20-F

ASML HOLDING NV (ASML)

20-F 2024-02-14 For: 2023-12-31
View Original
Added on April 02, 2026

United States

Securities and Exchange Commission

Washington, D.C. 20549

Form 20-F

ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d)

OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934

for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2023

Commission file number 001-33463

ASML HOLDING NV

(Exact Name of Registrant as Specified in Its Charter)

The Netherlands

(Jurisdiction of incorporation or organization)

De Run 6501, 5504 DR Veldhoven, The Netherlands

(Address of principal executive offices)

Skip Miller

Telephone: +1 480 235 0934 E-mail: skip.miller@asml.com

2650 W Geronimo Place, Chandler, AZ 85224, USA

(Name, Telephone, E-mail, and / or Facsimile number and Address of Company Contact Person)

Securities registered or to be registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act:

Title of each class            Trading Symbol              Name of each exchange on which registered

Ordinary Shares  ASML The Nasdaq Stock Market LLC

(nominal value €0.09 per share)

Securities registered or to be registered pursuant to Section 12(g) of the Act:

None

Securities for which there is a reporting obligation pursuant to Section 15(d) of the Act:

None

Indicate the number of outstanding shares of each of the issuer’s classes of

capital or common stock as of the close of the period covered by the annual report.

393,421,721 Ordinary Shares

(nominal value €0.09 per share)

Indicate by check mark if the registrant is a well-known seasoned issuer, as defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act.

Yes ☒ No ☐

If this report is an annual or transition report, indicate by check mark if the registrant

is not required to file reports pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.

Yes ☐ No ☒

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant: (1) has filed all reports required to be filed by Section 13 or 15(d) of the

Securities Exchange Act of 1934 during the preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant

was required to file such reports), and (2) has been subject to such filing requirements for the past 90 days.

Yes ☒ No ☐

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has submitted electronically

every Interactive Data File required to be submitted pursuant to Rule 405 of Regulation S-T (§232.405 of this chapter) during the

preceding 12 months (or for such shorter period that the registrant was required to submit such files).

Yes ☒ No ☐

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, a non-accelerated filer, or an emerging growth company.

See definition of "large accelerated filer,”  “accelerated filer" and “emerging growth company" in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act.:

Large accelerated filer ☒ Accelerated filer ☐ Non-accelerated filer ☐ Emerging growth company ☐

If an emerging growth company that prepares its financial statements in accordance with U.S. GAAP, indicate by check mark if the registrant has elected

not to use the extended transition period for complying with any new or revised financial accounting standards provided pursuant to Section 13(a) of the

Exchange Act. ☐

† The term “new or revised financial accounting standard” refers to any update issued by the Financial Accounting Standards Board to its Accounting

Standards Codification after April 5, 2012.

Indicate by check mark whether the registrant has filed a report on and attestation to its management’s assessment of the effectiveness of its internal

control over financial reporting under Section 404(b) of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act (15 U.S.C. 7262(b)) by the registered public accounting firm that prepared

or issued its audit report.

Yes ☒ No ☐

If securities are registered pursuant to Section 12 (b) of the Act, indicate by check mark whether the financial statements of the registrant included in the

filing reflect the correction of an error to previously issued financial statements. ☐

Indicate by check mark whether any of those error corrections are restatements that required a recovery analysis of incentive- based compensation

received by any of the registrant’s executive officers during the relevant recovery period pursuant to §240.10D-1(b). ☐

Indicate by check mark which basis of accounting the registrant has used to prepare

the financial statements included in this filing:

U.S. GAAP ☒ International Financial Reporting Standards as issued by the

International Accounting Standards Board ☐ Other ☐

If "Other" has been checked in response to the previous question, indicate by check mark

which financial statement item the registrant has elected to follow.

Item 17 ☐ Item 18 ☐

If this is an annual report, indicate by check mark whether the registrant is a

shell company (as defined in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act)

Yes ☐ No ☒

Name and address of person authorized to receive notices and communications from the Securities and Exchange Commission:

James A. McDonald

Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom (UK) LLP

22 Bishopsgate, London, England EC2N 4BQ

New_ThemedExplained_Background_190124.jpg

We are over 42,400 individuals – thinkers, innovators, problem<br><br>solvers, planners, movers and makers.
As a team, working together with our partners and customers, we<br><br>help feed the world’s ever-growing demand for faster and more<br><br>efficient microchips.
We create impact by pushing technology to new<br><br>limits, unlocking the potential of society and enabling people<br><br>to tackle some of humanity’s biggest challenges.
Together we create impact. Delivering for<br><br>our customers Embracing<br><br>change,<br><br>driving innovation A sustainability<br><br>mindset Making a<br><br>difference Helping our<br><br>teams thrive Working<br><br>together,<br><br>growing together Impact through<br><br>collaboration
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See page 18 > See page 35 > See page 89 > See page 105 > See page 124 > See page 135 > See page 144 >
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SMALL PATTERNS. BIG IMPACT. STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 2
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New_Contents_Image1_040124.jpg

Together we create impact
Throughout this year's report we feature<br><br>ASML colleagues and look at the impact<br><br>they are having on ASML and society.
18 Delivering for our customers
35 Embracing change, driving<br><br>innovation
89 A sustainability mindset
105 Making a difference
124 Helping our teams thrive
135 Working together, growing<br><br>together
144 Impact through collaboration
View our Highlights online >
Our 2023 online report highlights key information<br><br>from this pdf with additional links to relevant<br><br>information on our corporate website. 4 Forward-looking statements
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5 Message from the CEO
8 At a glance
11 Our unique offer
13 Our products and services
20 Q&A with the CTO
22 Innovation
24 Marketplace
30 Our business strategy
32 Our business model
40 Q&A with the CFO
Financial performance
43 Performance KPIs
48 Long-term growth opportunities Risk
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50 How we manage risk
55 Risk factors
68 Q&A with the CBO
Environmental, social and<br><br>governance
71 Our material ESG sustainability topics
74 Contributing to the UN Sustainable<br><br>Development Goals
Environmental
76 Energy efficiency and climate action
91 Circular economy
103 Water management
Social
107 Attractive workplace for all
126 Responsible supply chain
137 Innovation ecosystem
146 Valued partner in our communities
Governance
156 ESG integrated governance
174 Transparent reporting Corporate Governance
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180 Board of Management
182 Supervisory Board
185 Other Board-related matters
188 AGM and share capital
193 Financial reporting and audit
195 Compliance with Corporate<br><br>Governance requirements
Supervisory Board Report
196 Message from the Chair of the<br><br>Supervisory Board
198 Supervisory Board focus in 2023
202 Meetings and attendance
206 Supervisory Board committees
216 Financial statements and Profit Allocation
Remuneration Report
217 Message from the Chair of the<br><br>Remuneration Committee
219 Remuneration at a glance
221 Remuneration Committee
224 Board of Management remuneration
240 Supervisory Board remuneration Consolidated Financial Statements
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246 Report of Independent Registered<br><br>Public Accounting Firm
248 Consolidated Statements of Operations
249 Consolidated Statements of<br><br>Comprehensive Income
250 Consolidated Balance Sheets
251 Consolidated Statements of<br><br>Shareholders’ Equity
253 Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows
254 Notes to the Consolidated<br><br>Financial Statements
Non-financial Statements
298 Assurance Report of the<br><br>Independent Auditor
300 About the non-financial information
307 Non-financial indicators
327 Other appendices
347 Definitions
355 Exhibit index
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 CONTENTS STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 3
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Contents
STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS & NON-FINANCIALS
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A definition or explanation of abbreviations, technical<br><br>terms and other terms used throughout this Annual<br><br>Report can be found in the Definitions section. In<br><br>some cases, numbers have been rounded for<br><br>readers’ convenience.<br><br>This report comprises regulated information within<br><br>the meaning of articles 1:1 and 5:25c of the Dutch<br><br>Financial Markets Supervision Act (Wet op het<br><br>Financieel Toezicht). In this report the name ‘ASML’ is sometimes used for<br><br>convenience in contexts where reference is made to<br><br>ASML Holding NV and/or any of its subsidiaries, as<br><br>the context may require.<br><br>References to our website and/or video presentations<br><br>in this Annual Report are for reference only and none<br><br>nor any portion thereof are incorporated by reference<br><br>in this report.<br><br>© 2024, ASML Holding NV All Rights Reserved.
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This Annual Report contains statements

relating to our business, expected results,

business and industry trends and other

matters that are “forward-looking” within the

meaning of the Private Securities Litigation

Reform Act of 1995.You can generally

identify these statements by the use of words

like “may”, “will”, “opportunity”, “potential”,

“could”, “should”, “project”, “believe”,

“anticipate”, “expect”, “plan”, “estimate”,

“forecast”, “model”, “aim”, “seek”, “intend”,

“continue”, “target”, “future”, “progress”,

“goal” and variations of these words or

comparable words. They appear in a number

of places throughout this Annual Report and

include statements with respect to expected

trends, plans, expectations, strategies,

priorities, goals, outlook, expected financial

results for Q1 2024, including expected

sales, gross margin, R&D costs and SG&A

costs, expected results for full year 2024,

including expectations with respect to

revenue, gross margin and estimated

annualized effective tax rate, expectations

with respect to sales by market segment and

EUV, non-EUV and IBM sales and expected

drivers thereof, and other full year 2024

expectations and outlook, expectations with

respect to revenue growth in 2025 and other

statements with respect to outlook for 2024

and beyond and expected drivers thereof

and other statements under “Long-term

growth opportunities”, bookings, backlog,

expected capital expenditures, R&D

spending targets, statements made at our

2022 Investor Day, including revenue and

gross margin opportunity, model and

potential for 2025 and 2030, expected

business and industry trends and outlook,

including expected semiconductor industry

trends and trends in markets served by our

customers, business environment trends,

including expected demand, utilization,

inventory levels, expected recovery in the

semiconductor industry and expected timing

thereof, expected growth in semiconductor

end markets and market opportunity for

2025 and 2030 and key drivers and global

trends expected to fuel semiconductor

growth in the longer term, plans to increase

global semiconductor capacity and expected

growth in semiconductor ecosystem,

statements with respect to Moore’s Law and

continuation of shrink, expected trends in

customer demand, export control policy and

regulations and expected impact on us, our

plans to increase capacity, and expected or

planned production capacity, expected

timing of shipments, assumptions and

expectations with respect to fast shipments,

expectations with respect to systems being

operational in customer factories and high-

volume production of High NA systems,

product roadmaps including EUV goals and

roadmaps, customer roadmaps, expected

productivity and other attributes and benefits

of our tools, expected growth opportunities

in holistic lithography, our ESG and

sustainability strategy, plans, commitments

and targets, including emissions and waste

reduction commitments and targets,

recycling and refurbishment initiatives,

energy-saving strategies and targets,

including plans and targets to achieve net

zero carbon emissions and target dates to

achieve net zero emissions, potential for

semiconductors to reduce CO2 emissions,

plan for our systems to use less energy and

our energy savings plans, diversity and other

ESG targets and commitments, cash return

and dividend policy and statements about

our share buyback program and our

proposed dividend for 2023, and other non-

historical statements. These forward-looking

statements are not historical facts, but rather

are based on current expectations,

estimates, assumptions and projections

about business and future financial results

and readers should not place undue reliance

on them. Forward-looking statements do not

guarantee future performance, and actual

results may differ materially from projected

results as a result of certain risks and

uncertainties. These risks and uncertainties

include, without limitation, those described

under the section entitled “How we manage

risk – Risk factors”. These forward-looking

statements are made only as of the date of

this Annual Report. We do not undertake to

update or revise the forward-looking

statements, whether as a result of new

information, future events or otherwise.

New_ForwardLooking_Image.jpg

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 4
Special note regarding forward-looking statements

New_MessageCEO_IntroPage_240124.jpg

Dear Stakeholder,

In last year’s message, I wrote that I

expected 2023 to yet again see us break

records – and ASML's performance has fully

justified that confidence. We have grown

sales by 30% to €27.6 billion and lifted our

gross margin to 51.3%. We returned

€3.3 billion to shareholders through a

combination of dividends and share

buybacks. At the end of 2023, we finished

with a backlog of €39.0 billion and we

anticipate that with our sustained focus on

technology innovation, we will continue to

break new ground – not only in terms of

technological development, but also in how

we manage the environmental impact of our

products and services.

This stellar performance has been achieved

against a backdrop of what turned out to be

a real downturn in the semiconductor

industry instead of the mild and short-term

correction that many had forecast. In

addition, we had to manage uncertainties

created by geopolitical challenges including

the US and Dutch governments' export

control regulations, and global macro

concerns around inflation, rising interest rates

and lower GDP growth in certain economies.

There have also been other uncertainties at

play, driven by the ongoing war in Ukraine as

well as the more recent conflict in the Middle

East. These have inevitably dented

confidence and reduced investment by our

customers.

In 2023, demand for our DUV systems

continued to be strong, particularly in China.

During the previous two years, our Chinese

customers had received significantly fewer

systems than they had ordered, due to

global demand for our systems exceeding

supply. However, the shifts in demand timing

from other customers that we experienced in

2023 meant that we had the opportunity to

backfill these orders for mature and mid-

critical nodes to China, while of course

complying with export regulations.

Executing our business strategy

Our strategic innovation roadmap has

continued to guide us, and, as you can read

in the Q&A with our Chief Technology Officer

on page 20,we have made good progress on

further enhancements to our EUV, DUV and

metrology and inspection systems. Our

holistic approach to lithography provides

customers with support and solutions at

every stage of the chipmaking process, from

early design and development to high-

volume production. To mention a highlight: In

2023, we shipped the first modules of the

first High NA EUV EXE:5000 system.

Two further elements of our strategic

progress have been particularly pleasing.

Firstly, we strengthened the resilience of our

supply chain, which had been under

immense pressure, with a significant number

of suppliers experiencing challenges to meet

our increasing expectations. During 2023, we

reshaped our sourcing and procurement

organization under the leadership of Wayne

Allan, a new member of the Board of

Management (BoM). This team is now

working with suppliers to help optimize our

partnerships, so they have the flexibility and

capability to deliver the products and

services we need.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 MESSAGE FROM THE CEO STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 5
Managing the cycle, preparing for greater growth in years to come
Despite macroeconomic and geopolitical challenges, ASML has again delivered strong performance. Now, as we see signs<br><br>of the industry coming out of its cyclical downturn, we are laying plans for further significant growth.
Our holistic approach to lithography<br><br>provides customers with support and<br><br>solutions at every stage of the chipmaking<br><br>process.”
---
Peter Wennink
President, Chief Executive Officer and Chair of the Board of Management

New_MessageCEO_Page2_Background_040124.jpg

The second area is around customer trust.

Trust is the foundation for our customer

relationships – it means always being reliable,

working at the highest possible level of

efficiency, being transparent about what we are

doing and fairly sharing the risks and rewards.

And while customer trust in general was at a

high level in 2023, we – as always – recognize

that we can do even better. So over the last 12

months we have developed plans for

fundamental reorganization of our customer-

facing roles and responsibilities to prepare for

future growth, and this was implemented from

January 2024.

We expect that the reorganization will help us

cement greater customer trust, which will be

essential in ensuring that we and our customers

reap the rewards of the upturn that we expect

in 2025 and 2026.

ESG sustainability at the heart of our

company

Developed in 2022, our ESG sustainability

strategy took shape in 2023. It is now being

executed across the business, and we have

taken important steps in each of the E

(Environmental), S (Social) and G (Governance)

elements.

The overarching aim of our ESG sustainability

strategy is simple: As we grow our company,

we want to increase our positive impact at the

same time as minimizing our negative impacts

on the environment and people, while doing

business in a responsible way.

The very nature of what we do means we are

already making a contribution to overcoming

the challenges that our world is facing. Without

semiconductors, the changes that society

needs to implement – whether to do with the

energy transition, healthcare, electrification, AI or

many other areas – will not happen.

Our role is to make sure that our customers can

continue to deliver the innovation that is already

transforming the world, and with a reduced CO2

footprint per chip. In our own facilities, we are

reducing energy consumption and increasingly

using renewable energy. Together with our

suppliers and other upstream value chain

partners, we are working to jointly reduce our

carbon footprint in our supply chain. In

addition, we are taking steps to increase the

energy efficiency of our systems at our

customers’ sites – reducing waste intensity,

increasing reuse and repair, supporting our

people and their communities, and promoting

transparency and accountability through good

governance. There is work to do in all those

areas – but we have made excellent progress

and we are committed to playing our full part in

creating a more responsible and sustainable

society. You can read more details in the ESG

sustainability sections of this report.

Our stakeholder model

ASML operates on a stakeholder model.

With every decision we take, the Board of

Management and I, as CEO, aim to balance

the concerns and needs of our five different

stakeholders: Customers, suppliers and

partners, our people, our shareholders and

wider society – for example, the communities

where we operate.

Over the last year, we have used a significant

part of our operational cash flow to support our

customers, extending payment terms to help

them make investments despite their negative

cash flows. This was crucial sustaining their

businesses through difficult times while ensuring

that they have the resources in place to meet

future demand.

Similarly, we encouraged our suppliers to

maintain their investment ambitions through

the downturn, using opportunities such as

our Suppliers’ Day to explain how we

expected our business to accelerate from

2025 onward. It is vital that we retain the

trust of our suppliers.

To retain the trust of our shareholders, our

key focus is to be as transparent as possible

with them about everything to do with ASML

– on export controls, on industry cyclicality,

on how we are going to use our operational

cash flow, on how we are going to pay

dividends and buy back shares, and on how

we are going to help our customers and

suppliers.

As the stories highlighted in this report

demonstrate, our employees – representing

many different nationalities and bringing a

broad range of backgrounds, perspectives

and skills – are key to our success. One of

the reasons why so many talented people

choose ASML as an employer is because we

give them the opportunity to work at the

sharp end of technology and make a real

difference, while also supporting their health

and well-being. We put a lot of effort into

this, providing our employees with

opportunities and the best environments to

develop their talent, to feel respected and to

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 MESSAGE FROM THE CEO CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 6
Managing the cycle, preparing for greater growth in years to come (continued) Our task in 2024 is to reflect<br><br>on our organization and<br><br>capabilities and prepare for<br><br>the rapid growth that is sure<br><br>to come.”
---
Peter Wennink
President, Chief Executive Officer and<br><br>Chair of the Board of Management

thrive. We need our people to trust us, and

the fact that our engagement score has

improved again shows we are on the right

track.

Regarding society, we strive to respect a

range of different and sometimes conflicting

interests around our growth trajectory and

the increasing impact of our products and

services on society. We engage extensively

with communities, institutions, special

interest groups and governments at all levels

across the world on topics that are relevant

to our business and its role in society and

that therefore require long-term vision and

support, such as education, infrastructure,

culture and environment.

A year of transition

Our expectation is that our net sales in 2024

will be broadly in line with our net sales in

  1. But above all, this will be a year of

transition – a time to digest the fast growth

we have experienced in recent years and to

prepare for 2025 and 2026, which I believe

will be strong years because of three major

factors.

Firstly, demand for semiconductors is

increasingly generated by secular growth

drivers in end markets, such as the energy

transition, electrification and AI. As the

application space expands, with lithography

playing an ever-greater role in future

technology nodes, demand grows for both

advanced and mature semiconductors.

Secondly, the semiconductor industry is

currently working through the bottom of the

cycle. Historically, the downturns of the last

30-40 years have been for two to three

years, with the present downturn really

beginning in the second half of 2022. Our

customers are still not certain of the shape or

slope of the recovery, but there are some

positive signs in the indicators we have been

monitoring. Industry end-market inventory

levels continue to improve and litho tool

utilization levels are beginning to show

improvement. Our strong order intake in the

fourth quarter clearly supports future

demand.

Lastly, we need to prepare for the significant

number of new semiconductor fabs that are

being built. These fabs are spread

geographically across the globe – they’re

strategically important for our customers and

they’re scheduled to take our tools. It is

essential that we keep our focus on the

future and build capacity to be ready for this

ramp.

The semiconductor industry is expected to

double somewhere in the next decade, as

compared with today. Our task in 2024 is to

reflect on our organization and capabilities

and prepare for the rapid growth that is

expected to come, while managing

increased cost pressures. That means

working on our processes – for example,

ensuring that they are fit for purpose and

have the flexibility to expand rapidly when

and where needed.

And it means taking care of our people,

making sure that they feel fully engaged in

our company. Many thousands of new

employees have joined us in the last few

years, and around 40% of all our colleagues

have been with us for three years or less.

Our values of challenge, collaborate and care

have been instrumental in our success to

date, and they will continue to guide us in the

future. It is vital that all our people embrace

these values.

In 2024, we need to take the opportunity to

create clarity about the many roles and

responsibilities in our diverse, cross-

functional teams, to maintain a safe

environment where people feel connected,

included and respected.

Stakeholder support

We are tremendously proud of what we’ve

achieved to date and extremely excited for

the years ahead. But none of this would be

possible without the support of our

stakeholders. ASML has succeeded and will

continue to thrive because of the patience

and success of our customers, the

collaboration of our suppliers and partners,

and the understanding of shareholders and

governments. Most of all, we rely on our

people – and I thank them for all their

expertise and hard work over the last year.

This is my final Annual Report message as

ASML's CEO, following the Supervisory

Board’s announcement that Christophe

Fouquet will succeed me as President and

Chief Executive Officer at the 2024 AGM.

Christophe has been with ASML for 15

years, with a major focus on technology,

products and customers, and I am delighted

that we have been able to secure such a

talented, experienced individual to guide the

business through the coming years.

Christophe and I share the ‘ASML DNA’ of

collaboration and partnership, and we will

work closely together to ensure that he has

the best possible start in his new position.

I wish Christophe and all our stakeholders –

and particularly our fantastic people – every

success as, together, you embark on the

next phase of this great company’s journey.

