. Our next question comes from Jim Schneider from Goldman Sachs. The floor is yours.

Jim Schneider

Good morning. Thanks for taking my question. I was wondering if you could maybe focus on the topic of tariffs from a different angle for a moment. First of all, can you talk about whether you’ve baked any relative conservatism into the September quarter guidance based on some of the pull-in commentary you had earlier?

And secondly, as a result of President Trump’s announcement on semiconductor tariffs last night, I’m wondering if you see any kind of competitive advantage for you relative to your competitors as a result of that or kind of any other angle on that you can foresee at this point. Thank you.

John T.C. Lee

Jim, it’s John, I’ll take maybe the first one, and Ram can add. But the announcement last night was last night, and so it’s hard to tell where that will end up. Certainly, broad strokes, it’s complex. It may or may not impact our — the entire semiconductor ecosystem. So I would say it’s hard for us to tell right now, the puts and takes,

I would say in general, though, with respect to tariffs, as Ram said, we had more of an impact in Q2. We’re looking at less of an impact in Q3 as some of our mitigation actions start taking hold. But it is a very dynamic environment and things can change quickly, as you know. So I think it’s a little hard for us to determine if there’s any kind of competitive advantage or disadvantage with what was announced last night.

I don’t know, Ram, if you want to add anything to that.

Ramakumar Mayampurath

Yeah, I think you’re covered, John. I’ll just add that with regard to the guidance, there are two key variables here. One is the shifting rules itself and the second is the timing of our mitigation actions kicking in. So when we guide, we guide based on the best information we have at that point in time, based on the rules we know at that point. So I wouldn’t say there’s any conservatism built into the guide. It’s the best information we have at that point.

Jim Schneider

Thank you very much.

John T.C. Lee

Thanks, Jim.

Operator

Thank you for your question. [Operator Instructions] David Liu [Phonetic], the floor is yours. You may go.

David Liu

Hi. Thanks for taking my question. I was wondering if you can provide a little bit more color on your HDI and MLB for AI applications, maybe to the extent you have visibility, whether you see them going into merchant GPUs, hyperscaler versus neo clouds, custom ASICs. Yeah, any color you have there.

John T.C. Lee

I think, in general, it’s probably customers trying to get all that business. It’s a little difficult for us to tell if it’s going to particular parts of the AI food chain, but I think in general, many of our customers need that capacity. Many customers are trying to get into that market in a stronger sense, and so they’re building that capacity up. And that’s where we’re seeing the equipment orders, which have been, as we said, strong over the last several quarters.

So I think it’s a little hard for us to tell specifically what that substrate or that HDI or MLB is going towards. But I think in general, HDI type chips require a lot more layers than HDI, a lot more layers than MLB, and that’s why that is the application these customers are asking for.

David Liu

Okay, thanks. And then maybe follow up on opex. Are you guys still seeing the $250 million, $260 million range for fiscal 25? And then maybe 202d, where do you guys see you investing in your business? Thanks.

Ramakumar Mayampurath

Yeah, David, this is Ram. I would keep the $250 million, $260 million as the range for Q4. We are not guiding beyond Q3, but that’s a useful range to model. As you saw in Q2 and our guidance for Q3, we are at the lower end of that rate. So opex is something we take very seriously and try to manage while making the investments needed for the company’s long-term success. So it’s a balance between meeting profitability and investments to — for long-term success. But it’s something which we watch very carefully.

David Liu

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you for your question. Our final question comes from the line of Shane Brett from Morgan Stanley. You may go ahead.

Shane Brett

Thank you for letting me ask another question. I just have one. So in the June quarter, your Specialty Industrial business grew quarter over quarter for the first time since June quarter of ’23, if I’m correct. I know you’re guiding the September quarter down a touch sequentially, but are there any positive lead indicators in that business that you would call out? Thank you.

John T.C. Lee

Yeah, Shane, I think as you know, our Specialty Industrial segment is made up of several different buckets, and I would say in general industrials has been muted and remains muted. I would say that. Defense has been a bright spot, grown quite a bit, and life and health sciences remains relatively stable. So lots of puts and takes, but I think those are the ones I would point out.

Shane Brett

Got it. Thank you very much.

John T.C. Lee

Thanks, Shane.

Operator

Thank you for your question. This concludes the question-and-answer portion of our session. I would now like to turn it back to Paretosh Misra, Vice President of Investor Relations, for closing remarks. The floor is yours.

Paretosh Misra

Thank you all for joining us today and for your interest in MKS. Gerard, you may close the call, please.

Operator

[Operator Closing Remarks]

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