Eugene Technology designs and builds front-end semiconductor process equipment that it supplies to memory makers, with its main products being low-pressure chemical vapor deposition (LPCVD) and atomic layer deposition (ALD) tools that lay thin films on wafers, plus plasma-treatment equipment; because most of its revenue is for DRAM and NAND, its results move in step with the investment cycles of large customers such as Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix. The May 13, 2026 quarterly report confirmed an improvement in first-quarter results, and ahead of it came a April 29 decision to dispose of treasury shares (completed May 6), an April cash-and-stock dividend of ₩230 per share (a 12.3% payout ratio), and several shareholding-change filings. What stands out is that first-quarter earnings recovered faster than revenue, the balance sheet is effectively debt-free, and there is a multi-year demand backdrop from DRAM expansion by Samsung, SK Hynix, and Micron in 2026-2028, so the high P/E that reflects last year's depressed earnings falls to around or below peers on this year's basis; the caution is that revenue is tied to a handful of customers' investment and the +170% move over six months has already priced in much of that expectation.

At-a-glance assessment financial health · growth · profitability · valuation

Financial healthStable
  • Debt ratio, current ratio and interest burden all look healthy.
GrowthSlowing
  • Revenue rose 3.6% year over year, and the pace is slowing (3-year trend: rising).
  • Most recent quarter (Q1 2026) revenue was 22.5% higher than a year earlier.
ProfitabilityHealthy
  • ROE is 9.2% (controlling-interest basis). It is above the sector average.
  • Operating margin is 14.8%.
ValuationOvervalued
  • The forward P/E sits above the sector median, reflecting elevated expectations.

Ownership & governance As of 2024-12-31

Largest shareholder Uhm Pyung-yong 34.58% (individual)

Controlling bloc incl. related parties 36.24%

With the controlling bloc holding 36%, the ownership structure is stable.