Peter Wennink

President, Chief Executive Officer and

Chair of the Board of Management

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 MESSAGE FROM THE CEO CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 7
Managing the cycle, preparing for greater growth in years to come (continued) Our values of challenge, collaborate<br><br>and care have been instrumental in<br><br>our success.”
---
Peter Wennink
President, Chief Executive Officer<br><br>and Chair of the Board of Management
Key facts in 2023
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€27.6bn 42,416
Total net sales Employees (FTE)
€23.2bn Asia<br><br>€3.2bn US<br><br>€1.2bn EMEA 19,805 in Operations<br><br>15,604 in R&D<br><br>7,007 in Sales and Support
Read more on page 43 > Read more on page 107 >
€4.0bn 35.1 kt
R&D investments Scope 1 and 2 CO2e<br><br>emissions
We innovate across our entire<br><br>product portfolio through strong<br><br>investment in R&D
(2025 target net zero)
Read more on page 137 > Read more on page 76 >
€15.5bn 80.3%
Total sourcing spend1 Employee engagement<br><br>score against<br><br>benchmark
(Netherlands: 40% EMEA (excl. NL): 40%<br><br>North America: 13% Asia: 7%)
1.Reported for non-financial (GRI) reporting<br><br>purposes
(2025 target -2% vs. top 25%<br><br>performing companies)
Read more on page 126 > Read more on page 107 > What we do
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At ASML, we design and integrate lithography<br><br>systems with computational tools, metrology<br><br>and inspection systems, and process control<br><br>software solutions. This holistic approach<br><br>to lithography provides chipmakers with<br><br>support and solutions at every stage of the<br><br>chipmaking process, from early design<br><br>and development to high-volume production.<br><br>It enables chipmakers to optimize the<br><br>lithography system setup and process window<br><br>for high-volume manufacturing, helping them<br><br>achieve their highest yields and best chip<br><br>performance.
Read more in Our unique offer on page 11 >
Our key products and services
•Lithography systems<br><br>•Metrology and inspection<br><br>systems<br><br>•Computational<br><br>lithography<br><br>•Supporting our customers •System and process<br><br>control software<br><br>•Managing our<br><br>installed base<br><br>systems<br><br>•Refurbished systems
Read more in Our products and services on<br><br>page 13 > Where we operate – more than 60 locations across 3 continents
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OurCompanyIntro_AsiaMap.jpg Asia
China
Japan
Malaysia
Singapore
South Korea
Taiwan
OurCompanyIntro_NAMap.jpg North America
Arizona New Mexico
California New York
Colorado Oregon
Connecticut Texas
Idaho Utah
Massachusetts Virginia
OurCompanyIntro_EMEAMap.jpg EMEA
Belgium
France
Germany
Ireland
Israel
Italy
Netherlands
United Kingdom
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 AT A GLANCE STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 8
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We are a global innovator
As one of the leading innovators in the semiconductor industry, we’ve been helping chipmakers push<br><br>technology to new limits and unlock the potential of society since 1984. Together, our hardware,<br><br>software and services provide a holistic approach to mass producing the patterns of microchips.
Berliner Glas (ASML Berlin GmbH) is reflected as part of our business throughout this report, with the exception of non-financial reporting. We are preparing to integrate this in 2024 in line with Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) requirements.

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Why we exist – our purpose
Unlocking the potential of<br><br>people and society by pushing<br><br>technology to new limits.
What we try to achieve – our vision
We enable ground-breaking<br><br>technology to solve some of<br><br>humanity’s toughest challenges.
What we uniquely do – our mission
Together with our partners,<br><br>we provide leading patterning<br><br>solutions that drive the<br><br>advancement of microchips.
Read more in Our business model on page 32 > You can see the impact of our<br><br>collaboration in the commercial<br><br>results of ASML and our<br><br>customers.”
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George Tao
Director Customer<br><br>Service Applications
Read more on page 144 > Managing expansion<br><br>in high-stress<br><br>situations means<br><br>focusing on your<br><br>people and their<br><br>well-being.”
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Mark Bergkotte
Director Logistics Operations
Read more on page 124 > The interaction among<br><br>supply chain partners<br><br>helps us all improve to<br><br>support faster growth.”
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Manon Hendriks
Senior Director Sourcing & Procurement
Read more on page 135 >
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We work together to help society progress

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We challenge
We challenge boundaries and<br><br>question the status quo to keep<br><br>pushing technology forward.
We collaborate
By tapping into the collective<br><br>potential of our ecosystem<br><br>of customers, partners and<br><br>stakeholders, we can create<br><br>better solutions.
We care
We act with integrity and respect,<br><br>and provide a safe, inclusive<br><br>and trusting environment where<br><br>our people can learn and grow. Sustainability is a design<br><br>challenge that must be<br><br>solved in parallel with system<br><br>cost and performance.”
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Ton van der Net
Principal Architect D&E
Read more on page 89 > ASML’s focus on<br><br>technology and<br><br>its supportive<br><br>culture mean you<br><br>can go wherever<br><br>your talent and<br><br>ambition take<br><br>you.”
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Anya Kish
Program Director EUV Source
Read more on page 105 > My new role will help us<br><br>safeguard our innovation<br><br>power as we evolve to<br><br>support future growth.”
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Ron Kool
Head of Business Performance Improvement
Read more on page 35 > Every few months,<br><br>I have been given<br><br>a new challenge to<br><br>extend myself.”
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Manisha Devi
Solution Test Architect
Read more on page 18 >
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We live by our values to drive success

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Lithography technology is fundamental to the

mass production of microchips. Our holistic

approach is based on integrating our

lithography systems with a set of products

that optimize production and enable

affordable shrink.

The semiconductor industry is driven by

affordable shrink – the ability to make

smaller, more energy-efficient transistors at

the right price. Reducing the size of

transistors means that more can be packed

into a given area, resulting in increased

functionality and improved performance.

Lithography is a key driver for shrink,

enabling what is known as geometric scaling.

This determines the smallest feature sizes

that can be printed on a chip, and therefore

the number of transistors and the

performance. To achieve dimensional

scaling, lithography has to use shorter

wavelengths of light and larger numerical

apertures, as well as other advanced

techniques such as immersion lithography

and multiple patterning.

Our innovations in lithography have enabled

the continuation of Moore’s Law1 – the

observation that the number of transistors in

an integrated circuit (IC) doubles about every

two years – for more than 30 years.

1.Dr. Gordon Moore, co-founder of chipmaker Intel, and

the man who created Moore’s Law, passed away

peacefully at his home in Hawaii on Friday, March 24,

  1. He was 94 years old.
The Rayleigh criterion that drives Moore’s Law
Over the years, ASML has made several wavelength<br><br>steps, and our DUV lithography systems range from<br><br>365 nm (i-line), through 248 nm (KrF) to 193 nm<br><br>(ArF). With our extreme ultraviolet (EUV) systems, we<br><br>provide highest-resolution lithography in high-volume<br><br>manufacturing as these systems make a major step<br><br>in wavelength – with EUV tin plasma, we generate<br><br>EUV light which has a wavelength of just 13.5 nm.<br><br>•NA is the numerical aperture, indicating the entrance<br><br>angle of the light – with larger NA lenses/mirrors,<br><br>smaller structures can be printed. Besides larger<br><br>lenses, ASML has increased the NA of our ArF<br><br>systems by maintaining a thin film of water between<br><br>the last lens element and the wafer in our so-called<br><br>immersion systems, using the breaking index of the<br><br>water to increase the NA. After the wavelength step to EUV, we are developing<br><br>the next-generation EUV systems, called EUV<br><br>0.55 NA (High NA), where we push the numerical<br><br>aperture from 0.33 to 0.55.<br><br>•k1 is a factor relating to optical and process<br><br>optimizations. Together with our computational<br><br>lithography and patterning control software<br><br>solutions, we provide the control loops for our<br><br>customers to optimize their mask designs and<br><br>illumination conditions.
•CD is the critical dimension, a measure of how<br><br>small the smallest structures are that the<br><br>lithography system can print.<br><br>•Lambda ⁁ is the wavelength of the light source<br><br>used, and the smaller the wavelength, the smaller<br><br>the structures that can be printed. Our deep<br><br>ultraviolet (DUV) lithography systems, known as the<br><br>industry workhorse, dive deep into the UV light<br><br>spectrum to print the tiny features that form the<br><br>basis of a microchip. Watch Gordon Moore video

Lithography explained

Microchips are made by building up complex

patterns of transistors, layer by layer, on a

silicon wafer. Our lithography systems print

those patterns by projecting ultraviolet light

on a blueprint of the pattern (known as a

‘reticle’ or ‘mask’) and shrinking and focusing

that light onto a photosensitive silicon wafer.

This results in a so-called die, a rectangular

pattern on a wafer containing circuitry to

perform a specific function.

ASML's technology is pivotal to

semiconductor production because

lithography is the only stage where the wafer

is processed die by die.

Lithography therefore has a greater impact

on performance – including the number of

good wafers per day, or yield – than any

other stage in the chip manufacturing

process.

The lithography process is repeated to build

up the layers of a chip. Modern chips can

have more than 100 layers, all of which need

to be aligned on top of each other with

nanometer precision. In general, our EUV

systems are used to print the most intricate

layers on a chip first, with the rest of the

layers then printed using various DUV

systems.

Our holistic approach

to lithography

As patterning gets smaller, our lithography

systems become increasingly complex. And as

chipmakers print ever-smaller patterns, they

face unprecedented engineering, material,

structural and manufacturing challenges. Many

sources of variation and error can hinder the

lithography process, and they must be

controlled to ensure that chips are produced

with the required precision, in high volumes, as

fast as possible and at the lowest cost.

To help address these challenges, we provide

customers with a holistic, integrated approach

to lithography that enables them to optimize the

system setup and process window for high-

volume manufacturing, helping them achieve

their highest yields and best chip performance.

Read more in Our business model on page 32 >

What is a process window?
Lithography and all other stages in the microchip<br><br>manufacturing process must be closely aligned for<br><br>an optimal result. The process window is the<br><br>collection of acceptable variations of process<br><br>parameters that allow a microchip to be manufactured<br><br>and to operate under desired specifications. By<br><br>incorporating computational lithography, metrology<br><br>and inspection, ASML’s holistic lithography portfolio<br><br>enables customers to maximize the process window,<br><br>keeping lithography systems stable in a high-volume<br><br>manufacturing setting, which leads to a higher yield<br><br>with more good wafers per day.
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Holistic lithography

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Our holistic approach integrates lithography

systems with computational tools, metrology

and inspection systems, and process control

software solutions. This enables us to

provide chipmakers with support and

solutions at every stage of the chipmaking

process, from early design and development

to high-volume production.

By bringing together the different elements of

our holistic lithography portfolio, we help our

customers understand and correct for

potential issues that could cause variations

or errors.

Read more in Our business model on page 32 >

This helps minimize any deviation between

the intended and printed features of a

microchip layout, thereby optimizing the

lithography system’s performance, stability

and yield – including maximizing the number

of good wafers per day – and enabling ever-

smaller chip features.

What is edge placement error (EPE)?
Creating a microchip involves the patterning of tiny<br><br>features in precise locations. Edge placement error<br><br>(EPE) is the difference between the intended and the<br><br>printed features of the layout of a microchip. For<br><br>example, a feature could be a line, which has right<br><br>and left edges. On a microchip, this line and its<br><br>edges must be precise and placed in exact<br><br>locations. Any deviation, no matter how slight, can<br><br>result in misalignment, or an EPE. If one or more EPE<br><br>issues crop up in the microchip production flow, the<br><br>device is subject to shorts or poor yields, which<br><br>could cause the entire chip to fail. ASML plays an integral role in the microchip manufacturing process
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1Deposition – The first step is typically

to deposit different materials – such as

metals/conductors, insulation films and

semiconductors – onto a silicon wafer.

2Photoresist coating – The wafer is

then coated with a light-sensitive layer

called a photoresist.

3Lithography – Light is projected onto

the wafer through a reticle. Optics shrink

and focus the reticle pattern. This

pattern is then printed onto the wafer

when the resist layer is exposed to light.

4Baking, developing and etching –

The wafer is then baked and developed

to make the pattern permanent, with a

pattern of open spaces. Reactive gases are

used to etch away material from the open

spaces, leaving a 3D version of the pattern.

5Ion implantation – The wafer may be

bombarded with positive or negative ions

to tune the semiconductor properties.

6Removing photoresist – After the layer

is etched or ionized, the remainder of the

photoresist coating that was protecting

areas not to be etched is removed.

The entire microchip manufacturing

process – from start to tested and

packaged device, ready for shipment –

can take between 18 and 26 weeks,

depending on the complexity of the

microchip.

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Holistic lithography (continued)

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Our holistic approach to

lithography integrates a set of

products – enabling chipmakers

to develop, optimize and control

the semiconductor production

process.

Extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography systems

Using extreme ultraviolet (EUV) light at a

wavelength of 13.5 nm, our EUV

lithography systems make it possible to

print the smallest features on microchips at

the highest density. EUV systems are used

for the most intricate, critical layers on the

most advanced microchips. ASML is

currently the world’s only manufacturer of

EUV lithography systems.

EUV 0.33 NA (NXE platform)

EUV lithography uses light with a

wavelength of just 13.5 nm. This enables

EUV systems to print the finest lines and

allows our customers to use them in a

more simplified process compared to

complex multiple-patterning strategies

using DUV immersion systems. Our NXE

EUV platform, with an NA of 0.33, was first

introduced to customers in 2013 and is

now widely adopted in high-volume

manufacturing by our major customers.

The platform is now in its seventh

generation and we continue to industrialize

the technology, innovating further

developments to create value

for customers.

In June 2023, we celebrated the 100th

shipment of the TWINSCAN NXE:3600D,

our latest-generation EUV 0.33 NA

lithography system. It combines the

highest resolution with 15-20% increased

productivity and around 30% better overlay

compared with its predecessor, the

TWINSCAN NXE:3400C, while also

improving system availability.

Our EUV product roadmap is intended to

drive affordable scaling to 2030 and

beyond. Our EUV NXE platform extends

our customers’ Logic and Memory

roadmaps by delivering improvements in

resolution, productivity and overlay (layer-

to-layer alignment) performance, enabling

year-on-year cost reductions.

EUV 0.55 NA (EXE platform)

We are building the next platform of EUV

lithography systems and we shipped the

first modules intended for R&D purposes in

  1. With a higher NA of 0.55 compared

with the 0.33 NA of our first EUV systems,

these High NA systems are designed to enable

higher-resolution patterning for even

smaller transistor features.

This is an evolutionary step in EUV

technology, introducing a novel optics

design and significantly faster reticle and

wafer stages. In addition, the EUV 0.55 NA

(EXE) platform has been designed to

maximize commonality with the EUV NXE

platform to drive cost reductions, speed up

the development of new solutions and

optimize future reuse.

The enhancements offer considerable

benefits to our customers, enabling

lithography simplification for future nodes,

higher yields and decreased defect density

for both Logic and dynamic random-

access memory (DRAM). EUV 0.55 NA will

help our customers to extend their shrink

roadmap and minimize double or triple

patterning compared with 0.33 NA, leading

to reduced patterning complexity, lower

risk of defects and a shorter cycle time.

EUV 0.55 NA has also been designed to

enable multiple future nodes, with the

industry’s first deployment expected in

2025, followed by Memory technologies

at similar density.

We expect our EXE platform to start

supporting high-volume manufacturing in

2025/2026. We have received purchase

orders from all of our current EUV

customers for the delivery of the

industry’s first TWINSCAN EXE:5200

system – an EUV high-volume production

system with 0.55 NA and higher

productivity.

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World-leading holistic lithography solutions
Our comprehensive product portfolio is aligned to our customers’ roadmaps, delivering cost-effective<br><br>solutions in support of all applications, from leading-edge to mature nodes.

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Deep ultraviolet (DUV) lithography systems

Deep ultraviolet (DUV) lithography systems

are the workhorses of the industry,

producing the majority of layers in

microchips. Supporting numerous market

segments, we offer immersion as well as

dry lithography systems, and a range of

light sources to offer all wavelengths

currently used in the semiconductor

industry – argon fluoride (ArF) for 193 nm

wavelength, krypton fluoride (KrF) for 248

nm and mercury gas discharge lamp (i-line)

for 365 nm. Our systems lead the industry

in productivity, imaging and overlay

performance to help manufacture a broad

range of semiconductor nodes and

technologies, and support the industry’s

cost- and energy-efficient scaling.

Immersion systems (NXTi platform)

ArF immersion lithography maintains a thin

film of water between the lens and the

wafer. Using the refractive index of water to

increase NA improves resolution to support

further shrink. Our immersion systems are

suitable for both single-exposure and

multiple-patterning lithography, and can be

used in seamless combination with EUV

systems to print different layers of the

same chip.

Our latest state-of-the-art immersion

system is the TWINSCAN NXT:2100i,

launched in the third quarter of 2022.

Alongside intrinsic improvements to lens

metrology, reticle conditioning and wafer

table, as well as overall cross-matching

improvements, the NXT:2100i features

innovations such as the Alignment

Optimizer 12 Color package. The system

delivers 295-wafers-per-hour (wph)

productivity combined with unprecedented

overlay performance, providing the most

cost-efficient solution to customers for

critical immersion layers on the sub 3 nm

nodes.

Dry systems (NXT and XT platform)

Not every layer on a chip has to be

produced by the most innovative

immersion lithography systems. While

some more complicated layers do require

more advanced lithography systems,

others can often be printed using ‘older’

technology such as dry lithography

systems. Our dry systems product portfolio

offers our customers more cost-effective

solutions for all types of wavelengths.

Our TWINSCAN NXT:1470 dual-stage ArF

system continues to be adopted by the

majority of Logic and Memory customers

and has been inserted in high-volume

manufacturing processes. It is the first dry

NXT system, building on the common

immersion platform, with improvements in

matched machine overlay (<4.0 nm),

productivity (>300 wph) and footprint.

The TWINSCAN NXT:870 248 nm step-

and-scan system is a high-productivity,

dual-stage KrF lithography tool designed

for high-volume 300 mm wafer production

at and above-110-nm resolution. The

system increases productivity from the 260

wph capability of the XT:860N to 330 wph

through the use of the NXT platform, a

higher scan speed and reduced system

overhead time.

The TWINSCAN XT:400L is our latest i-line

lithography system, which can print

features down to a resolution of 220 nm for

200 mm and 300 mm wafer production.

We are on track with a platform

commonality roadmap in order to reduce

the cost of ownership: The transition in ArF

and KrF from the XT platform to the NXT

platform is resulting in significant

productivity gains (KrF 27% to 330 wph on

NXT:870, ArF 46% to 300 wph on

NXT:1470).

We continue to innovate in productivity,

cost of ownership and performance across

our TWINSCAN XT product lines (ArF, KrF

and i-line) for 200 mm and 300 mm wafer

sizes.

Refurbished systems

Our refurbished products business

refurbishes and upgrades our older

lithography systems to extend their lives,

and offers associated services and

support. We currently offer refurbished

PAS 5500 and first-generation AT, XT and

NXT systems.

ASML systems have a very long

operational lifetime that often exceeds

their role at the initial customer. Many

customers are therefore able to generate

value by selling off systems they no longer

require. To support this sustainable

product use and ensure used systems

deliver the quality that ASML stands

for, we are actively involved in the used-

system market. Remarkably, 95% of the

systems that we have sold in the last

30 years are still in use.

Read more in Environmental – Circular economy

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World-leading holistic lithography solutions (continued)

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Metrology and inspections systems

Our metrology and inspection systems

allow chipmakers to measure the patterns

that they print on the wafer to see how well

they match the intended pattern. Our

portfolio enables chipmakers to monitor

most steps of bringing a chip to market,

from R&D to mass production.

The systems are a key element of our

holistic approach to lithography. They

produce data at the speed and accuracy

needed during high-volume manufacturing

to enable our process control software

solutions to create automated feedback

control loops. This optimizes the

lithography system settings for each

exposure to reduce EPE, enlarging the

process window to achieve the highest

yield and best performance in a fab

environment.

Optical metrology

Our YieldStar optical metrology systems

allow chipmakers to assess the quality of

patterns on the wafer in volume production,

through fast and accurate overlay

measurements. We offer two categories of

YieldStar systems for use before and after

‘etching’ (the stage when the material in any

open spaces is removed to reveal the 3D

version of the patterns on the wafer). Pre-

etch metrology measures the overlay and

focus of the lithography system and the

pattern printed on the photoresist. Post-

etch metrology measures the overlay and

critical dimensions of the final patterns

formed on the wafer.

In 2023, we shipped the YieldStar 500, our

latest optical overlay and focus metrology

tool, designed to be the new benchmark for

measurement accuracy, matching

performance and measurement speed. It is

a standalone optical wafer metrology

system for measuring pre-etch overlay.

Using diffraction-based measurements, the

YieldStar 500 offers fast monitoring of

overlay and focus performance directly on

produced wafers with nanometer-level

accuracy.

E-beam metrology and inspection

Our HMI electron beam (e-beam) solutions

allow customers to locate and analyze

individual chip defects amid millions of

printed patterns, extending the scope for

process control. While e-beam solutions

were historically too slow to monitor volume

production processes, we have increased

the throughput to now uniquely offer e-

beam solutions for use during high-volume

production as well as the R&D phase.

The R&D phase of chip manufacturing

involves extensive testing, validation and

fine-tuning to optimize the complete

manufacturing process for reliable, high-

yield mass production.

We offer two types of solutions to support

this stage: E-beam metrology and defect

detection to monitor critical dimension and

EPE data at resolutions necessary for the

implementation of EUV lithography; and

single-beam inspection to monitor voltage

contrast and physical defects.

Our ground-breaking multiple e-beam

(multibeam) inspection systems operate at

throughput speeds that enable them to be

used inline during mass production to

detect voltage contrast defects and

physical defects.

