Here's something you don't see every day: the U.S. government is about to become a venture capitalist in semiconductor lasers. On Monday, the Trump administration announced it signed a preliminary, nonbinding agreement to take an equity stake in xLight, a Palo Alto startup that thinks it can solve one of the biggest bottlenecks in advanced chipmaking.
The EUV Problem Nobody Talks About
If you want to make cutting-edge chips, you need an EUV lithography machine. And if you want an EUV lithography machine, you have exactly one option: ASML Holdings NV (ASML). The Dutch company has a complete monopoly on these extraordinarily complex tools, which use extreme ultraviolet light to etch microscopic patterns onto silicon wafers.
The most technically challenging part of these machines? The laser. xLight believes it has a better approach. Instead of conventional laser technology, the company is developing a free-electron laser using particle-accelerator technology. Working with U.S. national labs, xLight aims to build a prototype that could integrate with ASML's systems or enable future competitors to emerge.
According to the Commerce Department's press release, the government plans to invest up to $150 million to support the construction, expansion, and testing of this prototype. In exchange, the department would receive $150 million in equity in xLight.
Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick framed the investment as supporting "technology that can fundamentally rewrite the limits of chipmaking."
Pat Gelsinger's Next Act
xLight was founded in 2021, but it made headlines in March when it brought Intel Corp (INTC) former CEO Pat Gelsinger onto its leadership team as executive chairman. Gelsinger, who spent decades at Intel before his recent departure, clearly sees the strategic importance of this technology.
In an interview with the Wall Street Journal, Gelsinger said the company's laser technology could increase wafer-processing efficiency by 30% to 40% while sharply reducing energy demands. If those numbers hold up, it would represent a meaningful shift in chip economics at a time when power consumption at advanced fabs has become a serious constraint.
A Broader Government Push Into Strategic Industries
This investment marks the first major action by the CHIPS Research and Development Office since the Trump administration took control of the $7.4 billion institute originally established under President Joe Biden.
But it's hardly the administration's first foray into direct equity investments. Last month, the New York Times reported that the Trump administration has invested more than $10 billion in taxpayer funds to acquire minority stakes in at least nine private companies across sectors including steel, minerals, nuclear energy, and semiconductors.
The government has also taken direct ownership stakes in five major publicly traded companies as part of what officials describe as a national security push to secure domestic supply chains. The portfolio now includes 10% of Intel (INTC), 15% of MP Materials (MP), 10% of Lithium Americas Corp. (LAC), 10% of Trilogy Metals Inc. (TMQ), and a "golden share" in U.S. Steel Corporation.
The xLight deal fits into a pattern. In October, Substrate, another U.S. semiconductor startup backed by Peter Thiel, raised $100 million to build domestic fabs and explore its own EUV tool development. Meanwhile, Commerce Department officials have reportedly been pressing global manufacturers, including Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSM), to expand their U.S. operations.
The message is clear: the administration wants more semiconductor manufacturing capacity on American soil, and it's willing to write checks and take equity positions to make it happen.
Market Reaction
On Monday, ASML (ASML) closed at $1,087.99, up 2.64% for the day. Shares edged slightly higher to $1,088.50 in after-hours trading. The company continues to show solid short, medium, and long-term growth prospects despite the potential for future U.S. competition in its core technology.