Screening Filters
Industry: Semiconductors & Semiconductor Equipment
- Purpose: Focus on companies that design, manufacture, or supply equipment and components used in semiconductors, including memory chips.
- Rationale: High‑performance memory (e.g., HBM, GDDR, high‑speed DRAM, advanced NAND) is a specialized subset of the semiconductor space. By restricting to the semiconductor industry, we concentrate on:
- Direct memory manufacturers (DRAM, NAND, HBM, GDDR, etc.)
- Chipmakers whose products rely heavily on high‑performance memory
- Equipment providers that supply the tools used to manufacture advanced memory chips.
Theme: Semiconductor Equipment & Materials
- Purpose: Capture the “picks and shovels” side of high‑performance memory—companies that sell the tools, process technology, and materials needed to build those memory products.
- Rationale: Your earlier wording (“picks and shovels”) suggests you’re not only interested in memory chip brands themselves, but also in the suppliers behind them. This theme targets:
- Lithography, deposition, etch, and test equipment vendors used in advanced memory fabs
- Materials suppliers (chemicals, wafers, gases, photoresists) needed for high‑performance memory production
This ensures the screen includes both end-product memory makers and enabling infrastructure players that benefit from high‑performance memory demand.
Market Cap: min = $10,000,000,000 (≥ $10B)
- Purpose: Focus on larger, established companies in the high‑performance memory ecosystem.
- Rationale: The most important players in high‑performance memory (and the equipment ecosystem that supports it) tend to be large‑cap firms because:
- Advanced memory R&D and fabs are capital‑intensive and dominated by big players.
- High‑bandwidth memory (HBM), cutting‑edge DRAM/NAND, and AI‑related memory typically come from large, global semiconductor firms or leading equipment vendors.
This filter reduces small, speculative names and highlights major, structurally important companies in the high‑performance memory value chain.
Price: min = $5
- Purpose: Avoid very low‑priced stocks that may be highly speculative, illiquid, or prone to extreme volatility.
- Rationale: High‑performance memory–related stocks under $5 are more likely to be distressed or micro‑cap names. Setting a minimum price:
- Screens out penny stocks that are often driven more by sentiment than fundamentals.
- Makes the list more suitable for most investors looking for relatively established semiconductor and equipment companies.
Monthly Average Dollar Volume: min = $150,000
- Purpose: Ensure a basic level of trading liquidity in the selected stocks.
- Rationale: Liquidity matters for entering and exiting positions at reasonable spreads. This filter:
- Excludes extremely illiquid names that might be hard to trade.
- Improves the practicality of the results, especially for investors who want to deploy meaningful capital in semiconductor or memory‑related names.
Why Results Match Your Request (“high‑performance memory” & “picks and shovels”)
- Direct relevance to memory: The semiconductor industry + semiconductor equipment & materials theme target companies whose core business either is memory (DRAM, NAND, HBM, etc.) or is essential to manufacturing such memory.
- “Picks and shovels” coverage: The equipment & materials theme overlays the broader semiconductor industry filter to catch the upstream suppliers that benefit from increased demand for high‑performance memory, rather than only the memory brands themselves.
- Focus on meaningful, tradable names: Market cap, price, and liquidity filters narrow the list to larger, more established and tradeable companies, which are more likely to be central players in the high‑performance memory ecosystem rather than small, peripheral, or purely speculative stocks.
This list is generated based on data from one or more third party data providers. It is provided for informational purposes only by Intellectia.AI, and is not investment advice or a recommendation. Intellectia does not make any warranty or guarantee relating to the accuracy, timeliness or completeness of any third-party information, and the provision of this information does not constitute a recommendation.