We continue to extend technology

leadership in voltage contrast inspection

and physical defect inspection with the

widely adopted single-beam platform. The

HMI eScan 600 is our latest highly flexible

e-beam wafer inspection system that can

operate in multiple modes, allowing

chipmakers to capture the widest variety of

defect types in a single system.

Our high-resolution e-beam metrology

system HMI eP5 offers world-class 1 nm

resolution with large field-of-view

capabilities. It produces critical dimension

(CD) and EPE data in high volume with a

quality level that customers need for

monitoring and control. EPE is becoming

more critical for device patterning and yield

with shrinking design rules and the adoption

of EUV lithography.

We also released an EPE metrology application

software product on eP5. It is capable of local

and global EPE measurements on device, both

intralayer and interlayer.

In 2022, we released and shipped the eP5

XLE, which extends the high-resolution

eP5 system with high landing energy up to

30 keV and fast back-scattered electron

detection for inspection and metrology of

3D devices in Logic and Memory. It is

capable of overlay measurement on device

patterns, complementing our YieldStar

product offering. We also released and

shipped the first next-generation high-

resolution e-beam metrology system, eP6,

to succeed eP5. The projected eP6

performance is expected to be more than

10 times the speed of existing technologies.

Building on the 2020 launch of our

breakthrough multibeam inspection tool

HMI eScan 1000, with a 3x3 image, in 2022

we also introduced the next-generation HMI

eScan 1100. With a 5x5 image, it

demonstrates successful multibeam

operation, simultaneously scanning with 25

beams. The 5x5 system has higher

sensitivity for detecting voltage contrast

defects and physical defects, while

substantially increasing inspection

throughput. In 2022, the first eScan 1100

multibeam system was installed at a

customer site to start customer evaluation.

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World-leading holistic lithography solutions (continued)

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System and process control software

Taking advantage of the huge flexibility of

our lithography systems, our system and

process control software products enable

automated control loops to maintain

optimal operation of lithography

processes and therefore maximize yield.

Using powerful algorithms, they analyze

metrology and inspection data and

calculate necessary corrections for each

individual exposure. This provides a

feedback loop to the lithography system

to minimize EPE in subsequent wafer lots.

Our roadmap aims to apply more

powerful algorithms with higher-order

corrections to enable our customers to

continue improving EPE performance.

Read more on EPE at box-out on page 12 >

| Our roadmap aims<br><br>to apply more powerful<br><br>algorithms with higher-<br><br>order corrections to<br><br>enable our customers<br><br>to continue improving<br><br>EPE performance. | | --- || Computational lithography | | --- |

We use computational lithography to

predict and enhance the process window

of our lithography systems by calculating

the optimal settings, depending on the

specific application. This takes place in

the R&D phase, during the development

of new chips to optimize both the reticle

patterns and the setup of the lithography

system to ensure robust, manufacturable

designs that deliver high yields.

Our computational lithography solutions

are based on models of the various

physical and chemical processes that

influence pattern quality. Advanced

algorithms, driven by these models,

predict how a designed pattern will

appear when printed on a wafer. Based

on those predictions, the reticle design

and factors within the lithography system

can be subtly adjusted to ensure that a

chip pattern is printed exactly as

intended. Increasingly, we are using

machine-learning techniques to further

speed up development of models and to

reduce the computational time and cost.

Managing our installed base system

Our installed base continues to grow,

comprising not only new systems but also

refurbished systems with new owners in

new markets and applications. To provide

all our customers with the best possible

value proposition, we offer an extensive

installed base management (IBM)

portfolio, including a wide range of service

and upgrade options.

We develop and sell product options and

enhancements designed to improve

throughput, patterning performance and

overlay. Our field upgrade packages

enable customers to optimize their cost of

ownership over a system’s lifetime by

upgrading older systems to improved

models.

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World-leading holistic lithography solutions (continued)

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We are one of the world’s leading

manufacturers of chipmaking equipment,

while our customers are the world’s leading

microchip manufacturers. We enable them to

create the patterns that define the electronic

circuits on a chip, and consequently our

success is inextricably linked with theirs.

That’s why we collaborate with our

customers to understand how our technology

best fits their needs and challenges. That

means engaging with our customers at all

levels: Building partnerships, sharing

knowledge and risks, aligning our investments

in innovation and increasingly focusing on the

long-term challenges for the next five to ten

years and beyond.

We develop our solutions based on their

input, help them achieve their technology

and cost roadmaps, and work together,

often literally in the same team, to make

sure our solutions fit together perfectly.

Engaging fully with customers is also an

important part of working toward securing

the full product portfolio that will sustain

our company into the future.

As our installed base continues to grow, we

work very closely with our customers to

develop and sell options and enhancements

designed to improve throughput, patterning

performance and overlay to optimize the cost

of ownership over a system’s lifetime.

Building on our customer relationships

We market and sell our products directly to

customers, without agencies or other

intermediaries. Our account managers,

field and application engineers, and service

and technical support specialists are located

close to our customers' operations

throughout Asia, the US and Europe, the

Middle East and Africa (EMEA).

Customer trust is the foundation for our

customer relationships. Our customers expect

us to have the right means to meet their needs

and expectations, consistently deliver upon the

promises we make, be transparent about what

we are doing and fairly share the risks and

rewards with them. In 2023, we took the first

steps toward a reorganization of our customer-

facing roles and responsibilities, and we

announced the intended appointment of a Chief

Customer Officer in ASML's Board of

Management, effective per the date of the 2024

AGM. This will help us to continue to scale

customer relationships, excellent support and

customer trust as the business grows.

How we provide customer support

We support our customers with a broad range

of applications, services and technical support

products to maintain and enhance our systems’

performance. Our customer support teams

across the world ensure the systems in our

customers’ fabs run at the highest levels of

predictability and availability. We offer 24/7

support, next-day parts delivery and an easy-

to-use, centralized customer portal.

It is essential for us and our customers to

have well-trained engineers in the regions

where we operate. We offer specialized

training to boost the capabilities of our local

customer service teams and enhance local

technical expertise. This helps us to increase

the self-sufficiency of local field engineers.

Read more in Engaging with our stakeholders –

Customers

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 OUR PRODUCTS AND SERVICES CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 17
Supporting our customers
We believe a true partnership with our customers based on mutual trust is vitally important,<br><br>ensuring that we share the risks and rewards of what we do. We collaborate with<br><br>our customers to<br><br>understand how our<br><br>technology best fits<br><br>their needs and<br><br>challenges.
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Every few months,<br><br>I have been given<br><br>a new challenge to<br><br>extend myself.”
Manisha Devi
Solution Test Architect
4 years at ASML Delivering for our customers
---
After joining ASML four years ago,<br><br>Manisha Devi led a team of<br><br>engineers in the roll-out of ASML’s<br><br>digital platform to customers in<br><br>2023. Aware that any mishaps could<br><br>lead to unplanned downtime that<br><br>may cost customers millions in lost<br><br>revenue, Manisha knew the stakes<br><br>couldn’t be higher.
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SMALL PATTERNS. BIG IMPACT. STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 18
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Finding your passion

I have always been inspired by the quote

from Marie Curie: “I am among those who

think that science has great beauty.” As a

child in a small town in North India, I

dreamed of a career in science and

technology. And I took every opportunity to

make that happen. I left the comfort of home

to study at a premier science & technology

institute before starting work in the telecoms

technology domain, growing with each new

role and responsibility. ASML then gave me

the chance to test my skills in the

semiconductor industry. I joined as a

software tester and am now a solution test

architect – determining test and integration

strategies for new solutions.

Unlocking the code

There is a huge amount of software inside

ASML’s systems, and we are continually

developing more. That software is critical

to the operation of the system and the

economic success of our customers. Any

unintended downtime can cost our customers

millions in lost revenue. So, ASML isn’t just

investing in development, it is also investing

in quality – to ensure all that software works

together seamlessly and doesn’t cause

unplanned stoppages in production.

Like most software-enabled systems,

ASML’s products have a huge amount of

legacy code. You can’t just reengineer that

every time you want to make an update or

add a feature – you need to develop new

software in such a way as to ensure that it

doesn’t break the legacy code. To streamline

the process, ASML has recently switched to

a platform development approach: Instead of

delivering a single software package for the

scanner, we deliver a series of options that

all work together. Part of this transition is to

update all installed systems in the field with

an entire new software stack. I was asked to

lead the team responsible for qualifying and

integrating that new stack. As someone who

loves a challenge, I jumped at the chance.

Replacing all the system software is a

daunting prospect, so quality was essential –

we had to get it right first time. To make that

possible, ASML has recently introduced a

new methodology for software development.

Of course, we make use of the standard

approaches like Lean and Agile, but we take

the parts that work best for us and our

customers, then combine them with new

ideas. For example, for the new stack, we

used a ‘shift-left strategy’ where testing and

quality evaluation starts much earlier. Having

the development team involved in testing

end-to-end helped us bring the software to

the required quality level faster.

A customer-first approach

Throughout the development of the new

software stack, we were guided by our

customers’ needs. ASML is in constant

contact with its customers, and regularly

asks them for feedback. In this case, our

customer representatives provided

continuous feedback on the features

customers will want in the next 9-12 months

and customers’ specific use cases. This

helped us better understand which software

configurations do and don’t work.

We started rolling out the new software stack

to customers in 2023. The goal is to do this

without downtime – this was the most nerve-

wracking part of the process, certainly for our

customers. There are always things that can

go wrong when you go live with such

complicated software, but we had done so

much preparation, studying each customer’s

use case, so we could be one step ahead.

That’s not to say that issues didn’t crop up,

but we were always ready with the solution

when they did. Our customers may not have

been smiling when we arrived, but they

definitely were eight hours later when their

system was running the new stack without

problems. And now they can be confident

about adding new options equally painlessly

in the future.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SMALL PATTERNS. BIG IMPACT. CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 19

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We expect High NA EUV high-volume<br><br>manufacturing systems to be fully<br><br>operational in customer factories by 2025.”
Martin van den Brink
President, Chief Technology Officer and Vice Chair of the Board of Management Q What were the highlights in<br><br>technology development and<br><br>innovation in 2023?
--- ---

Martin: Let me start by saying that in 2024 it

will be 40 years since a small team of

colleagues, including me, first came together

in a leaky shed in Eindhoven, tasked with

developing lithography systems for the

growing semiconductor market. That was

the start of ASML as we know it today. So,

although 2023 was another dynamic year for

innovation, this was not achieved overnight

but as the result of all the hard work that

preceded it.

Having said that, it was undeniably a very

proud moment for our innovation teams

when we successfully shipped the first

modules of our first High NA EUV system,

EXE:5000, following extensive testing and

integration throughout the year. Our EXE

High NA EUV platform increases the

numerical aperture from 0.33 to 0.55 and will

enable geometric chip scaling well into the

next decade. We expect High NA EUV high-

volume manufacturing systems to be fully

operational in customer factories by 2025.

In DUV immersion, we rolled out a lens

distortion manipulator to adjust the optics in

operation and reduce overlay errors, which

gives us an opportunity to improve our mix

and match overlay between EUV and DUV

immersion. It provides us with more flexibility

following distortion of the wafer and is also

applicable for 3D integration bonding.

On the application side, we made progress with

key technologies such as x-ray, working closely

with our customers, with whom we are closely

aligned. Regarding our metrology and

inspection product portfolio, in 2023, we

brought to market the YieldStar 500, our latest

optical overlay and focus metrology tool,

designed to be the new benchmark for

measurement accuracy, matching performance

and measurement speed. We are now also

delivering our multibeam and single-beam high-

voltage system. While there remains some work

for our teams in maximizing reliability and

maturing these systems to a point where

customers can use them in production, this has

been an important step forward, and one where

AI has played a key role.

Two years ago, we started to develop a

strategy to arrive at a unified or common EUV

platform in order to drive productivity. It was

very exciting to see that strategy begin to bear

fruit during 2023. We now have a clear, articulated

roadmap to achieve a full EUV suite – a common

platform with common manufacturing processes

and a common supplier base. This will drive

cost reductions and speed up the development

of new solutions, which is important not only for

ASML, but also for our customers.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 Q&A WITH THE CTO STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 20
Driving Moore’s Law across four decades of innovation
In conversation with our President, Chief Technology Officer and Vice Chair of the Board of Management
Martin van den Brink On April 24, 2024, ASML President & CTO Martin van den Brink will retire from ASML upon completion of his<br><br>current appointment term. “It has been a privilege to co-lead ASML with Peter Wennink and to have brought<br><br>a strong focus on product, technology and engineering capabilities to the company and its suppliers. I am<br><br>proud of the innovations that we have delivered together with our customers over the decades."
---

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Q Is shrink still the most<br><br>important driver of<br><br>innovation?

Martin: In line with Moore’s Law, shrink has

long played a key role in innovation, and

although this is inevitably becoming more

and more challenging, it will continue

because shrink is the only way to effectively

reduce costs.

However, it’s important to put this into

context. What we are looking at today is

whole-system integration shrink, not just of

the chips themselves. For example, 3D

system integration – vertically stacking

different chips together into a single package

– requires innovative lithography solutions to

handle the increasingly dense

interconnections. We have been working

with both Logic and Memory customers on

how to shrink these connections from chip to

chip. As is always the case with innovation

on this scale and in this industry, we are

engaging with core solution providers, such

as bonding suppliers, to find the answers.

Cost is closely aligned with shrink. As shrink

becomes more challenging over time, and as

technology continues to demand more

energy-efficient transistors per chip, the

industry will need to produce more silicon

but at lower cost. The cost-productivity ratio

is now a key aspect of our roadmap because

we understand the cost pressures that our

customers and suppliers are facing.

Moving forward, we have clear parameters

for R&D to work within so that future

innovations take account of the technology

limits of our supplier base and, where

possible, reduce any risks of suppliers

making unnecessary investments in new

capabilities.

Q How have your ecosystem<br><br>partners driven innovation in<br><br>2023?

Martin: It is impossible to overstate the

importance of our partners. A significant

number of them are integral to our innovation

activities and several have worked with us for

many years.

Our requirements are frequently unique and

very demanding – so we work hard to help

suppliers engage with our objectives in a

spirit of mutual trust and respect. The

importance of these relationships has been

further recognized at ASML Board level

through the recent appointment of Wayne

Allan as Executive Vice President (EVP) and

Chief Strategic Sourcing & Procurement

Officer (CSPO), heading up the supply

improvement program which aims to

radically step up our ability to work with

suppliers and deliver what our customers

demand. We saw a number of developments

in our supplier relationships in 2023. Having

partnered with imec (Interuniversitair Micro-

Elektronica Centrum) – a leading research

and innovation hub in nanoelectronics and

digital

technologies – since the late 1980s, in 2023

we signed a new Memorandum of

Understanding (MoU) to intensify our

collaboration around High NA. The MoU

includes the installation and service of our full

suite of advanced equipment in the imec

pilot line in Leuven, Belgium. This facility will

enable us to work alongside imec to develop

a new process that will take us to the next

semiconductor process node.

Q How do you safeguard<br><br>ASML’s ability to continually<br><br>improve?

Martin: We aim for R&D spend to be in the

10-15% range of revenue. As our revenue

increases rapidly, so too does our financial

commitment to supporting innovation – in

2023, we invested €4.0 billion in R&D. Of

that amount, we spend around 10% on pure

explorative research that aims to fill the

innovation pipeline. We continue to work with

our partners, for example by investing in a

high-transmissive illuminator with ZEISS.

Q Can you update us on future<br><br>developments such as Hyper<br><br>NA?

Martin: Hyper NA with an NA higher than 0.7 is

certainly an opportunity that will become more

visible from around 2030. It is likely to be most

relevant for Logic – and it will need to be more

affordable than double patterning – but it may

also be an opportunity for DRAM.

For us, the key thing is that Hyper NA is

driving our overall EUV capability platform to

improve both cost and lead time.

Regarding the industry in general, digitalization

will continue to enable many of the solutions

that are transforming our planet. Although

systems such as our EUV platform require a

great deal of energy, I think that we make a

positive contribution to reducing GHG

emissions by enabling the development of

technologies such as smart grids and electric

vehicles. More such technologies will follow – so

at ASML we can feel good that our customers

and their customers are engaging with society

in a positive way when it comes to the

environment.

Digitalization will<br><br>continue to enable<br><br>many of the solutions<br><br>that are transforming<br><br>our planet.”
Martin van den Brink
President, Chief Technology Officer<br><br>and Vice Chair of the Board of Management Q How do you envisage ASML<br><br>on its 50th anniversary?
--- ---

Martin: It is fair to say that our innovations

are likely to be restricted by more

boundaries, whether in terms of cost, cycle

time or technology limits. Our challenge is to

make efficiency gains in all these areas over

the next 10 years – to make sure not only

that we invent new solutions and ways of

working but that these can be put into cost-

effective and timely practice for our

customers. It’s all about doing everything we

can to turn theory into practical reality, giving

our customers the most efficient possible

operation in every regard: cost, sustainability

and productivity.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 Q&A WITH THE CTO CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 21
Driving Moore’s Law across four decades of innovation (continued)
In conversation with our President, Chief Technology Officer and Vice Chair of the Board of Management
Martin van den Brink

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Innovation is crucial to the continuing

success of our business. Every day, more

than 15,500 of our engineers take on the

exciting challenge of innovating across our

holistic lithography portfolio, including the

most advanced lithography systems in the

world. To stay ahead, we invest heavily in

R&D – in 2023, we spent €4.0 billion in this

vital area, compared with €3.3 billion in 2022,

further building our capability to meet

customer needs.

A collaborative network at the cutting

edge of our digital future

To drive the fast pace of innovation in our

value chain, we rely on our strong innovation

ecosystem to make progress together. We

work hard at developing long-term

relationships with our customers, suppliers,

research partners and peers, listening to and

pushing each other to continuously innovate.

We trust our supply chain to manufacture

most system parts and modules and many

are deeply involved in developing our new

technology.

Read more in Social - Innovation ecosystem on

page 137 >

We innovate across our entire product portfolio

and we aim to do this at the same pace as our

customers through large and sustained

investment in R&D, involving a diverse

international academic network. This so-called

‘double helix’ approach is designed to

accelerate innovation and provides access to a

large leading-edge knowledge base across a

wide range of technologies.

Read more in Our business model on page 32 >

Generating ideas and finding

technological innovations and solutions

Our R&D teams focus on generating and

exploring exciting new ideas and

demonstrating their feasibility in the long

term, as well as finding technological

solutions to the challenges colleagues may

face with any products and applications that

have already moved into development.

Our researchers continuously scout for

technological innovations and solutions –

within the semiconductor industry and

beyond – searching for those that can help

us support our customers while delivering on

our ESG sustainability commitments.

We innovate through<br><br>partnerships.<br><br>By developing our<br><br>technology in close<br><br>collaboration with our<br><br>customers, we seek to<br><br>build today what they<br><br>need tomorrow.
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 INNOVATION STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 22
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How we innovate
As a crucial manufacturer of lithography equipment, ASML is a vital part of the semiconductor ecosystem<br><br>value chain. We don't innovate in isolation, but work as architects and integrators – collaborating closely<br><br>with customers, our supply chain, and industry and research partners in a strong innovation ecosystem.

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Filling the innovation funnel

We encourage our experts to build wide

networks in the broader technology

space. This supports the constant stream

of new ideas into the technology pipeline

that flows through what we call our

‘innovation funnel’ (see diagram). Based

on our fundamental understanding of our

markets and the needs of chipmakers,

we select new ideas that have the

potential to advance our products and

their customer application.

Ideas that pass the ideation and selection

stages are assessed in the research

stage for their feasibility to go into our

product generation process (PGP), a

decision-based process for product

development that includes an ESG

assessment as well as the building and

testing of system prototypes in the

relevant environments. Prototypes that

pass these tests may eventually lead to

new product releases.

ASML Fellowship Program

At ASML, we recognize and honor our

technical experts because we know that

our company’s success is built on

technology leadership. One of the ways

we do this is through the ASML

Fellowship Program.

Innovation achievements in 2023
Our goal is to give customers the products<br><br>and capabilities they need to deliver on<br><br>technology’s potential to make a positive<br><br>contribution to society. As well as creating<br><br>some of the most advanced machines in<br><br>the world, this includes an increased focus<br><br>on sustainability through parts<br><br>commonality and reuse, and<br><br>improvements in the performance<br><br>and energy efficiency of our products<br><br>to reduce costs and waste.<br><br>Innovation achievements of the last<br><br>12 months include:<br><br>•Soft x-ray (SXR) scatterometry. Using<br><br>10-20 nm wavelength light, this is a<br><br>revolutionary next-generation metrology<br><br>for 3D metrology suitable for measuring<br><br>3D profiles of advanced devices such as<br><br>Gate All Around (GAA) transistors. •Generation of smooth mirror surfaces.<br><br>This innovation is used on the EXE:5200<br><br>mirror block. The mirror block carries the<br><br>wafer table, with its mirrors used to<br><br>position the wafer in three dimensions.<br><br>The smooth mirror surface has greater<br><br>stiffness compared to other glass<br><br>materials, enabling it to better cope with<br><br>the extreme stage accelerations in our<br><br>next-generation NXE and EXE systems.