🔎 In-depth analysis

🏢Business
  • Eugene Technology designs and builds front-end (pre-process) equipment used to make semiconductors and supplies it to memory manufacturers.
  • At its core are deposition tools that lay very thin films on wafers, and among them its mainstays are low-pressure chemical vapor deposition (LPCVD) that builds uniform films with heat and gas, atomic layer deposition (ALD) that stacks atoms one layer at a time, and plasma-treatment equipment.
  • Because most of its revenue comes from memory equipment for products such as DRAM and NAND, its results move in step with the investment cycles (capacity additions and process-conversion investment) of large memory makers like Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix.
  • In other words, its revenue comes not from finished semiconductors but from the machines that make them, and along with the competitiveness of the equipment it builds, when and how much customers invest sets the swing in quarterly results.
📈Price & chart
  • The latest close is ₩147,000 and the market cap is ₩3.4 trillion.
  • The price sits below its 20-day line (₩170,810) and below its 60-day line (₩147,193).
  • Trading below both its short- and medium-term moving averages, the trend is on the soft side.
  • RSI (an auxiliary gauge that scores the up-move versus down-move over the last 14 days on a 0-100 scale) is 45.8, a neutral level.
  • The one-month change is -5.1%, the three-month change is +22.4%, and the position relative to the 52-week high is -28.8%.
  • Relative strength against the KOSDAQ is 94 (1-99, a conversion of return versus the index over the past year weighted toward the recent period; higher means stronger than the market).
  • That places it in roughly the top 5% of all stocks by strength.
  • Over the past three months it led the index by 51.0%.
  • Chart readings are best viewed together with volume and disclosure dates.
📊Key metrics
  • On last year's (2025) reported results, the P/E ratio (how many times one year's net profit the price is) is 79.34x and the P/B (how many times net asset value the price is) is 7.33x.
  • The figures look high, but there is a reason the denominator shrank: 2025 was a weak year with net profit down 32.9% from the prior year, and dividing by earnings from a year that bottomed out makes the P/E look more expensive than it is.
  • For a stock whose earnings are turning back up, the picture is properly seen on this year's earnings (forward) rather than last year's, and indeed first-quarter 2026 net profit alone of ₩22.8 billion already exceeded half of last year's full-year net profit (₩42.5 billion).
  • Profitability supports this too, with an ROE (how much is earned in a year on shareholders' equity) of 9.2% and an operating margin of 14.8%.
  • The balance sheet is very solid: the debt ratio (debt relative to equity) is 1.3%, effectively debt-free, with a current ratio (cash-like assets versus debt due within a year) of 639% and an interest coverage ratio (how many times operating profit covers interest) of 35x, so near-term repayment and interest burdens are almost nil.
🚀Growth
  • Spread across several years, revenue is gentle, moving from ₩324.6 billion in 2021 to ₩350.3 billion in 2025, but earnings have swung widely with the semiconductor investment cycle (₩60.4 billion in 2021 to a ₩24.4 billion trough in 2023, a recovery to ₩63.3 billion in 2024, and a correction to ₩42.5 billion in 2025).
  • For such a cyclical company the direction of the recent quarter matters more than a single year's figure, and the first quarter of 2026 is decisive: revenue of ₩101.9 billion (+22.5%), operating profit of ₩18.8 billion (more than double the year-earlier ₩9.2 billion, +104.7%), and net profit of ₩22.8 billion (+180.9%), with the profit growth rate far outpacing revenue growth.
  • In the equipment sector, when customer investment revives and utilization rises, profit builds faster than revenue given the fixed-cost base laid down, and the first quarter shows exactly that.
  • On top of this, the company's results are seasonally largest in the second half and fourth quarter, and with memory makers continuing DRAM expansion and process-conversion investment, the profit trajectory for the remaining quarters could tilt above simply quadrupling the first quarter.
  • On this basis this year's earnings should rise sharply from last year, so the P/E that looked high on last year's basis roughly halves on this year's earnings.
  • That said, the data give no basis for calling this the end of the cycle, and confirming the continuity of the earnings improvement quarter by quarter is key.
📰Recent news & filings
  • Recent filings read along two lines: earnings recovery and capital policy.
  • The May 13, 2026 quarterly report officially confirmed the first-quarter improvement, and ahead of it the company decided on April 29 to dispose of treasury shares and completed the disposal on May 6.
  • Disposing of treasury shares means the company sells its own held shares back into the market, which increases the free float, but it is also a signal that the company chose to make active use of its held stock.
  • In April it decided on a cash-and-stock dividend of ₩230 per share (a dividend yield of about 0.1%, a payout ratio of 12.3%).
  • The dividend yield itself is low, so results and the equipment-order cycle, rather than dividends, are the main drivers of the stock.
  • In addition, several filings on executive and major-shareholder holdings and on 5%-plus large-holding changes followed, reflecting active changes in ownership.
🧭Bottom line
  • From an observational standpoint, the strengths come first: in the first quarter of 2026 earnings recovered faster than revenue, the balance sheet is solid and effectively debt-free, and there is a multi-year demand backdrop from the DRAM expansion Samsung, SK Hynix, and Micron are carrying out across 2026-2028.
  • Last year's reported P/E looks high because 2025 earnings were temporarily depressed, which is not something to read purely as a burden; on this year's earnings the stock sits around or below other front-end equipment companies.
  • On the other hand, the point to watch is the structural feature that most revenue is tied to the investment of a handful of memory customers.
  • If customer investment slows, the sector's characteristic amplitude works on the downside too, and it must be kept in mind that the stock has already priced in much of the expectation with a +170% move over six months and sits at its 52-week high.
  • In sum, this reads as a strong stock as long as the memory investment cycle continues and the first-quarter improvement carries through the year, and a weaker one if customer investment is delayed or reduced.

🔎 Valuation vs peers Fairly valued

Rather than a plain industry code (machinery and equipment), domestic front-end semiconductor equipment makers (deposition, etch, cleaning) that do the same actual business were directly selected for comparison.

