STMicroelectronics N.V., together with its subsidiaries, designs, develops, manufactures, and sells semiconductor products in Europe, the Middle East, Africa, the Americas, and the Asia Pacific. The company operates through Analog products, MEMS and Sensors Group (AM&S); Power and Discrete products (P&D); Microcontrollers (MCU); and Digital ICs and RF Products (D&RF) segments. It offers industrial application-specific integrated circuits (ASICs) and application-specific standard products (ASSPs); power management solutions; custom analog ICs, wireless charging solutions; galvanic isolated gate and LED drivers; converters, transistors, intelligent power switches, clocks and timers, comparators, and current-sense amplifiers; micro-electro-mechanical systems (MEMS) sensors, including accelerometers, gyroscopes, magnetic sensors, pressure, temperature, presence detection, biosensors, microphones, machine learning, and edge AI processing smart sensors, as well as thermal and piezoelectric actuators; and optical sensing solutions. The company also provides silicon MOSFETs, SiC MOSFETs, IGBTs, thyristors, rectifiers, and power modules and bipolar transistors; microcontrollers, NFC solutions, memories, and automotive MCUs; and radio frequency (RF) communications and ASICs, driver assistance systems, and RF and infotainment products. It serves automotive, industrial, personal electronics and communications equipment, and computers and peripherals markets. STMicroelectronics N.V. was incorporated in 1987 and is headquartered in Schiphol, the Netherlands.
Dutch Market Performance
7D7 Days: -1.3%
3M3 Months: 11.8%
1Y1 Year: -2.9%
YTDYear to Date: 5.0%
Over the last 7 days, the market has dropped 1.3%, driven by a loss of 7.9% in the Information Technology sector. In contrast, the Consumer Discretionary sector has actually gained 4.2%. In the last 12 months the market has been flat overall. As for the next few years, earnings are expected to grow by 9.4% per annum. Market details ›
The tide is turning for UK & European markets. Index ETFs won’t cut it since sector spreads are massive. Picking the right companies matters now more than ever.