In 2023, three new ASML Fellows were

appointed, and two of our current Fellows

were promoted to the titles of Senior and

Corporate Fellow, respectively, for their

personal outstanding technical

contributions.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 INNOVATION CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 23
How we innovate (continued)

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ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 MARKETPLACE STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 24
The world around us
The macroeconomic situation remains volatile and we continue to<br><br>see macro trends such as high interest rates, inflation, fear of<br><br>recession and geopolitical tensions increasing in some parts of<br><br>the world. The semiconductor industry is trying to manage its<br><br>inventory levels in some end-market segments to balance supply<br><br>and demand.
--- ---
The semiconductor market was still in the<br><br>aftermath of the COVID-19 crisis in 2023,<br><br>during which large stimulus packages<br><br>accelerated economic growth. This created<br><br>shortages in supply in the electronics industry<br><br>as companies built safety stocks to increase<br><br>future resilience.<br><br>End demand for electronics slowed as we<br><br>reached the end of the pandemic, while the<br><br>supply chain was still building safety buffers.<br><br>This resulted in a supply chain correction in<br><br>2023 which impacted our industry.<br><br>In the context of demand for lithography,<br><br>some customers delayed the timing of their<br><br>demand for specific systems, as some of<br><br>their facilities were not ready to receive the<br><br>systems as well as a result of their end<br><br>demand. This provided an opportunity to<br><br>allocate these systems to customers whose<br><br>demand profile we could not initially meet.<br><br>Despite these delays, for certain system<br><br>types the supply is still the main constraint,<br><br>with demand being higher than supply,<br><br>albeit at a reduced level than was<br><br>experienced at the start of the year. All in all, global trends – such as generative<br><br>AI, the energy transition, the electrification<br><br>of mobility and the industrial Internet of<br><br>Things (IoT) – continue to fuel<br><br>semiconductor growth in the longer term.<br><br>Our highest-priority objective is to optimize<br><br>supply so that we can deliver and live up to<br><br>our customers’ expectations.<br><br>We have strong confidence that the<br><br>semiconductor ecosystem will continue to<br><br>innovate and grow at a high single-digit<br><br>compound annual growth rate. Factors that<br><br>may impact our business are explained in<br><br>more detail over the next few pages,<br><br>including:
1.Macroeconomic and geopolitical<br><br>trends
2.Semiconductor market trends
3.Semiconductor application areas
4.Semiconductor industry market 1. Macroeconomic and geopolitical trends
--- --- ---
Economic outlook Middle East conflict Russia-Ukraine war
Description<br><br>The macroeconomic situation did not<br><br>improve in 2023; inflation rates and interest<br><br>rates stayed relatively high and the fear of<br><br>recession, amid the geopolitical conflicts,<br><br>remained. The continued macroeconomic<br><br>uncertainty means our customers in<br><br>different market segments have remained<br><br>cautious. A later recovery of markets is<br><br>expected, and the timing and shape of the<br><br>recovery slope remains unclear.<br><br>What it means for ASML<br><br>Our EUV business saw a slight shift in<br><br>demand timing, predominantly driven by<br><br>a lack of readiness of fabs. This was due<br><br>to the market environment and a<br><br>shortage of people who have the<br><br>capability to build advanced fabs. With<br><br>DUV demand higher than we can deliver,<br><br>particularly in China, we are working<br><br>closely with our customers and suppliers<br><br>to ride out the uncertainty and manage<br><br>the risks. Description<br><br>The military action in the Middle East is an<br><br>additional factor in the current uncertainty<br><br>in the macroeconomic environment.<br><br>What it means for ASML<br><br>Both ASML and our customers have<br><br>operations in the Middle East. Additional<br><br>military action in the region has and could<br><br>further adversely affect the global<br><br>economy, financial markets and the<br><br>supply chain. This may impact our people<br><br>and operations and our customers'<br><br>operations, customer demand, delivery of<br><br>products and services to customers, and<br><br>the ability to obtain parts and components<br><br>due to supply chain disruption. The safety<br><br>and well-being of our employees and their<br><br>families are a priority for us. Description<br><br>The military action in Ukraine is an element<br><br>of the current uncertainty in the<br><br>macroeconomic environment.<br><br>What it means for ASML<br><br>While we do not have operations in Russia<br><br>or Ukraine, sanctions and other measures<br><br>taken in response to the military action<br><br>have adversely affected – and could<br><br>further affect – the global economy,<br><br>financial markets and the supply chain.<br><br>This may impact our customer demand,<br><br>delivery of products and services to<br><br>customers, and the ability of us and our<br><br>suppliers to obtain parts, components and<br><br>gas supply due to supply chain<br><br>disruption.
Read more in Our business strategy<br><br>Read more in Risk - How we manage risk

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1. Macroeconomic and geopolitical trends (continued)
Global geopolitics –<br><br>technological sovereignty Global geopolitics – export controls Mitigating climate change
Description<br><br>Semiconductors are crucial to the economic<br><br>and strategic development of countries and<br><br>regions, with the strategic importance of the<br><br>semiconductor industry only likely to grow.<br><br>Many countries and regions are pushing for<br><br>‘technological sovereignty’ to ensure security<br><br>of supply, resilience and technological<br><br>leadership in semiconductor technologies<br><br>and applications. This is fueling capital<br><br>expenditures in new regions.<br><br>What it means for ASML<br><br>As governments increasingly see<br><br>semiconductor manufacturing as<br><br>strategically significant, chips acts are<br><br>incentivizing our customers to build<br><br>manufacturing facilities in the US, Europe<br><br>and Asia.<br><br>Besides sharing our views with<br><br>governments on semiconductor<br><br>manufacturing, we work closely with our<br><br>customers to build the semiconductor<br><br>manufacturing ecosystem in new regions,<br><br>while retaining our focus on supporting<br><br>incumbent regions. Description<br><br>On June 30, 2023, the Dutch Government<br><br>published new regulations regarding the<br><br>export control of semiconductor equipment<br><br>that came into effect on September 1, 2023.<br><br>These controls focus on advanced chip<br><br>manufacturing technology, including the<br><br>most advanced deposition and immersion<br><br>lithography systems (NXT:2000i, NXT:2050i,<br><br>NXT:2100i and subsequent systems). In<br><br>addition, in October 2023, the US<br><br>government published updated US export<br><br>control regulations which include restrictions<br><br>on shipping mature immersion lithography<br><br>systems (NXT:1970 and NXT:1980) to a<br><br>limited group of customers in certain<br><br>countries (including China). Governments<br><br>have turned their attention to securing<br><br>sufficient semiconductor supplies to ensure<br><br>greater technological sovereignty and<br><br>support local industries. Significant<br><br>investments in the semiconductor industry<br><br>are being planned, with industry forecasts<br><br>suggesting that the top three semiconductor<br><br>manufacturers plan to invest over $300<br><br>billion in global capacity in the coming years.<br><br>While the industry is managing its overall<br><br>costs, price rises could ultimately be passed<br><br>on to the end market, driving up the price of<br><br>devices. Trade tensions and protectionism<br><br>introduce significant complexity across the<br><br>supply chain and the processes required. Like so many others in this trading environment,<br><br>the semiconductor industry needs to review<br><br>its global supply chain. At the end of 2023,<br><br>the Dutch Government partially revoked a<br><br>license for the shipment of NXT:2050i and<br><br>NXT:2100i lithography systems, impacting<br><br>a small number of customers in China.<br><br>What it means for ASML<br><br>The new regulations require ASML to apply<br><br>for Dutch export licenses for all shipments of<br><br>its most advanced DUV immersion<br><br>lithography systems (TWINSCAN NXT:2000i<br><br>and subsequent immersion systems) as well<br><br>as US licenses for mature systems for a<br><br>limited number of customers in China. The<br><br>governments will determine whether to grant<br><br>or deny the required export licenses and<br><br>provide further details to the company on any<br><br>conditions that apply. From January 1, 2024,<br><br>we will work with our customers to deliver<br><br>the non-advanced lithography systems<br><br>which are not impacted by the new<br><br>restrictions. We continue to educate<br><br>governments on the semiconductor<br><br>manufacturing process and ecosystem to<br><br>foster understanding of the potential impacts<br><br>of current and future regulatory measures. Description<br><br>With an urgent collective response needed<br><br>to limit global warming to 1.5°C, climate<br><br>change is a crucial matter for governments,<br><br>companies and individuals worldwide.<br><br>Energy and water resources<br><br>Technologies to counter climate change –<br><br>from the energy transition to electrification,<br><br>smart mobility and agricultural innovation –<br><br>require semiconductors. Semiconductors<br><br>are crucial to the generation, storage,<br><br>distribution and consumption of electrical<br><br>energy. They are at the core of smart (home)<br><br>devices and play an important role in<br><br>reducing overall energy consumption.<br><br>The semiconductor industry also has an<br><br>important role to play by reducing its own<br><br>climate impacts; the semiconductor<br><br>manufacturing process consumes large<br><br>volumes of energy and water resources.<br><br>Driving Moore’s Law to enable shrink and<br><br>improve computing power and storage<br><br>capacity fuels demand for these vital<br><br>resources. Innovative architectures and a<br><br>new way of looking at the entire ecosystem<br><br>will be required to enhance energy and<br><br>water resource efficiency of the industry. What it means for ASML<br><br>Our goal is to achieve net zero emissions<br><br>across our value chain by 2040. We plan to<br><br>do it by decreasing our GHG emissions and<br><br>reducing our carbon footprint across our<br><br>value chain, enhancing the energy efficiency<br><br>of our products and properties. We aim to<br><br>achieve this by reducing energy<br><br>consumption, using renewable energy and<br><br>compensating CO2 emissions.<br><br>We are also committed to using water<br><br>responsibly. This includes acting to preserve<br><br>water quality and conservation across our<br><br>operations and in the communities where we<br><br>operate.<br><br>We work closely with our customers and<br><br>suppliers to minimize waste and maximize<br><br>the value gained through use of resources.<br><br>By 2030, we aim to send zero waste from<br><br>operations to landfill or incineration.
Read more in Environmental – Energy efficiency and<br><br>climate actionand Environmental – Circular economy<br><br>Read more in Risk – Risk factors
Read more in Risk -Risk factors
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--- --- --- --- --- ---
The world around us (continued)

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The world around us (continued)
Technology is evolving at pace – we are moving fast toward<br><br>intelligent edge computing, the next level of computing which<br><br>focuses on processing data closer to its source rather than in<br><br>centralized data centers. The current era of mobile computing –<br><br>where you bring the computer with you – is moving us into an<br><br>immersive world of ubiquitous computing, with computing<br><br>power available everywhere, driven by artificial intelligence (AI).
--- 2. Semiconductor market trends
--- --- ---
Trends
Increasing market demand<br><br>The continuing convergence of wireless<br><br>communication, telecoms, media and cloud<br><br>technology via connected devices is driving<br><br>demand for advanced semiconductors<br><br>across the globe.<br><br>Growing populations, urbanization, the energy<br><br>transition and electrification to support smart<br><br>mobility are increasing demand for advanced<br><br>electronic devices.<br><br>Microchips are at the heart of these devices,<br><br>ranging from sensors and actuators to smart,<br><br>scalable and flexible computing solutions. This<br><br>is driving demand for chips in both leading<br><br>edge and mature process nodes, which are<br><br>specifically designed for innovative<br><br>applications in areas ranging from smart<br><br>homes, cities and industries to predictive<br><br>healthcare, smart wearables and autonomous<br><br>robotics.<br><br>The virtuous cycle of a data-<br><br>driven society<br><br>Moore’s Law is the guiding principle for the<br><br>semiconductor industry. It is the motor<br><br>behind the industry transition from mobile<br><br>computing to ubiquitous computing. This<br><br>transition continues to expand, driving the<br><br>three main elements in computing –<br><br>applications, data and algorithms – that feed each other in a virtuous cycle:<br><br>applications generate data, data fuels new<br><br>algorithms, which again leads to new<br><br>applications that generate new data, etc.<br><br>This is the virtuous cycle of our data-driven<br><br>society.<br><br>Unleashing the power of data<br><br>better and faster with AI<br><br>AI is becoming more ubiquitous and<br><br>embedded into the environment and smaller<br><br>devices, which moves us into the era of<br><br>intelligent edge computing – smart,<br><br>connected networks of more energy-efficient<br><br>devices that seamlessly communicate over<br><br>powerful 5G networks to unleash the power<br><br>of data better and faster than ever. This<br><br>provides people with more innovative<br><br>functionalities and applications, improves<br><br>human-to-machine interactions, and<br><br>enhances data management and analytics.<br><br>With intelligent edge computing, data<br><br>processing is brought as close to the source<br><br>of data as possible, rather than happening in<br><br>the cloud. The vast amounts of data and<br><br>insights that people can access are expected<br><br>to fuel semiconductor business growth and<br><br>the digital transformation. Edge intelligence and AI-empowered<br><br>mobile and ubiquitous computing<br><br>technologies are key to solving some of<br><br>society's toughest challenges, such as<br><br>mitigating climate change, enabling the<br><br>energy transition, creating sustainable<br><br>social communities and improving quality of<br><br>life.

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The world around us (continued)
3. Semiconductor application areas
--- Automotive
---
Automotive is one of the fastest-<br><br>growing market segments driven, by<br><br>electrification, autonomy and other<br><br>mega trends. Integrated automotive<br><br>systems consist of a full range of<br><br>scalable, flexible computing solutions<br><br>that require advanced and mature<br><br>semiconductor devices. Advanced<br><br>driver-assistance systems (ADAS)<br><br>enabled by electronics and<br><br>semiconductors, considered<br><br>supercomputers on wheels, are also<br><br>expected to contribute to the growth<br><br>of the automotive segment in the<br><br>semiconductor industry.
Smart industry<br><br>Smart industry devices use real-<br><br>time data analytics and machine-<br><br>to-machine sensors to optimize<br><br>processes, foresee bottlenecks,<br><br>and prevent errors and injuries. Autonomous robotics
---
A new generation of lightweight<br><br>robots connected to a wide network<br><br>and fitted with smart sensors enable<br><br>humans and machines to safely and<br><br>efficiently work side by side.
Predictive healthcare<br><br>Predictive analysis of health data<br><br>from multiple sources combined<br><br>with machine learning and AI is<br><br>being harnessed to improve<br><br>healthcare services and patient<br><br>outcomes. Global connectivity<br><br>5G enables a new kind of network<br><br>that is designed to connect almost<br><br>everyone and everything around the<br><br>world, including machines, objects<br><br>and devices.
---
Smart cities<br><br>Smart cities use technology and<br><br>digital networks to integrate<br><br>transportation and infrastructure,<br><br>connectivity, energy and lighting,<br><br>and other public services. Mixed reality
---
Augmented reality and virtual reality<br><br>technology can combine to bring<br><br>the real world and digital elements<br><br>together (so that physical and digital<br><br>objects coexist and interact in real<br><br>time) to create the next-level user<br><br>experience.
Wearables
Wearable devices (such as fitness<br><br>trackers smart watches, smart rings,<br><br>jewelry or glasses) are able<br><br>to connect to the internet and<br><br>continuously monitor, track and<br><br>transmit personal data. Artificial intelligence
---
Artificial intelligence (AI) is about developing systems that have the<br><br>intellectual processes characteristic of humans, such as the ability to<br><br>reason, discover meaning, generalize or learn from past experience. Due<br><br>to the exponential growth in computation, along with the availability of<br><br>massive data sets and improved algorithms, AI has made huge<br><br>advancements over a short period of time. Today, AI not only matches,<br><br>but also beats human performance in many areas. Smart home<br><br>Smart home devices, such as<br><br>thermostats, lights and smart TVs,<br><br>learn a user’s habits to provide<br><br>automated support for everyday<br><br>tasks.
--- Energy transition<br><br>The energy transition is expected to be a<br><br>key market driver, with semiconductors<br><br>enabling the global shift from fossil-<br><br>based energy production to renewable<br><br>sources like wind and solar. Semi-<br><br>conductors are crucial in the generation,<br><br>storage, distribution and consumption of<br><br>electrical energy. The energy transition<br><br>also drives the need for more intelligent<br><br>infrastructure and end devices.
---

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4. Semiconductor industry market
Semiconductor technology plays a crucial<br><br>role in shaping the interconnected and<br><br>intelligent network future. As a result, end<br><br>markets continue to grow. This overview<br><br>provides an outlook on current market size<br><br>and opportunity for the entire industry,<br><br>based on external research. The historical<br><br>market compound annual growth rate<br><br>(CAGR) from 2012 to 2022 was 7%. In<br><br>2022, almost 1.1 trillion chips were<br><br>manufactured around the world, feeding a<br><br>$0.6 trillion industry. 2023 was a correction<br><br>year, as consumer markets like PC slowed<br><br>following the peak in working-from-home<br><br>triggered by COVID-19. At the same time,<br><br>the supply chain continued to build safety<br><br>buffers in 2022 to increase resilience against<br><br>future supply chain disruptions, and these<br><br>needed to be corrected given lower<br><br>demand. Industry sources project that the<br><br>chip market (worldwide semiconductor<br><br>revenues) will resume growth after 2023 in<br><br>line with historical growth rates. The longer-<br><br>term market outlook is not expected to be<br><br>materially impacted by the 2023 downturn.<br><br>With an expected global annual wafer<br><br>capacity growth of over 780,000 wafer<br><br>starts per month per year, we plan to<br><br>increase our annual capacity to 90 EUV 0.33<br><br>NA and 600 DUV systems (2025-2026),<br><br>while ramping up EUV 0.55 NA (High NA)<br><br>capacity to 20 systems per year<br><br>(2027-2028). Smartphone Consumer<br><br>electronics Automotive Industrial<br><br>electronics Wired and wireless<br><br>infrastructure Servers, data<br><br>centers and storage
Key driver
Continued refresh of all semiconductor content including image sensors and edge AI processors Both low-power and<br><br>high-bandwidth<br><br>connectivity, sensors Strong IC content<br><br>growth: graphics<br><br>processing unit<br><br>(GPU), sensors,<br><br>vehicle-to-everything<br><br>(V2X) communication<br><br>sensing Connectivity, edge<br><br>processors, sensors High-bandwidth<br><br>connectivity, edge<br><br>processors High processor and<br><br>Memory growth,<br><br>hardware<br><br>accelerations<br><br>including GPU for AI<br><br>applications
2020 market size (bn) Total
117 50 40 51 38 76 471
2023 market size (bn)
104 60 79 74 50 78 534
2025 market opportunity (bn)
146 74 104 94 60 136 721
Outlook CAGR 2020-2025 (%)
5% 8% 21% 14% 10% 12% 9%
Source: Based on external market research firms

All values are in US Dollars.

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The world around us (continued)
Logic and Memory chips
--- ---
Logic chips are the ‘brains’ that process<br><br>information in electronic devices. They are<br><br>produced by two groups of manufacturers:<br><br>integrated device manufacturers (IDMs),<br><br>which design and manufacture Logic chips,<br><br>and contract manufacturers, known as<br><br>foundries. Foundry manufacturers produce<br><br>chips for ‘fabless’ companies that focus on<br><br>chip design and distribution but do not<br><br>manufacture microchips themselves.<br><br>Memory chips can store large amounts of<br><br>data in a very small area. They are used in<br><br>an increasing variety of electronic products<br><br>like servers, data centers, smartphones,<br><br>high-performance computing, automotive,<br><br>or personal computers and other<br><br>communication devices. There are two<br><br>main classes of chips typically made in<br><br>dedicated Memory-chip factories: NAND<br><br>chips that can store data even when a<br><br>device is powered off and DRAM Memory<br><br>chips that are used to efficiently provide<br><br>data to the processor. Logic and Memory chips can vary greatly in<br><br>complexity and capability. For example, the<br><br>most advanced chips power leading-edge<br><br>technology, in AI, big data and automotive<br><br>technology, while simpler low-cost chips<br><br>integrate sensing capabilities into everyday<br><br>technology to create a vast network of<br><br>connected devices, the loT.<br><br>During 2023 generative AI got a lot of<br><br>traction, which resulted in strong demand<br><br>for GPU chips (Logic) and High-Bandwidth<br><br>Memory (HBM) at our customers. Both<br><br>products are still a small portion of the<br><br>overall Logic and Memory market.
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--- --- --- --- --- ---
The world around us (continued)

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Our purpose is to unlock the

potential of people and society by

pushing technology to new limits.

Our vision is that we enable

ground-breaking technology to

solve some of humanity’s

toughest challenges. Our strategy

and priorities are designed to

deliver on these points and create

long-term sustainable value for

our stakeholders.

Our strategy is to
1 Grow our<br><br>holistic lithography<br><br>business
2 Secure unique supply<br><br>chain capabilities to<br><br>ensure business<br><br>continuity
3 Move toward adjacent<br><br>business<br><br>opportunities
4 Deliver on our ESG<br><br>sustainability<br><br>commitments 1. Grow our holistic lithography business
---

Fueled by strong customer demand, we

expect substantial growth opportunities for

our holistic lithography business in the

remainder of this decade.

We will continue to increase the capacity of

our company to meet the demand across

all market segments, preparing for

cyclicality while sharing risks and rewards

fairly with all stakeholders.

We will remain focused on protecting and

gaining market share by delivering on our

technology roadmap, securing our

competitiveness, and addressing our

growth and execution challenges.

We aim to innovate responsibly by improving

the simplicity, sustainability, serviceability,

manufacturability and scalability of our future

lithography solutions. By considering the cost

and complexity constraints of a new

technology from day one, we can efficiently

allocate our resources and cost-effectively

deliver new capabilities to our customers.

2025 2030
€30-40bn €44-60bn
Annual revenue Annual revenue
54-56% 56-60%
Gross margin Gross margin

Based on different market scenarios, shared

during our 2022 Investor Day, we presented

an opportunity to achieve the following in

2025 and 2030:

•In 2025: annual revenue between

approximately €30 billion and €40 billion

with a gross margin between

approximately 54% and 56%

•In 2030: annual revenue between

approximately €44 billion and €60 billion

with a gross margin between

approximately 56% and 60%

Our priorities

Our holistic approach to lithography

integrates a set of products that enables

chipmakers to develop, optimize and control

the semiconductor production process.

Through the continued execution of our

strategic priorities, we aim to deliver cost-

effective solutions that support all

applications, from leading-edge to mature

nodes, and enable the extension of the

industry roadmap into the next decade.