PeerP/EP/BROE
Wonik IPS61.28x5.31x8.66%
PSK56.13x8.18x14.57%
TES49.32x7.17x14.53%
HPSP44.51x10.49x23.57%

(a) True peer positioning: domestic front-end semiconductor equipment stocks generally carry high P/E ratios on memory-investment expectations (Wonik IPS 96.7, PSK 78.0, Tes 72.5, HPSP 56.9x, all on last year's earnings). (b) Premium/discount: Eugene Technology's 111.5x P/E on last year's basis is nominally higher than these, but that stems from 2025 being an earnings trough. A stock at a clear earnings inflection should be viewed on this year's earnings rather than trailing, and on that basis the burden falls to less than half, placing it around or below the peers. (c) Limits of trailing figures and the forward basis: because 2025 net profit was weak at -32.9%, the trailing P/E looks overstated, but with first-quarter net profit already exceeding half of last year's full year and the second half seasonally strong, the valuation on this year's earnings is hard to call an excessive premium versus peers. Taken together it is at a 'fair' level, though the +170% move over six months, which has priced in much of the expectation, should be weighed in a balanced way.

₩147,000 +8.73%
Market cap $2.2B

Price history Close · MA20 · MA60

Close MA20MA60

The latest close is ₩147,000 and the market capitalization is ₩3.4 trillion. The price sits below its 20-day moving average (₩170,810) and below its 60-day moving average (₩147,193). It is under both its short- and medium-term moving averages, so the trend looks subdued. The RSI (a supplementary indicator that gauges the strength of gains versus losses over the past 14 days on a 0-100 scale) is 45.8, a neutral level. The one-month change is -5.1%, the three-month change is +22.4%, and the position relative to the 52-week high is -28.8%. Relative strength versus the KOSDAQ is 94 (on a 1-99 scale, converted from returns against the index over the past year with more weight on recent performance; higher means stronger than the market). It is stronger than roughly 95% of all stocks. Over the past three months it outpaced the index by 51.0%. Chart interpretation is best done alongside trading volume and the dates on which disclosures occur.

Relative performance stock vs index · start = 100

94Relative strength vs KOSDAQ1–99 · last 12 months’ return vs the index, recency-weighted · higher = stronger than the marketTop 5% strength

Excess return vs index · 3M +51.03% / 6M +93.22% / 12M +241.18%

StockKOSDAQ

Key metrics vs sector median

Valuation

P/E (trailing)79.34x
Forward P/E37.44x
P/B7.33x
Forward P/B6.94x
P/S9.61x
EPS₩1,853
BPS (book value/share)₩20,053
Dividend yield0.16%
DPS₩230

The P/E of 79.34x is above the sector median (14.44x). The P/B of 7.33x is above the sector median (1.44x). That said, this P/E is based on last year's (trailing) results. With recent quarterly earnings up sharply, the trailing P/E can look higher than it really is, so a precise read is best done on this year's expected (forward) earnings.

Enterprise value (EV)

Net debt-$31.8M
EV (enterprise value)$2.6B
EV/EBIT76.81x
EV/EBITDA57.48x
EV/Sales11.33x
FCF (free cash flow)$30.0M
FCF yield1.13%

EV = market cap + net debt. It reflects cash and debt, so it captures the real cost of the whole business that market cap alone misses; lower multiples are cheaper relative to earnings or sales.

Intrinsic value (DCF estimate)

Bear case₩52,300
Base case₩74,600
Bull case₩118,700

DCF (discounted cash flow) estimate — discount rate 10.1%, initial growth 10.0%→terminal 2.0%, 10-yr forecast, free-cash-flow basis, forward earnings power normalized 2.119x. A reference range that shifts materially with assumptions.

Profitability & financials

ROE9.24%
Operating margin14.75%
Net margin12.12%
Debt ratio126.35%
Payout ratio12.30%

Return on equity (ROE) is 9.2%, above the sector average (5.0%). The operating margin is 14.8%. The debt ratio is 126.4%, so the financial structure is moderate.

Growth FY2025 · annual report (consolidated)

Item202320242025YoY
Revenue$183.3M$224.1M$232.2M+3.63% ↓ slower
Operating profit$16.1M$40.5M$34.2M-15.54% ↓ slower
Net profit$16.2M$41.9M$28.1M-32.88% ↓ slower
5-year20212022202320242025
Revenue$215.1M$205.9M$183.3M$224.1M$232.2M
Operating profit$49.0M$35.6M$16.1M$40.5M$34.2M
Net profit$40.0M$25.1M$16.2M$41.9M$28.1M
Revenue CAGR4-yr avg 1.93%

Revenue rose 3.6% year over year (2023 ₩276.5 billion → 2024 ₩338.1 billion → 2025 ₩350.3 billion), and the three-year trend is 'rising'. That said, the pace of growth slowed from the prior year. Operating profit fell 15.5% year over year. The decline widened. Over the 5 years on record, revenue compound annual growth (CAGR) is 1.9%. The two-year revenue CAGR is 12.6%. In the most recent quarter (Q1 2026), revenue was 22.5% higher than the same period a year earlier.