Our five priorities are:
OurBusiness_Icon1.jpg Strengthen<br><br>customer trust OurBusiness_Icon4.jpg Enhance the value of EUV<br><br>0.33 NA for manufacturing
Enhance our innovation and operational<br><br>excellence capabilities to deliver on our<br><br>roadmap for new product introductions<br><br>and system deliveries, on time and with<br><br>the highest quality, to address the needs<br><br>of our customers. Increase our focus on<br><br>sustainability through parts commonality<br><br>and reuse, and drive improvements in the<br><br>performance and energy efficiency of our<br><br>products to reduce costs and waste. Secure high-volume manufacturing<br><br>performance and enhance the value of<br><br>EUV technology by extending our product<br><br>portfolio for future nodes. Improve cost<br><br>effectiveness for our customers by<br><br>improving system performance and<br><br>energy efficiency.
OurBusiness_Icon2.jpg Build a winning position<br><br>in holistic lithography OurBusiness_Icon5.jpg Insert EUV 0.55 NA into<br><br>high-volume manufacturing
Build a winning position in edge placement<br><br>metrology and process control to support<br><br>customer needs. Integrate our complete<br><br>product portfolio into a holistic lithography<br><br>solution to optimize and control lithography<br><br>performance. Insert EUV 0.55 NA (High NA) in Logic and<br><br>DRAM for high-volume manufacturing from<br><br>2025 onward to support customer<br><br>roadmaps by simplifying patterning<br><br>schemes and decreasing defect density.
OurBusiness_Icon3.jpg Continue innovation<br><br>leadership in DUV
Continue our innovation leadership,<br><br>enabling execution of customer roadmaps<br><br>by driving DUV to the highest level of<br><br>performance while remaining cost-<br><br>competitive. Expand our installed base<br><br>and support customer needs. Toward the end of 2023 and in light of our<br><br>expectation that 2024 would be a year of<br><br>transition, we reviewed our strategic<br><br>business priorities, adding operational<br><br>excellence and people empowerment as<br><br>supplementary focus points.
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 OUR BUSINESS STRATEGY STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 30
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Focused on sustainable long-term value creation

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2. Secure unique supply chain<br><br>capabilities 4. Deliver on our ESG sustainability commitments
We believe digital technologies can have a<br><br>positive impact on the world – supporting<br><br>society to make progress and addressing<br><br>environmental and social challenges.<br><br>Enabled by microchips, these technologies<br><br>are fueling a digital transformation that is<br><br>helping to address global challenges, such<br><br>as tackling climate change by reducing<br><br>energy consumption and GHG emissions.<br><br>We recognize that new technology comes<br><br>with new challenges – and we’re committed<br><br>to using our innovations to enable the<br><br>semiconductor industry to reduce its<br><br>footprint. We aim to help our customers<br><br>minimize the materials and energy required<br><br>to produce advanced microchips. Within<br><br>our own operations, including our supply<br><br>chain, we aim to minimize our environmental<br><br>impact while having a positive role in society<br><br>for our employees, the communities around<br><br>us and everyone involved in our innovation<br><br>ecosystem. Our ESG sustainability strategy<br><br>Our aim is to create long-term sustainable<br><br>value for our stakeholders, while also<br><br>contributing to the United Nations’<br><br>Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Our<br><br>ESG sustainability strategy is based on a<br><br>materiality assessment that helps us identify<br><br>and focus on the ESG sustainability topics<br><br>where we can have the biggest impact.<br><br>Environmental<br><br>We want to continue to expand computing<br><br>power but with minimal waste, energy use<br><br>and emissions. That's why we focus on<br><br>energy efficiency and climate action, and a<br><br>circular economy.<br><br>Social<br><br>We want to ensure that responsible growth<br><br>benefits all our stakeholders – we aim to offer<br><br>an attractive workplace for all, to build and<br><br>maintain a responsible supply chain, to fuel<br><br>innovation in our ecosystem and to be a<br><br>valued partner in our communities. Governance<br><br>We act on our responsibilities and aim to<br><br>fully anchor them in the way we do<br><br>business through our focus on integrated<br><br>governance, engaged stakeholders and<br><br>transparent reporting.
In order to deliver on our growth<br><br>aspirations, we need to secure innovation,<br><br>scale-up and continuity, while preserving<br><br>sound business conditions and a<br><br>constructive collaboration model with our<br><br>unique technology suppliers.<br><br>Our supply chain is a critical enabler of our<br><br>ambition to grow our core business.<br><br>Therefore, we are proactively assessing<br><br>our supply base for projected demand<br><br>and control of future roadmap-enabling<br><br>capabilities.
See how we're delivering on our ESG<br><br>sustainability commitments
3. Move toward adjacent business<br><br>opportunities
Once core growth is secured, we can<br><br>move into adjacent business opportunities<br><br>representing additional growth<br><br>opportunities. We aim to do this by<br><br>focusing on synergetic opportunities at the<br><br>forefront of holistic transistor scaling to<br><br>best serve our customers. This includes<br><br>leveraging product and technology<br><br>synergies, and tapping into different future<br><br>semiconductor scaling engines.
Read more on how we're delivering on our<br><br>vision on pages 18, 35, 89, 105, 124, 135, 144  >
Read more in ESG - Our material ESG sustainability<br><br>topics
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--- --- --- --- --- ---
Focused on sustainable long-term value creation (continued)

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People and culture Manufacturing facilities Ecosystem of innovation partners
We depend on more than 42,400<br><br>talented, dedicated and highly motivated<br><br>employees who live our values of<br><br>challenge, collaborate and care.<br><br>Every day, our colleagues in R&D,<br><br>manufacturing, customer support,<br><br>sourcing and supply chain, and<br><br>support functions take on the<br><br>exciting challenge of building and<br><br>maintaining the most advanced<br><br>lithography, metrology and<br><br>inspection systems in the world. We have eight manufacturing sites in the EU, US<br><br>and Asia that provide high-precision, highly<br><br>controlled environments where we assemble, test and<br><br>deliver our complex lithography and metrology and<br><br>inspection portfolio, from prototype to final product.
Read more on page 13 >
Read more on pages 34 and 107 >
Our lithography solutions are the result of strong partnerships based<br><br>on trust, respect, and shared risks and incentives to compete and<br><br>drive innovation.
C<br><br>a<br><br>p<br><br>i<br><br>t<br><br>a<br><br>l Capital Innovation Research partners<br><br>We co-develop R&D expertise within<br><br>a wide network of technology<br><br>partners, such as universities and<br><br>research institutions – accelerating<br><br>innovation and giving us access to a<br><br>large leading-edge knowledge base<br><br>across a wide range of technologies.
--- --- --- ---
We have strong capital reserves, underpinned by a<br><br>robust balance sheet. Total shareholders' equity at the<br><br>end of 2023 amounts to €13.5 billion on a<br><br>consolidated balance sheet total of €40.0 billion and<br><br>net cash provided by operating activities of<br><br>€5.4 billion in 2023. In 2023, we spent a total of 4.0 billion on R&D. We do not innovate alone – our more than 15,500 R&D employees collaborate closely within an innovation ecosystem of key partners in the value chain.
Peers
Our semiconductor industry peers<br><br>optimize the total manufacturing<br><br>process by delivering<br><br>complementary process equipment,<br><br>critical materials, essential data and<br><br>new processing steps.
Read more on page 250 > Read more on page 137 >

All values are in Euros.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 OUR BUSINESS MODEL STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 32
What we need to create sustainable long-term value
The depth and breadth of our resources and the relationships we build are key to our continued<br><br>success in growing a sustainable holistic lithography business.

New_WhatWeNeedToCreate_Background.jpg

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 OUR BUSINESS MODEL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 33
Creating sustainable long-term value through holistic lithography
Our holistic approach is based on the intelligent integration of computational lithography, lithography<br><br>systems, and metrology and inspection.

Computational lithography

Computational lithography is used to

predict and enhance the process window

of our lithography systems by calculating

the optimal settings, depending on the

specific application. This takes place in

the research and development phase,

before a lithography system goes into

high-volume manufacturing.

Metrology and inspection

We have a suite of tools – optical and

e-beam metrology, high-resolution

inspection, and scanner and process

control software solutions – which control

the process window and help ensure that

the lithography system operates optimally

in the fab environment. Lithography is the

only way in which in-line adjustments can

optimize performance as part of the

manufacturing process.

Read more about the microchip manufacturing

process on page 12 >

Read more in Our products and services on page 13 >

Holistic lithography enables

shrink by optimizing setup and

control of a lithography system’s

process window for high-volume

manufacturing – improving the

system’s availability, reducing

downtime and overall costs, and

optimizing yield (or number of good

wafers per day) for our customers.

New_longterm sustainable value.jpg

Customers Employees Suppliers Shareholders Society
Our world-leading lithographic<br><br>systems enable our customers to<br><br>develop ever more powerful and<br><br>energy-efficient chips for new<br><br>applications and devices. At the<br><br>same time, we help our<br><br>customers reduce costs and their<br><br>environmental footprint. ASML is a growth business<br><br>providing employment<br><br>opportunities around the world.<br><br>We invest in people’s career<br><br>development and well-being, and<br><br>provide a diverse and inclusive<br><br>environment where people can<br><br>achieve their full potential. We innovate together with our<br><br>strategic partners, sharing<br><br>knowledge and tapping into each<br><br>other’s technology expertise to<br><br>drive ever higher levels of<br><br>complexity and capability. Long-<br><br>term relationships, close<br><br>collaboration, transparency and a<br><br>commitment to sustainability with<br><br>our suppliers are key to our<br><br>success. The effective and disciplined<br><br>investment of free cash flow drives<br><br>the profitable growth of our<br><br>company, and delivers solid<br><br>financial performance and a<br><br>healthy financial position. This<br><br>underpins our cash return policy<br><br>through share buybacks and<br><br>dividends. We play an active role in the<br><br>communities where we operate,<br><br>recognizing that when the<br><br>community thrives, we thrive. And<br><br>our collaborative ecosystem<br><br>nurtures innovation and benefits<br><br>society. For example, we share<br><br>our expertise with universities and research institutes, support young<br><br>tech companies and promote<br><br>science, technology, engineering<br><br>and mathematics (STEM)<br><br>education worldwide.<br><br>We are also committed to<br><br>creating sustainable value by<br><br>reducing our environmental<br><br>footprint, both from our<br><br>operations and during the use of<br><br>our products and services.
€27.6bn 80.3% €15.5bn €3.2bn €413 88%
Total net sales Employee engagement score Total sourcing spend Free cash flow1 Community partnership<br><br>program: amount invested per<br><br>employee % Reuse rate of parts returned<br><br>from field and factory
600 27% 5,100 €6.10 €16.4m 35.1 kt
Net system sales (in units) Gender diversity – % inflow of<br><br>women Number of suppliers Proposed annualized dividend<br><br>per share Contribution to<br><br>EU research projects Emissions from manufacturing<br><br>and building (scope 1 and 2)
#2 3.6% 57% €1.0bn 95% 15.0 Mt
TechInsights customer<br><br>satisfaction ranking Attrition rate % supplier spend covered by<br><br>commitment to sustainability<br><br>via Letter of Intent (LOI) Share buyback % of systems sold in the past<br><br>30 years still active in the field Indirect emissions from total<br><br>value change (scope 3)
Read more in Engaging with our<br><br>stakeholders – Customers Read more in Engaging with our<br><br>stakeholders – Employees Read more in Engaging with our<br><br>stakeholders – Suppliers Read more in Engaging with our<br><br>stakeholders – Shareholders Read more in Engaging with our<br><br>stakeholders – Society
  1. Free cash flow is a non-GAAP measure and is defined as net cash provided by operating activities (2023: €5,443.4 million and 2022: €8,486.8 million) minus purchase of property, plant and equipment (2023: €2,155.6 million and 2022: €1,281.8 million) and purchase of intangible assets (2023:

€40.6 million and 2022: €37.5 million). We believe that free cash flow is an important liquidity metric for our investors, reflecting cash that is available for acquisitions, to repay debt and to return money to our shareholders by means of dividends and share buybacks. Purchase of property, plant

and equipment and purchase of intangible assets are deducted from net cash provided by operating activities in calculating free cash flow because these payments are necessary to support the maintenance and investments in our assets to maintain the current asset base.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 OUR BUSINESS MODEL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 34
The sustainable long-term value we created for our stakeholders in 2023
Our success depends on strong, sustainable relationships with all stakeholders<br><br>in the value chain. We aim to create sustainable value for them, and to use their<br><br>input to develop our strategy, products and services.

New_Story2_IntroPage_180124.jpg

My new role will help<br><br>us safeguard our<br><br>innovation power as<br><br>we evolve to support<br><br>future growth.”
Ron Kool
Head of Business Performance Improvement
26 years at ASML Embracing change,<br><br>driving innovation
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Ron Kool spent over 25 years in<br><br>various product-related roles within<br><br>ASML, most recently leading our<br><br>deep ultraviolet (DUV) lithography<br><br>business. In 2023, he changed<br><br>direction to use the experience he<br><br>has gained in improving our<br><br>technology to help us improve<br><br>our business processes.
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SMALL PATTERNS. BIG IMPACT. STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 35
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New_Story2_Page2_Background_050124.jpg

A strong track record

When I joined ASML in 1997, it had fewer

than 2,000 employees. Today, it has over

42,400. We are shipping more products

each year and supporting many more

installed systems in the field. And we have

plans to grow further to support future

developments in the semiconductor industry.

ASML has always been driven by

technology. We employ the best technical

minds and let them focus on innovation. But

with the massive growth, we have had to

evolve how we work around the technology.

At ASML, we have always seen ourselves as

technology firefighters – ready to tackle any

challenge that comes our way. But

firefighters need to be organized or bad

things can happen. So ASML has continually

improved its processes for developing new

products and running the business so that

our innovators can continue to focus on what

they do best: innovation.

Building on strong foundations

The challenge is to do that in a structured

way. Business processes are, by nature,

cross-sector – they govern how different

parts of the company work together to

deliver what customers and shareholders

want. You need to make sure improvements

in one area don’t cause problems in others.

That means having insight from all affected

groups while keeping the end goal clearly in

focus.

In 2023, I stepped away from a career track

in technical and business line management

to start a Business Performance

Improvement (BPI) group. The group aims to

be a catalyst, to create a way of working that

makes cross-sector business performance

improvements more efficient.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, given my history, I

am copying our PGP approach as a blueprint

for BPI. In particular, we’ve adopted the

PGP’s key decision process, whereby we

only move on to the next step if everyone

agrees. It’s very much an ASML-tailored

approach, but it works well in our product

development, and I believe it will help on the

BPI side too: If you actively say yes to

something, you are more committed to it.

Evolving for the future

We currently have around 10 ongoing BPI

initiatives, covering areas such as reuse,

supporting field operations, planning and IT.

In each case, execution is handled mostly by

the main sector involved. Our role is to help

them communicate with the other sectors to

understand the wider impact and know who

to connect with to address issues. So, our

planning department is responsible for

improving planning, but they need input from

our sourcing and customer-facing

departments to make that happen.

Another example is an initiative to improve

how we ship systems to customers. Any

changes to shipping impact the whole work

chain for many operational sectors. First, we

need alignment with our customers, so sales

and customer support must be involved. But

we also need to consider the internal way of

working for departments such as finance,

because changes to shipping practices

could affect our compliance with customs

regulations and tax rules. Having the right

people from all the necessary departments

involved from the start allows us to discuss

and solve those issues at an early stage, and

not have to spend time fighting fires later.

Improving business processes is an ongoing

challenge for any company. At ASML, we

want to safeguard our innovation-driven way

of working while we evolve. That was my

motivation for making the change to BPI. It’s

a step we need to take to prepare for further

growth and the evolving needs of our

customers.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SMALL PATTERNS. BIG IMPACT. CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 36
We engage with our stakeholders on an ongoing basis,<br><br>working hard to understand how we impact them and<br><br>how we can best meet their needs. This approach plays<br><br>a key role in our ability to build stakeholder relationships<br><br>based on mutual trust.
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Read more on page 71 >
A new Stakeholder Engagement<br><br>Policy has been published.<br><br>Read more at asml.com
Our stakeholders – customers,<br><br>employees, suppliers,<br><br>shareholders and society – can<br><br>affect or be affected by our<br><br>business, and we embrace<br><br>continuous open dialogue and<br><br>knowledge-sharing for the<br><br>benefit of all parties. EngagingStakeholders_CustomersIcon.jpg At each stage of the customer relationship, we aim to foster trust, advocacy and<br><br>continuous engagement, with the goal of achieving complete customer satisfaction<br><br>and loyalty. As customer requirements become more complex, it takes longer to align<br><br>with a shared vision, so we seek to start earlier in the process. Transparency is key,<br><br>and our customer intimacy strategy helps us to leverage our innovations and develop<br><br>even more sophisticated solutions with our customers.
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Customers
What’s happening in their world
Macroeconomic uncertainty across different market<br><br>segments led our customers to more carefully control<br><br>capital expenditure and cash flow. In 2023, the market<br><br>continued to be influenced by governments focusing on<br><br>incentives to encourage the construction of<br><br>semiconductor manufacturing facilities in their respective<br><br>countries through chips acts. This led our customers to<br><br>look into expanding their manufacturing in these new<br><br>geographical locations. However, the readiness of these<br><br>'off-shore' facilities has been impacted due to a shortage<br><br>of experienced staff in these new locations. In addition,<br><br>new regulations were announced and imposed by the<br><br>Dutch, US and Japanese governments regarding the<br><br>export control of advanced semiconductor equipment<br><br>impacting the customers in China that are using<br><br>advanced lithography tools. We have deployed improvement actions identified in our<br><br>2022 customer survey. This has helped us focus on truly<br><br>understanding what customers need from us, and<br><br>validating that we are on the right track with the right<br><br>improvements. We have updated our customers<br><br>regularly on the progress being made, and in September<br><br>2023 we sent out our latest survey, including a new set<br><br>of questions to measure customer trust.<br><br>Survey results reveal that our customers have high levels of<br><br>trust in us, mainly driven by our transparency and<br><br>commitment to fairness in driving mutual success. They ask<br><br>us to listen closely to their feedback, resolve issues in a<br><br>timely manner, provide them with shorter delivery times for<br><br>good-quality products and continue pushing the technology<br><br>forward to meet their current and future needs.
How we respond How we engage
We had delivery challenges for our DUV systems (in<br><br>light of the heightened demand) and we kept our<br><br>customers informed about shipment status and<br><br>progress in our capacity plans. To respond to their<br><br>demand faster, we implemented the fast shipment<br><br>solution as a standard way of working in 2023. We<br><br>continued to closely collaborate with our customers to<br><br>support them in settling in to their new manufacturing<br><br>locations by providing them with operational flexibility<br><br>where needed. We worked with governments and our<br><br>customers to minimize the potential impact of new<br><br>regulations on our customers’ deliveries. In new<br><br>product design, we are increasing our focus on<br><br>reducing energy consumption of our systems. •Regular meetings with our key customers<br><br>•Technology Review Meetings where our senior<br><br>technology experts, our Chief Technology Officer (CTO)<br><br>and our Chief Business Officer (CBO) discuss technology<br><br>roadmaps and requirements with customers<br><br>•Executive Review Meetings where members of our senior<br><br>management team and Board of Management discuss<br><br>business and strategies with customers<br><br>•Operational Review Meetings where we review topics<br><br>related to our customers’ operational activities<br><br>•Annual customer feedback survey<br><br>•Voice of the Customer program, which provides firsthand<br><br>feedback about our customers’ needs and challenges for<br><br>employees without direct access to customers<br><br>•Various technology symposia and special events
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 OUR BUSINESS MODEL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 37
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Engaging with our stakeholders
EngagingStakeholders_EmployeesIcon.jpg We strive for engaged employees who are proud to work for ASML and deliver<br><br>jointly our vision and our ambitions as a company.
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Employees
What’s happening in their world How we engage
Our growth in recent years has been accompanied by<br><br>a large increase in our workforce. This has brought<br><br>benefits – such as a more diverse employee base – as<br><br>well as challenges. As the organization becomes more<br><br>complex, and the expectations of our customers and<br><br>stakeholders increase, the need to engage all our<br><br>employees becomes even more crucial.<br><br>Our employees feel respected and have trust in each<br><br>other. They continue to raise suggestions to improve<br><br>processes, and they like to have more opportunities to<br><br>participate in sustainability initiatives. •Employee engagement survey<br><br>•Training and development programs, including<br><br>employee evaluation and feedback<br><br>•ASML's Speak Up service<br><br>•Works Council/Unions<br><br>•Employee networks, such as Next, Women/WAVES,<br><br>Seniors, Parents, Veterans, Green ASML, Atypical,<br><br>SHADES and Proud<br><br>•ASML Ambassadors community, aiming to attract<br><br>and inspire talent, engage colleagues and show the<br><br>community our appreciation<br><br>•Internal communication and awareness, for example<br><br>through the intranet, our Ethics program,<br><br>department employee meetings and interactive<br><br>lunch sessions with Board members<br><br>•Onboarding program for new employees<br><br>•All-employee meeting and senior management<br><br>meetings
Read more in Social - Attractive workplace for all
How we respond
Since the pandemic, employee expectations have<br><br>continued to change, especially around work-life<br><br>balance, hybrid working and well-being. Staying on top<br><br>of these trends and understanding how the world of<br><br>work and expectations is evolving is a key part of our<br><br>strategy to attract and retain talent.<br><br>Inclusion, well-being and job enablement are the key<br><br>themes we will focus on to further increase our<br><br>engagement. Cross-collaboration and sharing<br><br>knowledge across teams also remain subjects for<br><br>improvement. EngagingStakeholders_SuppliersIcon.jpg We engage with our suppliers to help deliver our innovations.<br><br>They are critical to our value chain and our ambition to be a sustainable<br><br>leader in the semiconductor industry.
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Suppliers
What’s happening in their world How we engage
Over recent years, the world of our suppliers has been<br><br>quite turbulent. First of all, geopolitical uncertainties led<br><br>to disruptions in our supply chain due to less<br><br>availability of materials as well as increased price<br><br>levels. Furthermore, on a broader scale, the inflationary<br><br>pressure has hit our suppliers, mainly in areas of raw<br><br>materials, energy and wages. And finally, throughout<br><br>all those challenges, ASML continued to grow, and<br><br>despite short-term market uncertainties was still<br><br>requiring suppliers to build up further capacity for<br><br>future growth while putting pressure on cost and<br><br>quality performance.<br><br>The future growth in demand of ASML’s customers<br><br>can only be met if our suppliers are capable and willing<br><br>to keep up. •ASML’s Suppliers' Day<br><br>•Direct interactions via supplier account teams /<br><br>sourcing account leaders<br><br>•Supplier audits<br><br>•Site visits<br><br>•Newsletter<br><br>•Responsible Business Alliance (RBA) self-<br><br>assessment questionnaire (SAQ)<br><br>•ASML's Speak Up service<br><br>•Knowledge sessions on ESG sustainability
How we respond New_EngagingStakeholders_Suppliers_Image.jpg
Our commitment to our suppliers is that we want to<br><br>maintain and build a strong business relationship<br><br>based on mutual trust. We listen to our suppliers when<br><br>they openly share their pain points and challenges. We<br><br>are implementing improvements relating to quality<br><br>issues, early supplier involvement during the<br><br>industrialization phase of new product introductions,<br><br>reducing cycle time and cost, planning with our<br><br>suppliers and ESG sustainability.
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 OUR BUSINESS MODEL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 38
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Engaging with our stakeholders (continued)
EngagingStakeholders_ShareholdersIcon.jpg We aim to help shareholders – as well as financial and ESG sustainability<br><br>analysts – to understand our long-term investment opportunities. We<br><br>communicate with them about our financial growth strategies and opportunities,<br><br>financial and ESG sustainability performance, and our outlook and shareholder<br><br>returns.
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Shareholders
What’s happening in their world How we engage
For investors in the semiconductor industry, 2023 was an<br><br>interesting, highly dynamic year in which ASML showed<br><br>impressive sales growth while overall semiconductor<br><br>sales went down. Key focus areas for investors were to<br><br>get a better sense of when the industry will recover from<br><br>its short-term cyclical downturn in order to understand<br><br>how 2024 will shape up. There were also positive<br><br>developments of (generative) AI gaining strong traction.<br><br>In addition to uncertainties around a potential recession,<br><br>inflationary costs, the Russia-Ukraine war and the conflict<br><br>in the Middle East, the Dutch and US governments<br><br>published new regulations in 2023 regarding the export<br><br>controls of semiconductor equipment. •AGM<br><br>•Investor calls and Investor Days<br><br>•Company quarterly results presentations and press<br><br>releases<br><br>•Various (ESG) investor conferences and roadshows<br><br>•Various sustainability questionnaires, assessments<br><br>and survey feedback<br><br>•Direct personal interactions in line with our Bilateral<br><br>Contacts Policy as published on our website
How we respond New_EngagingStakeholders_Shareholders_Image.jpg
During the year, ASML’s management and Investor<br><br>Relations team actively engaged with our investor<br><br>community to discuss specific topics that are relevant<br><br>to ASML’s equity story. We focus on being<br><br>transparent, accessible, credible, reliable and<br><br>responsive. We actively engage with the investor<br><br>community via a large number of (ESG-related)<br><br>conferences, roadshows and conference calls. We<br><br>also encourage investors to visit our Veldhoven (NL) or<br><br>Wilton (US) facilities to be able to discuss our capacity<br><br>expansion plans as well as our technology challenges<br><br>and opportunities in our ASML Experience Centers. EngagingStakeholders_SocietyIcon.jpg We know that our actions and our activities have an impact beyond ASML – on<br><br>the environment, for example, and on the world around us in its broadest sense,<br><br>which is how we define society. We engage with organizations, communities and<br><br>other bodies in society on a wide range of issues – from reducing our<br><br>environmental footprint to regulatory matters and fulfilling our commitment to<br><br>playing an active role in the communities where we operate.
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Society
What’s happening in their world How we engage
Increasingly the local community feels the impact of<br><br>the rapid development of our headquarters in the<br><br>Brainport Eindhoven region, home to around half of<br><br>ASML’s employees. Our community stakeholders<br><br>expect ASML to take its fair share in keeping the<br><br>region attractive and inclusive for all community<br><br>members, with sufficient affordable housing,<br><br>sustainable transportation, a strong (technology)<br><br>education system for all and opportunities for the<br><br>underserved. Meanwhile, our headquarter campus<br><br>expansion should take into account the interests of<br><br>our close neighbors. With industry unions and associations<br><br>•Member conferences and technical forums<br><br>•Member consultation on standards<br><br>•Brainport Eindhoven<br><br>With governments and authorities<br><br>•Dialogue with tax authorities<br><br>•Relevant EU roundtable discussions<br><br>•Compliance reporting<br><br>•Proactive dialogue with government, authorities and<br><br>municipalities<br><br>With communities and other bodies<br><br>•In the Veldhoven region, via regular dialogue at six-<br><br>weekly intervals with local government<br><br>representatives and local residents. In addition, we<br><br>regularly hold information events, open house events,<br><br>town halls and other opportunities for discussion,<br><br>and also invite local input through the 'ASML<br><br>Dichtbij' (ASML close by) section of our website.<br><br>• At our site in Wilton in the US, we held information<br><br>sessions during 2023 where local officials and<br><br>neighbors could discuss our expansion plans<br><br>• Quarterly surveys of a random sample of the 800,000<br><br>residents of the Brainport Eindhoven region<br><br>• Regular discussion between the managers of our 17<br><br>community programs and various stakeholders and<br><br>specialists<br><br>• Through (social) media, conferences and other mass<br><br>communication channels, we have an intensive<br><br>communication plan to inform and engage with<br><br>stakeholders around our communities
How we respond
Launched in collaboration with our ESG Sustainability<br><br>team at the start of 2023, ASML’s Society &<br><br>Community Engagement team focuses on four areas:<br><br>boosting the attractiveness of the communities, aiming<br><br>to keep these communities inclusive, promoting<br><br>science and technology education, and supporting<br><br>ESG innovation. Within these focus areas, we and our<br><br>stakeholders have identified and formed 17 program<br><br>strategies that we began to execute during 2023.
Read more in Social - Valued partner in our communities
Operating in an international industry with a global<br><br>value chain where strong incentives to compete and<br><br>drive innovation are key, we work with and collaborate<br><br>with governments on all levels (national, regional and<br><br>local) to ensure our growth and objectives are clear<br><br>and can be supported.<br><br>Read more in our ASML Government & External Affairs<br><br>Report at asml.com
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 OUR BUSINESS MODEL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 39
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Engaging with our stakeholders (continued)

New_CFO_IntroPage_Background_050124.jpg

Q Can you reflect on ASML's<br><br>financial performance in<br><br>2023?

Roger: In short, we did what we said we

expected to do at the beginning of the year.

We delivered on our expectations in spite of

the challenges.

We have reported an excellent financial

performance, with sales up by 30% and a

gross margin of 51.3%. When you take the

macro environment into account – inflation,

high interest rates, falling GDPs, geopolitical

tensions and a downturn in the

semiconductor industry – this achievement

was little short of remarkable.

Diving into some further details, we showed

a strong increase in net income compared to

  1. We were able to successfully place a

bond amounting to €1.0 billion. In addition to

this, we repurchased shares for a total

consideration of €1.0 billion and paid

dividends totaling €2.3 billion.

Free cash flow1 was low compared to

previous years by design. In a challenging

economic climate, we took the decision to

help our customers navigate their liquidity

issues by offering extended payment terms,

while continuing to support our supply chain.

Understanding and balancing the interests of

all our stakeholders is one of our most

important responsibilities, and in this instance

helping our ecosystem partners through

difficult times was the right thing to do.

However, this inevitably meant delayed

payments and therefore reduced cash flow.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 Q&A WITH THE CFO STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 40
Robust results in a challenging macro environment
In conversation with our Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Roger Dassen
We delivered on our<br><br>expectations in spite of the<br><br>challenges.”
---
Roger Dassen
Executive Vice President<br><br>and Chief Financial Officer
1. Free cash flow is a non-GAAP measure and is defined as net cash provided by operating activities (2023: €5,443.4 million and 2022: €8,486.8 million) minus purchase of property, plant and equipment (2023: €2,155.6 million and 2022: €1,281.8 million) and<br><br>purchase of intangible assets (2023: €40.6 million and 2022: €37.5 million). We believe that free cash flow is an important liquidity metric for our investors, reflecting cash that is available for acquisitions, to repay debt and to return money to our shareholders<br><br>by means of dividends and share buybacks. Purchase of property, plant and equipment and purchase of intangible assets are deducted from net cash provided by operating activities in calculating free cash flow because these payments are necessary to<br><br>support the maintenance and investments in our assets to maintain the current asset base.
---

New_CFO_Page2_Background_050124.jpg

Q What were the main drivers<br><br>for that performance?

Roger: Firstly, we had been significantly

supply-constrained in both 2021 and 2022,

and over the last 12 months we saw those

constraints ease. The supply bottlenecks

created by COVID-19 restrictions have now

worked their way through the system. This

meant that over 2021 and 2022, we built up

a very significant backlog that we could start

eating into in 2023.

Secondly, although we have received

significant orders from customers in China

for a number of years, our fill rate has been

less than 50%. This meant that, while some

of our other customers were understandably

taking their foot off the accelerator, we could

take the opportunity to step up our China

order fill rate this year.

Q How do you manage industry<br><br>cyclicality?

Roger: Cyclicality is no stranger to this

industry, obviously. Key is to focus on the

longer term while managing short-term cost

and working capital challenges. The secular

trends remain very strong and we believe

that the years ahead will see a significant

uptick in the market – so while we address

the downcycle, we also have to prepare for

the upcycle that all the indicators say is

around the corner.

Managing costs is always important, so

during 2023 we focused on our selling,

general and administrative costs, and also

looked after our cash. In addition, we slowed

our hiring pace. In the last two years we had

boosted our staff by around 10,000 FTEs. In

2023 we were able to put more resources

and effort into making them feel welcome

and training them in our values and how we

work.

We have also spent considerable time

making sure that our organization is fit for

purpose. From finance and tax to IT, HR and

other areas, our enabling functions exist to

support ASML’s growth. This means we

must continually focus on working together

and not in silos, collaborating and being

totally aligned on end-to-end processes and

solutions that meet customer needs instead

of each department doing their own thing.

We have looked at all our functions

collectively from an overall business

perspective, identifying challenges around

issues such as the pre-building of tools next

year. In addition, we have come together to

have the right capacities and processes in

the right places at the right times to meet

those challenges.

Q What other matters have<br><br>required focus during 2023?

Roger: Reporting requirements continue to

put more pressure on our teams, particularly

around ESG. For example, the Corporate

Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD)

comes into force for us over the financial year

2024 and involves reporting on many more

data points. At ASML we are already fairly

advanced in our ESG reporting. Nonetheless,

several new disclosure requirements,

including data points, have been introduced,

and each of these require robust reporting,

targets and strategies, not just for next year

but also for the longer term. We have

developed the appropriate action plans to

close the approximately 900 gaps we

identified, and we track our progress

accurately and consistently. All of this means

a lot of work, not just for the enabling

functions, but for everybody in the business.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 Q&A WITH THE CFO CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 41
Robust results in a challenging macro environment (continued)
In conversation with our Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Roger Dassen
We believe<br><br>that the years<br><br>ahead will see<br><br>a significant<br><br>uptick in the<br><br>market.”
---
Roger Dassen
Executive Vice President<br><br>and Chief Financial Officer €27.6bn
---
Total net sales
51.3%
Gross margin
€3.3bn
Returned to shareholder

CFO_Pg2.jpg

Cybersecurity is another area that required

serious focus. We face two different kinds of

cyber and data security threats. We have

external exposure, where outside forces try

to penetrate our systems. This is continuous

warfare – as we increase our defenses, so

will our combatants – and we have done a

lot of good work on that front. As well as

making our lines of defense and detection

capabilities as strong as possible, we have

also continued to invest in how to counter

and mitigate the impact of a successful

penetration. Secondly, there is the internal

exposure – how do we ensure that

employees and others who have access to

our systems keep data only in a safe

environment, and do not export this data to

private devices or places that are not secure.

Our response has been to change our way of

working. For decades, ASML has thrived on

the notion of open innovation, but now we

have to conclude that this comes with risks

that have to be mitigated, and we have to

ensure that people only have access to

information that they need. Although this is

counter-cultural to an extent, everybody

understands that security is vital to the

company.

Q What’s the outlook for 2024<br><br>and beyond?

Roger: We believe that the market has now

reached the lowest point of the dip, and

although we cannot predict the exact nature

of the slope ahead, the recovery is nascent.

The longer-term trends are unmistakable –

artificial intelligence, electrification and the

energy transition are happening, and those

factors are underlined by the large number of

fabs that are set to open in the next couple

of years. All of these new fabs will need our

tools.

Amid these very encouraging signs, we are

looking at 2024 and 2025 as a whole and

making output plans for the combined

period. For 2024, we envisage a transition

year with 2024 revenue to be similar to 2023.

We will continue to be frugal, managing our

costs and cash while not compromising on

our capability and capacity for 2025, which

we see as a potentially strong growth year.

Our target capacity for 2025-2026 is 600

DUV and 90 EUV tools, and this is going to

place pressure on our supply chain.

One of our major projects for 2024 is to work

even more closely with our suppliers to help

them build the capacity to support our

growth.

For the first time in our history, during 2024

we will pre-build and create our own

inventory in order to prepare for the surge of

demand that we expect in 2025. We are

readying ourselves for the uptick – pre-

building tools, helping our new hires buy into

our culture, working with suppliers and

reshaping our functions, all while being

fiscally prudent and managing any fallout

from export restrictions.

We face the future with confidence, sure in

our technology and strategies, proud of our

ability to be a force for good in the world and

committed to meeting the increasing

demands that all our stakeholders – from

customers, suppliers and shareholders to

governments and wider society – place upon

us.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 Q&A WITH THE CFO CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 42
Robust results in a challenging macro environment (continued)
In conversation with our Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Roger Dassen For 2024, we envisage a<br><br>transition year with revenue<br><br>broadly similar to 2023.”
---
Roger Dassen
Executive Vice President<br><br>and Chief Financial Officer

Performance_KPIs_Background.jpg

Sales Profitability Liquidity
Total net sales Gross profit Cash and cash equivalents & short-term investments (year-end)
€27.6bn 14.1bn €7.0bn
2022: €21.2bn 2022: 10.7bn 2022: €7.4bn
Net system sales Income from operations Net cash provided by operating activities
€21.9bn 9.0bn €5.4bn
2022: €15.4bn 2022: 6.5bn 2022: €8.5bn
Net service and field option sales Net income Free cash flow2
€5.6bn 7.8bn €3.2bn
2022: €5.7bn 2022: 5.6bn 2022: €7.2bn
Sales of lithography systems (in units)1 Earnings per share
449 19.91
2022: 345 2022: 14.14
EUV systems recognized (in units)
53
2022: 40 1.Lithography systems do not include metrology and inspection systems.
2. Free cash flow is a non-GAAP measure and is defined as net cash provided by operating activities (2023: 5,443.4 million and 2022: 8,486.8 million) minus purchase of property, plant and equipment (2023: 2,155.6 million and 2022: 1,281.8 million) and purchase of intangible assets (2023: 40.6 million and 2022: 37.5 million). We believe that free cash flow is an important liquidity metric for our investors, reflecting cash that is available for acquisitions, to repay debt and to return money to our shareholders by means of dividends and share buybacks. Purchase of property, plant and equipment and purchase of intangible assets are deducted from net cash provided by operating activities in calculating free cash flow because these payments are necessary to support the maintenance and investments in our assets to maintain the current asset base.

All values are in Euros.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 43
Performance KPIs
Operating results of 2023 compared to 2022
--- Year ended December 31 (€, in millions) 2022 %1 2023 %1 % Change
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Net system sales 15,430.3 72.9 21,938.6 79.6 42.2
Net service and field option sales 5,743.1 27.1 5,619.9 20.4 (2.1)
Total net sales 21,173.4 100.0 27,558.5 100.0 30.2
Cost of system sales (7,582.3) (35.8) (10,151.0) (36.8) 33.9
Cost of service and field option sales (2,891.0) (13.7) (3,271.4) (11.9) 13.2
Total cost of sales (10,473.3) (49.5) (13,422.4) (48.7) 28.2
Gross profit 10,700.1 50.5 14,136.1 51.3 32.1
Research and development costs (3,253.5) (15.4) (3,980.6) (14.4) 22.3
Selling, general and administrative costs (945.9) (4.5) (1,113.2) (4.0) 17.7
Income from operations 6,500.7 30.7 9,042.3 32.8 39.1
Interest and other, net (44.6) (0.2) 41.2 0.1 (192.4)
Income before income taxes 6,456.1 30.5 9,083.5 33.0 40.7
Income tax expense (969.9) (4.6) (1,435.8) (5.2) 48.0
Income after income taxes 5,486.2 25.9 7,647.7 27.8 39.4
Profit from equity method investments 138.0 0.7 191.3 0.7 38.6
Net income 5,624.2 26.6 7,839.0 28.4 39.4

1.As a percentage of total net sales.

For a comparison of ASML’s operating results for the year ended December 31, 2022, with the year ended<br><br>December 31, 2021, please see Our performance in 2022 – Financial – Financial performance – Operating results of<br><br>2022 compared with 2021 of ASML’s annual report on Form 20-F for the year ended December 31, 2022.<br><br>The preparation of our Consolidated Financial Statements in conformity with US GAAP requires management to<br><br>make estimates and assumptions. Reference is made to Note 1 General information / summary of general<br><br>accounting policies to the Consolidated Financial Statements for detailed information on critical accounting<br><br>estimates.

Total net sales and gross profit

We achieved another record year in 2023, with total net

sales increasing by €6,385.1 million, or 30.2%, reflecting

an increase in net system sales of 42.2%, partially offset

by a decrease in net service and field option sales of

2.1% compared to 2022.

Revenue growth from Logic and Memory markets
(in millions)

286972534853692

Despite lower overall lithography tool utilization in 2023,

we saw strong demand in the Logic markets in support

of the digital transformation (5G, AI, VR, intelligent cloud

solutions, and simulation and visualization applications).

Logic is the largest consumer of our most advanced NXE

systems and also benefited from a catch-up in the

backlog of DUV orders to Chinese customers. The

revenue growth in the Memory market was less

pronounced due to historically low lithography tool

utilization levels. The latter and lower demand for

productivity enhancement packages negatively impacted

net service and field option sales.

Increase (decrease) on previous year

30.2%
Net sales
42.2%
Net system sales
(2.1)%
Net service and field option sales
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 44
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Performance KPIs (continued)
Increase in net sales driven by growth in NXE and<br><br>DUV immersion
---
(in millions)

322

The increase in total net sales was primarily driven by

higher sales volumes for NXE and DUV immersion

systems as supply caught up with demand. In addition

there was increased DUV demand from China that was

previously unfulfilled due to supply constraints. Also the

timing of revenue recognition for DUV immersion fast

shipments is considered to be proven. We recognized

revenue for 53 EUV systems in 2023 compared with 40

EUV systems in 2022. Our system sales across our DUV

technologies increased from 305 units in 2022 to 396

units in 2023.

The decrease in net service and field option sales was

mainly driven by lower field upgrade sales due to lower

lithography tool utilization levels at our customers, and

customers delaying productivity enhancement packages

due to uncertainty around the timing of the market

recovery. This decrease is partially offset by higher

service sales, which continue to scale as a result of the

growing installed base of systems.

Gross profit
(in millions)

286972534913439

Gross profit increased as a result of higher NXE and DUV

immersion sales volumes and improved profitability. The

gross margin increased from 50.5% in 2022 to 51.3% in

  1. This increase is mainly due to:

•a larger share of DUV immersion system sales

•lower inflationary effect on our business

partially offset by lower field upgrade sales.

Research and development costs
(in millions)

286972534867149

R&D costs were €3,980.6 million in 2023 compared with

€3,253.5 million in 2022. The increase in R&D

investments across each of our EUV, DUV and

Applications programs, all support our holistic lithography

solutions. In 2023, R&D investments mainly related to:

•Investments in the development of the NXE:3800E

system and further improving availability and

productivity of our EUV installed base systems.

•Investments in our next generation EUV 0.55 NA (High

NA) systems, to support future nodes for both Logic

and DRAM customers.

•The introduction of our immersion system NXT:1980Fi

and the dry system XT:400M. Continued developments

for the next generation of scanners include NXT:2150i

and NXT:870B. In parallel, there were multiple

developments for productivity packages and new

service models, focusing on increasing 'good wafers

per day' in our customers' installed base.

•Continued investment in e-beam inspection, e-beam

metrology and Yieldstar optical metrology. In addition,

securing our multibeam inspection roadmap and

continuously expanding our investment in the holistic

software applications space.

Performance_KPI's_Pg2.jpg

€4.0 billion

R&D costs

22.3%

Increase in R&D costs

on previous year

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 45
Performance KPIs (continued)
Selling, general and administrative costs
---

SG&A costs increased by 17.7% from 2022 to 2023,

largely due to an increase in the number of employees

and increased wage per FTE.

378

Income taxes

The effective tax rate (ETR) increased to 15.8% in 2023,

compared with 15.0% in 2022. The higher rate is mainly

caused by an increase in our liability for unrecognized tax

benefits and a reduction in US Foreign Derived Intangible

Income (FDII) deduction.

195

Read more in Consolidated Financial Statements - Notes to the

Consolidated Financial Statements - Note 21 Income taxes

Net income

Net income in 2023 amounted to €7,839.0 million, or

28.4% of total net sales, representing €19.91 basic net

income per ordinary share, compared with net income in

2022 of €5,624.2 million, or 26.6% of total net sales,

representing €14.14 basic net income per ordinary share.