Latest quarterly results Q1 2026 · vs year-ago

Revenue$67.5M
Revenue YoY+22.51%
Operating profit$12.5M
Op. profit YoY+104.65%
Net profit$15.1M
Net profit YoY+180.89%

Technical indicators

RSI (14)45.8
MA20₩170,810
MA60₩147,193
1-month-5.10%
3-month+22.40%
vs 52-wk high-28.81%

What stands out

  • The balance sheet is stable in terms of debt and liquidity.

Points to watch

  • Revenue rose 3.6% year over year, and the pace is slowing (3-year trend: rising).
  • The price is high versus peers, so expectations already appear priced in.

Recent news & events searched · sourced

Figure cross-check computed ↔ external

MetricComputedExternalStatusSource
Q1 2026 revenue₩101.9 billion₩101.9 billionConfirmedlink
Q1 2026 operating profit₩18.8 billion₩18.8 billionConfirmedlink
Dividend per share (DPS)₩230₩230Confirmedlink
2026 full-year net profit (estimate)approx. ₩90.0 billionUnverifiedlink

Recent filings

📖 Plain-language glossary — expand if you are new to this
P/E
How many times a year's net profit the price is worth (lower is cheaper relative to earnings). The P/E here is on trailing (last full-year) results; for companies whose earnings swing fast (memory chips and other cyclicals/high-growth), a forward P/E on this year's expected earnings is more accurate.
P/B
Price relative to net assets (equity). Around 1x means it trades near book value; below 1x means below book.
P/S
Price relative to a year's revenue — useful for growth companies with thin earnings.
Net debt / EV
Net debt = interest-bearing debt − cash. Negative means more cash than debt (net cash). EV (enterprise value) = market cap + net debt, closer to what it would cost to buy the whole business.
EV/EBIT · EV/EBITDA · EV/Sales
Enterprise value against operating profit (EBIT), EBITDA, or revenue. Unlike P/E these reflect debt and cash; lower is cheaper relative to earnings power or sales.
FCF / FCF yield
Free cash flow = operating cash − capex, the cash actually left over. FCF yield = FCF ÷ market cap; higher means more cash generated per unit of market value.
Intrinsic value (DCF)
Future free cash flow (or, for some capex-heavy but profitable names, forecast earnings) discounted to today to estimate per-share value. Because it shifts a lot with the discount-rate and growth assumptions, it is shown as a bear/base/bull range, and the basis and assumptions are disclosed in one line beneath it.
ROE
How much profit the company earns in a year on its equity (%). Higher means better returns on capital.
EPS / BPS
Earnings per share / net assets (book value) per share.
Operating / net margin
Profit left from the core business / final profit after tax and interest, per unit of revenue.
Debt ratio
Debt relative to equity (%). Higher means more reliance on borrowing (norms vary by sector).
Current ratio
Assets convertible to cash within a year against debt due within a year. Above 100% leaves some short-term headroom.
Interest coverage
How many times operating profit covers the interest owed. Below 1x means operating profit alone struggles to cover interest.
Dividend yield / payout ratio
The year's dividend as a % of today's price / the share of earnings paid out as dividends.
Revenue CAGR
Multi-year growth expressed as a single yearly average (compound annual growth rate).
RSI (short-term signal)
Whether recent price action is overheated or beaten down. Above 70 is overbought, below 30 oversold.
MA20 / MA60 (moving averages)
The 20- and 60-day average price. Price above them signals a firmer short-term trend.
vs 52-week high
How far below the past year's peak the price sits now (%).

All figures are for reference only; how they read varies by sector and over time.

Sources: Korea FSC market-price API (data.go.kr), OpenDART, KRX/KIND — public data only.

Bong Stocks presents public-data-based information for reference only. It is not investment advice and contains no target prices, ratings, or buy/sell recommendations. Verify independently before making any decision.