The increase in basic net income per ordinary share is

mainly due to the higher net income, but also partially

driven by a decrease in the weighted average number of

outstanding shares resulting from our share buyback

program.

246

New_FinPerformanmce_NetIncome_Image.jpg

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 46
Performance KPIs (continued)

Cash flow analysis

We continue to invest heavily in our next-generation technologies in order to secure future growth opportunities which

require a significant cash investment in net working capital, capital expenditures and R&D.

We also continued our efforts to return cash to our shareholders through our dividends and share buyback program.

Year ended December 31 (€, in millions) 2022 2023
Cash and cash equivalents, beginning of period 6,951.8 7,268.3
Net cash provided by (used in) operating activities 8,486.8 5,443.4
Net cash provided by (used in) investing activities (1,028.9) (2,689.3)
Net cash provided by (used in) financing activities (7,138.3) (3,003.9)
Effect of changes in exchange rates on cash (3.1) (13.8)
Net increase (decrease) in cash and cash equivalents 316.5 (263.6)
Cash and cash equivalents, end of period 7,268.3 7,004.7
Short-term investments, end of period 107.7 5.4
Cash and cash equivalents and short-term investments 7,376.0 7,010.1
Purchases of property, plant and equipment and intangible assets (1,319.3) (2,196.2)
Free cash flow1 7,167.5 3,247.2

1.Free cash flow is a non-GAAP measure and is defined as net cash provided by operating activities (2023: €5,443.4 million and 2022: €8,486.8

million) minus purchase of property, plant and equipment (2023: €2,155.6 million and 2022: €1,281.8 million) and purchase of intangible assets

(2023: €40.6 million and 2022: €37.5 million).

Net cash provided by (used in) operating activities

The decrease in net cash provided by operating activities of €3.0 billion compared with 2022 is mainly due to an

increase in inventory and a decrease in contract liabilities, as a result of extended payment terms granted to our

customers. This is partially offset by an increase in net income of €2.2 billion.

Net cash provided by (used in) investing activities

The increase in net cash used in investing activities of €1.7 billion compared to 2022 is mainly due to our continuous

cash investment in capital expenditures, which increased by €0.9 billion. Additionally, our loans issued increased by

€0.3 billion, and the net cash inflow from the purchase and maturity of short-term investments was €0.4 billion lower.

Net cash provided by (used in) financing activities

The decrease in net cash used in financing activities of €4.1 billion compared to 2022, is mainly due to a decrease in

shares purchased through our share buyback program, which decreased by €3.6 billion. Other drivers are the

temporary decrease of our total paid dividends of €0.2 billion due to a change from bi-annual to quarterly dividend

payments. Additionally, in 2023, we had net proceeds from issuances of notes of €1.0 billion (2022: €0.5 billion) and

we repaid an amount of €0.8 billion (2022: €0.5 billion) for a previously issued note that became due.

As of December 31, 2023, ASML has sufficient capital for the company’s present requirements.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 47
Performance KPIs (continued)

Trend information

The semiconductor industry continues to work through

the bottom of the cycle. To prepare for the recovery, we

are looking at the combined demand for 2024 and 2025.

We view 2024 to be a transition year in preparation for

the expected strong demand in 2025. We continue to

make investments this year both in capacity ramp and

technology to be ready for the turn in the cycle.

Although our customers are still not certain about the

shape of the semiconductor market recovery in 2024,

there are some positive signs. Industry end-market

inventory levels continue to improve and litho tool

utilization levels are beginning to show improvement. Our

strong order intake in the fourth quarter of 2023

(€9.2 billion) clearly supports future demand. In spite of

the positive signs, we maintain our conservative view for

the total year and expect 2024 revenue to be similar to

  1. We also expect 2024 to be an important year to

prepare for significant growth that we expect for 2025.

We expect 2024 revenue to be similar to 2023, with a

slightly lower gross margin.

We expect slightly lower Logic revenue in 2024 versus

2023 as customers digest capacity and utilization levels

improve.

For Memory, we currently expect revenue growth in 2024

versus 2023, primarily driven by DRAM technology node

transitions in support of advanced memory devices.

For EUV, we are expecting revenue growth in 2024.

Relative to 2023, we are expecting to recognize revenue

for a similar number of systems, however with a higher

average selling price from the NXE:3800E systems. In

addition, we expect the first revenue from High NA EUV

systems in 2024.

We expect our non-EUV business to be down in 2024,

primarily driven by lower immersion system sales, relative

to 2023.

Our net service and field option sales is expected to be

at a similar level of revenue as last year.

Our expectations and guidance for the first quarter of

2024 can be summarized as follows:

–Total net sales between €5.0 billion and €5.5 billion

–Gross margin between 48% and 49%

–R&D costs of around €1,070 million

–SG&A costs of around €300 million

–Annualized effective tax rate between 16% and 17%

The trends discussed above are subject to risks and

uncertainties.

Read more in Forward-looking statements

New_FinPerformance_LongTermGrowth_Image_050124.jpg

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 48
Long-term growth opportunities

Outlook 2025 and 2030

This decade is all about distributed computing, bringing

the cloud closer to devices at the edge. Through

connectivity, computing power will be available to all of

us ‘on device’, enabling a connected world. These global

megatrends in the electronics industry, supported by a

highly profitable and fiercely innovative ecosystem, are

expected to continue to fuel growth across the

semiconductor market. This translates into increased

wafer demand at both advanced and mature nodes.

The continued push of countries around the globe for

technological sovereignty is expected to drive increased

capital intensity. This means that the industry is expected

to make significant investments in wafer capacity, with

increasing spend on lithography. The semiconductor end

markets, such as automotive, data centers, industrial and

consumer electronics, are expected to grow, and we

expect the total semiconductor market to grow around

9%1 year-on-year through 2030, fueling the strong

growth of our business based on an increased mix of

EUV, while the demand for DUV is expected to increase

across all wavelengths. To achieve this, we and our

supply chain partners are actively adding and improving

capacity to meet future customer demand.

At our November 2022 Investor Day, also known as

Capital Markets Day (CMD), we presented our long-term

growth opportunity for 2025 as well as 2030.

We plan to update our view in our next Investor Day

planned for November 14, 2024.

  1. Source: Based on external market research firms

Based on the different market scenarios, we believe we

have an opportunity to reach annual sales of between

approximately €30 billion and €40 billion in 2025, with a

gross margin between approximately 54% and 56%.

Looking further ahead, for 2030 we believe we have an

opportunity to reach annual sales of between

approximately €44 billion and €60 billion, with a gross

margin between approximately 56% and 60%.

The anticipated growth in the future is largely market

driven in both advanced and mature markets, technology

(e.g., the energy transition, AI and die sizes) and

geopolitical and competition-driven growth.

Our sales potential is primarily based on assumed

organic growth. We continuously review our product

roadmap and have, from time to time, made focused

acquisitions or equity investments to enhance the

industrial synergy of our product offering. Based on such

reviews and the assessment of clear potential product

and value synergies, we may also evaluate and pursue

focused merger and acquisition activities in the future.

Within this growth ambition, we expect to continue to

return significant amounts of cash to our shareholders

through a combination of growing dividends and share

buybacks.

Read more in Our business strategy

Long-term models as presented at CMD2022
Market System units Total sales opportunity (in bn)
High CMD 2022<br><br>Units ASML CMD 2022<br><br>Units ASML CMD 2022<br><br>Sales
2025 2030 2030
EUV High NA 0.55 5 30 Systems (Lithography & M&I1) 47
EUV Low NA 0.33 80 80
ArFi (immersion) 105 115 Installed Base Management2 13
Dry 385 425
Total 575 650 Total 60
Low CMD 2022<br><br>Units ASML CMD 2022<br><br>Units ASML CMD 2022<br><br>Sales
2025 2030 2030
EUV High NA 0.55 5 15 Systems (Lithography & M&I1) 33
EUV Low NA 0.33 65 65
ArFi (immersion) 75 85 Installed Base Management2 11
Dry 180 250
Total 325 415 Total 44
1. M&I: Metrology and inspection.<br><br>2. Installed Base Management equals our net service and field option sales.

All values are in Euros.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 49
Long-term growth opportunities (continued)

Enterprise risk management

ASML's ERM framework is designed to enable a well-

defined governance structure and a robust ERM

process. The Risk and Business Assurance function

drives the ERM process and associated activities across

ASML. We follow a systematic approach to identify,

manage and monitor risks in pursuit of our business

objectives by setting standards and enabling

management to maintain and continuously improve our

governance, risk management, internal control and

compliance. The framework enables us to identify

opportunities to achieve our objectives and enable long-

term sustainable growth.

The purpose of risk management is to<br><br>maximize the probability of achieving<br><br>business objectives responsibly.”
Geert Beullens
Head of Risk and Business Assurance

ERM is a continuous process. Its related activities are

periodically repeated to identify and address risks in a

timely fashion, and ensure outcomes are relevant for

effective decision-making. Our Head of Risk and

Business Assurance reports to the CFO and Audit

Committee and is responsible for leading the

development and maintenance of the ERM framework

and the implementation of the ERM process. We have

adopted the ISO 31000:2018 standard as the basis for

our ERM activities. In addition, the Head of Risk and

Business Assurance is responsible for leading the

security function and for developing and maintaining the

compliance process.

Risk management governance structure
Supervisory Board Audit Committee
Request to investigate<br><br>specific risk topics •Bi-annual risk review<br><br>•Risk topics feedback •Assertion on control effectiveness<br><br>•Quarterly progress reporting
Board of Management
Corporate Risk Committee (CRC)<br><br>Risk oversight Disclosure Committee<br><br>Internal Control Committee
•Risk appetite<br><br>•Risk management policy<br><br>•CRC sub committees<br><br>(governance) •Risk assessment results<br><br>•Risk response progress<br><br>•Incidents •Control effectiveness
Risk owners
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 RISK STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 50
--- --- --- --- --- ---
How we manage risk
We use a robust enterprise risk management (ERM) framework to embed risk management into our<br><br>daily business activities and strategic planning.

Supervisory Board and Audit Committee

The Supervisory Board (SB) provides independent

oversight of management’s response on critical risk

areas. The SBs Audit Committee provides independent

oversight of the ERM process and timely follow-up of

priority actions based on quarterly progress updates.

Board of Management

The Board of Management is responsible for managing

internal and external risks related to our business

activities and for ensuring we comply with applicable

laws and regulations.

Corporate Risk Committee

The Corporate Risk Committee (CRC) is the central risk

oversight body that reviews, manages and controls risks in

the ASML risk universe, including security. It also approves

the risk appetite, risk management policies and risk

mitigation strategies. The CRC is chaired by the CFO and

comprises senior management representatives across

ASML, including the CEO, COO and CSPO.

ASML's risk management process<br><br>provides direction for adequate risk<br><br>and control measures for key risks.”
Roel Verstegen
Risk manager

Disclosure Committee

The Disclosure Committee assists the Board of

Management in overseeing ASML’s disclosure activities

and compliance with applicable disclosure requirements

arising under Dutch and US law, applicable stock

exchange regulations and other regulatory requirements.

Internal Control Committee

The Internal Control Committee, which includes

members of the Disclosure Committee, advises the

Disclosure Committee and the CEO and CFO in their

assessment of our internal control over financial reporting

and related disclosures, under section 404 of the

Sarbanes Oxley Act. The Chair of the Internal Control

Committee updates the Audit Committee, the CEO and

CFO on the progress of this assessment. The Chair also

includes this update in the Internal Control Committee’s

report to the Audit Committee.

Risk owners

Risk owners monitor the development of risks across the

ASML risk universe and drive risk response across ASML

according to requirements that are defined by the CRC.

ASML risk universe

The ASML risk universe is a consolidated overview of the

risks that may have a material adverse impact on our

ability to achieve our business objectives. The risk

universe was updated in 2023 and consists of 32 risk

categories grouped into six risk types. The risk universe

allows us to have a consistent approach to risk

assessments across ASML.

ASML risk universe
Strategy and products
•Industry cycle risk<br><br>•Geopolitical risk<br><br>•Climate change risk •Business model risk<br><br>•Merger and<br><br>acquisition risk •Competition risk<br><br>•Innovation risk<br><br>•Product<br><br>stewardship risk •Product roadmap<br><br>execution risk<br><br>•Intellectual property<br><br>rights risk
Finance and<br><br>reporting Partners People Operations
•Business planning risk<br><br>•Financial risk<br><br>•Shareholder activism risk<br><br>•Disclosure/external<br><br>reporting risk<br><br>•Tax and customs risk •Customer<br><br>dependency risk<br><br>•Product/service<br><br>quality risk<br><br>•Supplier strategy and<br><br>performance risk<br><br>•Supply chain<br><br>disruption risk •Knowledge<br><br>management risk<br><br>•Organizational<br><br>effectiveness risk<br><br>•Human resource risk •Product<br><br>industrialization risk<br><br>•Process effectiveness and<br><br>efficiency risk<br><br>•Environment, health and<br><br>safety risk<br><br>•Continuity of own<br><br>operation risk<br><br>•Security risk<br><br>•Information technology risk<br><br>•Manufacturing and<br><br>install risk
Legal and compliance
•Contractual liability risk •Violation of laws and regulations risk •Violation of internal policies risk

We take into account a broad range of internal and

external information sources such as macroeconomic

and industry trends, relevant guidelines and legislation,

and stakeholders’ needs and expectations in all areas.

The risk universe is reviewed, updated and approved

annually, or more frequently when there are significant

internal and/or relevant external developments.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 RISK CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 51
How we manage risk (continued)

Enterprise risk management process

The ERM process provides a holistic approach

combining both top-down (company-level) and bottom-

up (organization- and process-level) perspectives. This

helps us to identify, evaluate and manage risks at the

right level. We continuously seek to improve our ERM

process based on learnings, developments and best

practices.

The results of periodic risk assessments and the potential

impact of external trends and emerging risks are

captured in the ASML risk landscape. As we operate in a

dynamic environment, risk exposures are subject to

change. The ASML risk landscape is reviewed and

updated by the CRC each quarter. Risk assessments are

carried out to assess all risk events in ASML's risk

universe. We define strategies to address relevant risks

and take these into account when we define our

corporate priorities. Our risk responses aim to mitigate

risks to the level defined by the risk appetite.

Risk appetite

Our risk appetite describes the level of risk we are willing

to accept to achieve our objectives. It depends on the

nature of the specific risk and is divided into five levels:

Averse, Prudent, Moderate, High and Extensive. Our

approach is geared toward mitigating risks to the level

defined in our risk appetite.

Risk management process

Risk assessment Risk response
Top-down risk assessment Coordination and follow-up
Corporate Risk Committee/Risk owners/Emerging risks Risk owners
How_we_manage_risk_Page3_Arrow_Risk.jpg Risk identification Risk<br><br>landscape Risk appetite
Risk analysis
Risk evaluation Risk treatment
Bottom-up risk assessment Execution
Country/Sector Action owners Risk appetite levels
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Risk type Averse Prudent Moderate High Extensive
Strategy and products
Partners
People
Operations
Finance and reporting
Legal and compliance
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How we manage risk (continued)

The table below shows the main risks related to our strategy and includes examples of our responses:

Grow our holistic lithography business
Risk development Risk trend Risk universe reference Risk response
Geopolitical tensions New_RiskDevelopments_Icon1.jpg •Geopolitical<br><br>•Competition<br><br>•Supply chain<br><br>disruption<br><br>•Continuity of own<br><br>operations<br><br>•Business model •Violation of laws and<br><br>regulations<br><br>•Security<br><br>•IP rights<br><br>•HR •Active engagement with authorities and governments<br><br>•Scenario planning<br><br>•Collaborate with peers in global advocacy<br><br>•Optimize industrial footprint<br><br>•Apply for export licenses<br><br>•Comply with applicable regulations
Geopolitical tensions and the strive for technological sovereignty may lead to a decoupled ecosystem and – in<br><br>longer term – overcapacity. Additional export restrictions have been imposed during 2023. There is a risk that<br><br>future trade restrictions (e.g. raw materials, technology, systems, investments) further limit our ability to source<br><br>parts and/or sell and service systems to certain customers.
Uncertain global economy New_RiskDevelopments_Icon1.jpg •Industry cycle<br><br>•Business model<br><br>•Financial •Competition<br><br>•Supply chain<br><br>disruption •Cost control<br><br>•Maintain flexibility<br><br>•Scenario planning
Global economic conditions lead to uncertainty for semiconductor demand and therefore demand for our<br><br>products. We have experienced order push-outs. The macroeconomic weakness continues into 2024 and<br><br>duration is uncertain.
Pressure on innovation in ecosystem New_RiskDevelopments_Icon1.jpg •Innovation<br><br>•Product roadmap<br><br>•Supplier strategy<br><br>and performance •IP rights<br><br>•Competition<br><br>•Security •Open innovation – sharing risk and reward<br><br>•Intellectual property portfolio management<br><br>•Patents and relevant technical publications monitoring<br><br>•Substantial investments in security<br><br>•Awareness and training programs<br><br>•Cyber defense capabilities
ASML’s strengths are based on the innovation power in our ecosystem and the ability to protect our IP. There is<br><br>a risk that we are not able to deliver on our technology roadmap. In addition, there is significant pressure on<br><br>know-how and IP protection for ASML and its open innovation partners. We and our partners experience<br><br>cyberattacks and other security threats.
Growth challenges New_RiskDevelopments_Icon2.jpg •Manufacturing and<br><br>install<br><br>•Supplier strategy<br><br>and performance<br><br>•HR •Product<br><br>industrialization<br><br>•Process effectiveness<br><br>•Product/service<br><br>quality •Increase of manufacturing capabilities<br><br>•Cycle time reduction<br><br>•Fast shipments<br><br>•Supplier move rate support<br><br>•Secure unique supply chain capabilities<br><br>•Onboarding, retention and well-being program<br><br>•Shorten time to knowledge
The increasing demand in recent years is an opportunity for us that also brings challenges. While we are now facing<br><br>uncertainty in customer demand outlook, we face challenges to increase production capacity in our end-to-end supply<br><br>chain to meet future demand. This is amplified by supply chain constraints. In addition, hiring, onboarding and retaining<br><br>our workforce in the competitive market is challenging. Our ability to attract people also depends on the government to<br><br>accommodate them, e.g. by income tax policies and investments in appropriate infrastructure.
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How we manage risk (continued)
Deliver on our ESG sustainability commitments
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Risk development Risk trend Risk universe reference Risk response
Strengthening ESG regulations and increasing stakeholder expectations New_RiskDevelopments_Icon1.jpg •Product<br><br>stewardship<br><br>•EHS<br><br>•Climate change •Human resource<br><br>•Violation of laws<br><br>and regulations •Stakeholder engagement and disclosures<br><br>•Deployment of ESG strategy in ASML & value chain<br><br>•Non-financial reporting in accordance with the Global<br><br>Reporting Initiative (GRI)<br><br>•Preparing for CSRD reporting requirements
Stakeholders are increasingly focused on our contribution to society and expect us to minimize the environmental<br><br>and social impact of our products throughout all life-cycle stages. There is a risk that we fail in achieving our ESG<br><br>objectives. In addition, we are faced with increasing regulations and disclosure requirements (e.g. CSRD).
Climate change fueling extreme weather New_RiskDevelopments_Icon2.jpg •Continuity of<br><br>own operations<br><br>•Supply chain<br><br>disruption •Deployment of business continuity plans<br><br>•Include extreme weather aspects in building upgrades<br><br>and new designs
Climate change contributes to increasing severity and frequency of extreme weather events (such as cyclones,<br><br>flood, fire stress, drought, excessive heat and precipitation, rising sea levels) that can impact continuity of our<br><br>operations and/or our supply chain.
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How we manage risk (continued)
The risk factors in this section are<br><br>classified under these six risk types. Any<br><br>of these risks and the related events or<br><br>circumstances described therein may<br><br>have a material adverse effect on our<br><br>business, financial condition, results of<br><br>operations and reputation.<br><br>These risks are not the only ones that we<br><br>face. Some risks may not yet be known to<br><br>us, and certain risks that we do not<br><br>currently believe to be material could<br><br>become material in the future.<br><br>Many risks may be intensified by global<br><br>events such as interstate conflicts,<br><br>geopolitical tensions, inflation, industry<br><br>downturn, global measures (including<br><br>new regulations) taken in response to<br><br>these events and/or any worsening of the<br><br>associated global business and economic<br><br>conditions. 1. Strategy and products
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Our future success depends on our ability to respond timely to commercial and technological<br><br>developments in the semiconductor industry The success of new product introductions is<br><br>uncertain and depends on our ability to<br><br>successfully execute our R&D programs
Risk category: Risk category:
Business model, Innovation Product roadmap execution, Innovation
Our success in developing new and enhancing existing technologies,<br><br>products and services, depends on a variety of factors. These include<br><br>the success of our and our suppliers’ R&D programs and the timely,<br><br>cost-effective and successful completion of product development and<br><br>design relative to competitors.<br><br>Our business will suffer if the technologies we pursue to assist our<br><br>customers in producing smaller and more energy-efficient chips are<br><br>not as effective as, or are more costly than, those developed by<br><br>competitors. Our business will also suffer if our customers do not<br><br>adopt technologies that we develop, or if they adopt new<br><br>technological architectures that are less focused on lithography<br><br>products.<br><br>The success of our EUV 0.55 NA (High NA) technology, which we<br><br>believe is critical for keeping pace with Moore’s Law, depends on<br><br>continuing technical advances by us and our suppliers. We invest<br><br>considerable financial resources to develop and introduce new and<br><br>enhanced technologies, products and service offerings. If we are<br><br>unsuccessful in developing (or if our customers do not adopt) these<br><br>technologies, products and service offerings such as EUV 0.55 NA<br><br>and multibeam inspection, or if alternative technologies or processes<br><br>are successfully introduced by others, our competitive position and<br><br>business may suffer. We make significant investments in developing new products and<br><br>product enhancements and we may be unable to recoup some or all<br><br>of these investments. We may incur impairment charges on<br><br>capitalized technology including prototypes or incur costs related to<br><br>inventory obsolescence, as a result of technological changes. Such<br><br>costs may increase as the complexity of technology increases. Due to<br><br>the highly complex nature and costs of our systems, including newer<br><br>technologies, our customers may purchase existing technology<br><br>systems rather than new leading-edge systems, or they may delay<br><br>their investment in new technology systems to the extent that such<br><br>investment is not economical or required, given their product cycles.<br><br>Global economic conditions affect our customers’ investment<br><br>decisions and lead to uncertainties in the timing around the<br><br>introduction of and demand for new leading-edge systems. Some of<br><br>our customers have experienced and may continue to experience<br><br>delays in implementing their product roadmaps. This increases the<br><br>risk of slowing down the overall transition period (or cadence) for the<br><br>introduction of new nodes, and therefore new systems.<br><br>We also depend on our suppliers to maintain their development<br><br>roadmaps to enable us to introduce new technologies in a timely<br><br>manner. If they are unable to keep pace, whether due to<br><br>technological factors, lack of financial resources or otherwise, we may<br><br>not meet our development roadmaps. As our lithography systems and applications have become<br><br>increasingly complex, the cost and time to develop new products<br><br>and technologies have increased and we expect this trend to<br><br>continue. In particular, developing new technology, such as EUV<br><br>0.55 NA (High NA) and multibeam, requires significant R&D<br><br>investments by us and our suppliers.<br><br>Our suppliers may not be able or willing to invest the resources<br><br>necessary to continue the (co-) development of new technologies to<br><br>the extent that such investments are necessary. This has resulted<br><br>and may continue to result in ASML contributing funds to such R&D<br><br>programs or limiting the R&D investments that we can undertake.<br><br>Furthermore, if our R&D programs are not successful in developing<br><br>the desired new technology on time or at all, we may be<br><br>unsuccessful in introducing new products and unable to recoup our<br><br>R&D investments. In case of high levels of customer demand, we<br><br>may prioritize our resources toward increasing production over R&D<br><br>programs.
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Risk factors
Many risks have the potential to impact our business. It is important to understand the nature of these risks.<br><br>We assess risks by using the ASML risk universe which comprises six risk types (Strategy and products,<br><br>Finance and reporting, Partners, People, Operations, Legal and compliance).
1. Strategy and products (continued)
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We face intense competition The semiconductor industry can be cyclical and we<br><br>may be adversely affected by any downturn We derive most of our revenues from the sale of<br><br>a relatively small number of products
Risk category: Risk category: Risk category:
Competition Industry cycle risk Business model
The semiconductor equipment industry is highly competitive. Our<br><br>competitiveness depends on our ability to develop new and<br><br>enhanced lithography equipment, related applications and services<br><br>that bring value to our customers and are competitively priced and<br><br>introduced on a timely basis – as well as our ability to protect and<br><br>defend our intellectual property, trade secrets or other proprietary<br><br>information.<br><br>We compete primarily with Canon and Nikon in respect of DUV<br><br>systems. Both Canon and Nikon have substantial financial<br><br>resources and broad patent portfolios. Each continues to offer<br><br>products that compete directly with our DUV systems, which may<br><br>impact our sales or business. In addition, adverse market<br><br>conditions, long-term overcapacity or a decrease in the value of the<br><br>Japanese yen in relation to the euro could increase price-based<br><br>competition, resulting in lower prices and lower sales and margins.<br><br>We also face competition from new competitors with substantial<br><br>financial resources, as well as from competitors driven by the<br><br>ambition of self-sufficiency in the geopolitical context. Furthermore,<br><br>we face competition from alternative technological solutions or<br><br>semiconductor manufacturing processes.<br><br>We also compete with providers of applications that support or<br><br>enhance complex patterning solutions, such as Applied Materials<br><br>Inc. and KLA-Tencor Corporation. These applications effectively<br><br>compete with our Applications offering, which is a significant part of<br><br>our business. The semiconductor industry has historically been cyclical. As a<br><br>supplier to the global semiconductor industry, we are subject to the<br><br>industry’s business cycles. The timing, duration and volatility are<br><br>difficult to predict and can have a significant impact on<br><br>semiconductor manufacturers including ASML. Newer entrants to the<br><br>industry, including Chinese semiconductor manufacturers, could<br><br>increase the risk of cyclicality in the future. Certain key end-market<br><br>customers – Logic and Memory – exhibit different levels of cyclicality<br><br>and different business cycles. Cyclicality may be worsened by the<br><br>geopolitical situation if countries increase semiconductor capacity for<br><br>higher levels of self-sufficiency, thereby creating global overcapacity.<br><br>Sales of our lithography systems, services and other holistic<br><br>lithography products depend in large part on the level of capital<br><br>expenditures by semiconductor manufacturers. These in turn are<br><br>influenced by industry cycles, the drive for technological sovereignty<br><br>and a range of competitive and market factors, including<br><br>semiconductor industry conditions and prospects. The timing and<br><br>magnitude of capital expenditures of our customers also impact the<br><br>available production capacity of the industry to produce chips, which<br><br>can lead to imbalances in the supply and demand of chips.<br><br>Reductions or delays in capital expenditures by our customers, or<br><br>incorrect assumptions by us about our customers’ capital<br><br>expenditures, could adversely impact our business. In addition, industry trends that are positively impacting our business,<br><br>such as increasing capital expenditures by our customers, may not<br><br>continue. We have experienced changes in timing of orders from<br><br>certain customers, and while we currently have significant backlog<br><br>and therefore such timing changes have not impacted sales, we are<br><br>subject to uncertainty in future customer demand. The current global<br><br>economic environment, including inflation and high interest rates,<br><br>contribute to this uncertainty. Our ability to maintain profitability in an<br><br>industry downturn will depend substantially on whether we are able to<br><br>lower our costs to break-even level. If sales decrease significantly as a<br><br>result of an industry downturn and we are unable to adjust our costs<br><br>over the same period, and if down payments need to be returned, our<br><br>net income may decline significantly or we may suffer losses.<br><br>As we have significantly increased our organization in terms of<br><br>employees, infrastructure, manufacturing capacity and other areas,<br><br>we may not be able to adjust our costs adequately in a timely manner<br><br>in the event of an industry downturn.<br><br>An uncertain global economy frequently leads to reduced consumer<br><br>and business spending, and could cause our customers to decrease,<br><br>cancel or delay their orders. High interest rates and volatility in<br><br>financial markets could make it more difficult for our customers to<br><br>raise capital, whether debt or equity, to finance their purchases of<br><br>equipment, including the products we sell. The foregoing could lead<br><br>to reduced demand, which may adversely affect our product sales<br><br>and revenues and may harm our business and operating results.<br><br>If we are unable to adapt appropriately and in a timely manner to<br><br>changes resulting from difficult macroeconomic conditions, our<br><br>business, financial condition or results of operations may be materially<br><br>and adversely affected. We derive most of our revenues from the sale of a relatively small<br><br>number of lithography systems (449 units in 2023 and 345 units in<br><br>2022). As a result, the timing of shipments, including any delays,<br><br>and recognition of system sales for a particular reporting period<br><br>from a small number of systems, with an increase in sales prices,<br><br>may have a material adverse effect on our business, financial<br><br>condition and results of operations in that period. In recent years,<br><br>we have used fast shipments for some customers, which allows us<br><br>to deliver systems more quickly to customers by having some final<br><br>testing and formal acceptance carried out on customer sites instead<br><br>of at our own facilities. In general, this leads to a delay of revenue<br><br>recognition for those shipments until formal customer acceptance,<br><br>which can impact comparability of our results of operations from<br><br>quarter to quarter.<br><br>In addition, we may not be able to increase installed base revenues<br><br>to the extent we planned, as, for example, customers may perform<br><br>more of these services themselves, find other third-party suppliers<br><br>to provide them or we may be limited by national security<br><br>restrictions. ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 RISK CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 56
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Risk factors (continued)
1. Strategy and products (continued)
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Failure to adequately protect intellectual property could harm our business Defending against intellectual property claims brought by others<br><br>could harm our business
Risk category: Risk category:
Intellectual property rights Intellectual property rights
We rely on intellectual property (IP) rights such as patents and<br><br>copyrights to protect our proprietary technology. However, we face<br><br>the risk that such protective measures could prove inadequate and<br><br>we could suffer material harm because, among other matters:<br><br>•IP laws may not sufficiently support our proprietary rights or may<br><br>change adversely in the future.<br><br>•Our agreements (e.g. confidentiality, licensing) with our<br><br>customers, employees and technology development partners<br><br>and others to protect our IP may not be sufficient or may be<br><br>breached or terminated.<br><br>•Patent rights may not be granted or interpreted as we expect;<br><br>•Patent rights will expire, which may result in key technology<br><br>becoming widely available that may harm our competitive<br><br>position.<br><br>•The steps we take to prevent misappropriation or infringement of<br><br>our proprietary rights may not be successful.<br><br>•IP rights and trade secrets are difficult to enforce in countries<br><br>where the application and enforcement of the laws governing<br><br>such rights may not have reached the same level compared with<br><br>other jurisdictions where we operate.<br><br>•Third parties may be able to develop or obtain patents for our<br><br>own or for similar competing technology. Legal proceedings may be necessary to enforce our IP rights and the<br><br>validity and scope may be challenged by others. Any such<br><br>proceedings may result in substantial costs and diversion of<br><br>management resources, and, if unfavorable decisions are made,<br><br>could result in significant costs or have a significant impact on our<br><br>business.<br><br>We have experienced and may in the future experience<br><br>misappropriation attacks by third parties or our employees, including<br><br>theft of intellectual property. Such incidents may result in third parties<br><br>or others, without authorization, obtaining, copying, using or<br><br>disclosing our intellectual property, despite our efforts to protect<br><br>them. In the course of our business, we have been and are subject to<br><br>claims by third parties alleging that our products or processes<br><br>infringe upon their IP. If successful, such claims could limit or<br><br>prohibit us from developing our technology, manufacturing and<br><br>selling our products.<br><br>Our customers or suppliers may also be subject to claims of<br><br>infringement from third parties, including patent holder companies,<br><br>alleging that our products used by such customers in the<br><br>manufacturing of semiconductor products and/or the processes<br><br>relating to the use of our products infringe on one or more patents<br><br>issued to such third parties. If such claims are successful, we could<br><br>be required to indemnify our customers for some or all of any losses<br><br>incurred or damages assessed against them as a result of such<br><br>infringement. We may incur substantial licensing or settlement costs to settle<br><br>claims or to potentially strengthen or expand our IP rights or limit<br><br>our exposure to IP claims of third parties.<br><br>Patent litigation is complex and may extend for a protracted period<br><br>of time, giving rise to the potential for substantial costs and<br><br>diverting the attention of key management and technical personnel.<br><br>Potential adverse outcomes from patent litigation may include<br><br>payment of significant monetary damages, injunctive relief<br><br>prohibiting our manufacturing, exporting or selling of products,<br><br>reputational damage and/or settlement involving significant costs to<br><br>be paid by us. ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 RISK CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 57
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Risk factors (continued)
1. Strategy and products (continued)
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We are exposed to economic, geopolitical and other developments<br><br>in our international operations We may be unable to make desirable acquisitions or to integrate successfully<br><br>any businesses we acquire
Risk category: Risk category:
Geopolitical Mergers and acquisitions
Geopolitical tensions may result in export control restrictions, trade<br><br>sanctions, tariffs and more generally international trade regulations<br><br>which may impact our ability to deliver our systems, technology,<br><br>and services. Our ability to deliver technology in certain countries<br><br>such as China has been and continues to be impacted by our ability<br><br>to obtain required licenses and approvals. Our business involves the<br><br>sale of systems and services to customers in a number of countries,<br><br>including China, and includes technologies that may be the subject<br><br>of increased export regulations or policies. We are required under<br><br>Dutch regulations and other applicable legislation to obtain licenses<br><br>for the export of certain technologies. In some cases, such licenses<br><br>have not been granted or renewed. For example, at the end of<br><br>2023, the Dutch government partially revoked a license for<br><br>shipment of NXT:2050i and NXT:2100i systems, impacting a small<br><br>number of customers in China. Following recent changes in the<br><br>Dutch regulations, advanced DUV-immersion is also now subject to<br><br>license requirement. The US government has enacted trade<br><br>measures, including national security regulations and restrictions on<br><br>conducting business with certain Chinese entities, restricting our<br><br>ability to provide certain products and services to such entities<br><br>without a license. The list of Chinese entities impacted by export<br><br>control restrictions has increased since 2022, with the recently<br><br>updated additional export controls on semiconductor manufacturing<br><br>items imposing license requirements on the sale / transfer of US<br><br>origin items as well as on the support by US persons on non-US<br><br>origin items destined for certain fabs in China working on advanced<br><br>node ICs. The list of restricted customers and the scope of the<br><br>restrictions are subject to change. These and further developments<br><br>in multilateral and bilateral treaties, national regulation, and trade,<br><br>national security and investment policies and practices have<br><br>affected and may further affect our business, and the businesses of<br><br>our suppliers and customers. For example, the ability to obtain US<br><br>licenses to authorize employees with foreign nationalities to work in programs that include controlled<br><br>US items has been reduced over the last couple of years. Such<br><br>developments, including the drive for technological sovereignty,<br><br>could also lead to long-term changes in global trade, competition<br><br>and technology supply chains, which could adversely affect our<br><br>business and growth prospects. Customers in China represented<br><br>26.3% of our 2023 total net sales. The semiconductor industry<br><br>makes use of (raw) materials that are controlled by certain countries.<br><br>In the current geopolitical context, we see an increasing risk<br><br>exposure that these materials may become unavailable or restricted,<br><br>which could impact our suppliers, our customers and ASML.<br><br>Interstate conflicts and/or nationalization of ASML assets can also<br><br>impact our business. For example, some of our facilities and supply<br><br>chain and customers are located in Taiwan. Customers in Taiwan<br><br>represented 29.3% of our 2023 total net sales and 38.2% of our<br><br>2022 total net sales. Taiwan has a unique international political<br><br>status. Changes in relations between Taiwan and China, Taiwanese<br><br>government policies and other factors affecting Taiwan’s political,<br><br>economic or social environment could, for example, impact our<br><br>ability to service our customers in Taiwan. Furthermore, certain of<br><br>our facilities as well as our supply chain and customers are located<br><br>in South Korea. Customers in South Korea represented 25.2% of<br><br>our 2023 total net sales and 28.6% of our 2022 total net sales. In<br><br>addition, there are tensions with the Democratic People’s Republic<br><br>of Korea (North Korea). A worsening of relations between those<br><br>countries or the outbreak of war on the Korean Peninsula could<br><br>impact our ability to service customers. A small percentage of our<br><br>suppliers and customers as well as our customer support<br><br>organization is based in Israel. There are tensions in this region that<br><br>have resulted and may continue to result in violence and/or the<br><br>outbreak of war that could impact our business. From time to time, we may acquire businesses or technologies to<br><br>complement, enhance or expand our current business or products<br><br>or that might offer us growth opportunities. Any such acquisitions<br><br>could lead to failure to achieve our financial or strategic objectives or<br><br>our ability to perform as we plan or disrupt our ongoing business<br><br>and adversely impact our results of operations. Our ability to<br><br>complete such transactions may be hindered by a number of<br><br>factors, including potential difficulties in obtaining government<br><br>approvals, for example, anti-trust and/or inbound and outbound<br><br>foreign direct investment approval processes.<br><br>Any acquisition could pose risks related to the integration of the new<br><br>business or technology with our existing business and organization.<br><br>We may not be able to achieve the benefits we expect from an<br><br>acquisition investment. Such transactions may also strain our<br><br>managerial and operational resources and the challenge of<br><br>managing new operations may divert our management from day-to-<br><br>day operations. Furthermore, we may be unable to retain key<br><br>personnel from acquired businesses or we may have difficulty<br><br>integrating employees, business systems and technology. The<br><br>controls, processes and procedures of acquired businesses may<br><br>also not adequately ensure compliance with laws and regulations,<br><br>and we may fail to identify compliance issues or liabilities. In connection with acquisitions, antitrust and national security<br><br>regulators have and may in the future impose conditions, including<br><br>requirements to divest assets or other conditions that could make it<br><br>difficult for us to integrate the businesses that we acquire.<br><br>Furthermore, we may have difficulty in obtaining, or be unable to<br><br>obtain, antitrust and national security clearances, which could<br><br>inhibit future desired acquisitions.<br><br>As a result of acquisitions, we have recorded a significant amount<br><br>of goodwill and intangible assets. Accounting standards require<br><br>periodic review of these assets for indicators of impairment. If one<br><br>or more indicators of impairment are found to exist, then valuation<br><br>of the related asset could change and may incur impairment<br><br>charges. ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 RISK CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 58
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Risk factors (continued)
1. Strategy and products (continued)
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We may not be able to achieve our ESG objectives or adapt and respond timely to emerging ESG<br><br>expectations and regulations
Risk category:
Climate change, Product stewardship
Companies across all industries are facing increasing scrutiny of<br><br>their ESG policies and practices. Investors, capital providers,<br><br>shareholder advocacy groups, market participants, customers and<br><br>other stakeholders are increasingly focused on ESG practices and<br><br>ESG matters. In particular, within the semiconductor industry, there<br><br>is a focus on contribution to society and minimizing environmental<br><br>and social impacts of products throughout all life-cycle stages.<br><br>Failure to achieve our ESG objectives, meet the emerging ESG<br><br>expectations of our stakeholders and/or respond in a timely way to<br><br>enhanced regulations, reporting and disclosure obligations could<br><br>negatively affect our brand and reputation and impede our ability to<br><br>recruit or retain employees, which may adversely affect our<br><br>operations. Climate change contributes to increasing severity and frequency of<br><br>extreme weather events, rising sea levels and droughts that can<br><br>impact continuity of our operations and/or our supply chain. Climate<br><br>change concerns and the potential environmental impact of climate<br><br>change have and may result in new laws and regulations that affect<br><br>us, our suppliers and our customers. Such laws or regulations could<br><br>cause us to incur additional direct costs for compliance, as well as<br><br>increased indirect costs resulting from our value chain. Furthermore,<br><br>the ability to improve our product-related environmental<br><br>performance (such as energy efficiency) may be affected by the<br><br>complexity of our technology and products. In order to meet our<br><br>ESG goals and requirements, we are dependent on our suppliers<br><br>and their ability to reduce their ecological footprints. In addition, we<br><br>are dependent on our customers and/or our customers may not be<br><br>satisfied with our progress, which can impact demand. A global trend to transition to a lower-carbon economy has resulted<br><br>in increased regulations that could lead to technology restrictions,<br><br>modification of product designs, an increase in energy prices and<br><br>energy or carbon taxes, restrictions on pollution, remediation<br><br>measures, or other requirements that could impact our business<br><br>and increase our costs. A variety of regulatory developments have<br><br>been introduced that focus on restricting or managing carbon and<br><br>GHG emissions. This could result in a need to redesign products<br><br>and/or purchase at higher costs new equipment or materials with<br><br>lower carbon footprints. We publish disclosures on ESG matters<br><br>relating to our business and our partners as required by applicable<br><br>regulations and guidance and other data which may not be required<br><br>but which we nonetheless elect to disclose. Such disclosures include statements based on our ESG goals,<br><br>expectations and assumptions, including forecasts about costs and<br><br>future circumstances, which may prove to be incorrect. In addition,<br><br>our ESG sustainability strategy may not deliver the intended results,<br><br>and our estimates concerning feasibility, timing and cost of meeting<br><br>stated goals are subject to risks and uncertainties. This could result<br><br>in us not meeting our goals on expected timing or at all. ESG<br><br>disclosure requirements are increasing and authorities have<br><br>proposed disclosure requirements on ESG matters which differ from<br><br>the requirements that we are currently subject to. We face risks in<br><br>complying with such regulations, including the risk of complying<br><br>with requirements in different jurisdictions, costs associated with<br><br>such compliance and potential liability in the event that our ESG<br><br>disclosures prove incorrect. ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 RISK CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 59
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Risk factors (continued)
2. Finance and reporting
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We are exposed to financial risks including liquidity risk, interest rate risk, credit risk,<br><br>foreign exchange risk and inflation
Risk category:
Financial
As a global company, we are exposed to a variety of financial risks,<br><br>including those related to liquidity, interest rates, credit, foreign<br><br>exchange and inflation.<br><br>Liquidity risk<br><br>Negative developments in our business or global capital markets<br><br>could affect our ability to meet our financial obligations or to raise or<br><br>refinance debt in the capital or loan markets. In addition, we might<br><br>be unable to repatriate cash from a country when needed for use<br><br>elsewhere due to legal restrictions or required formalities. Interest rate risk Inflation risk<br><br>We are exposed to increases in costs due to inflation for costs of<br><br>goods, transportation and wages, which may impact our<br><br>profitability. We are experiencing higher-than-normal inflation, which<br><br>impacts our costs and margins to the extent that we are not able to<br><br>pass on increased costs in our prices.
Our Eurobonds bear interest at fixed rates. Our cash, investments and credit facilities bear interest at a floating rate. Failure to effectively hedge this risk could impact our financial condition and results of operation. In addition, we could experience an increase in borrowing costs due to a ratings downgrade (or the expectation of a downgrade), developments in capital and lending markets or developments in our businesses.
Counterparty credit risk
We are exposed to credit risk, particularly with respect to financial counterparties with whom we hold our cash and investments as well as our customers. As a result of our limited number of customers, credit risk on our receivables is concentrated. Our three largest customers (based on total net sales) accounted for 3,718.8 million, or 64.4% of accounts receivable and finance receivables at December 31, 2023 compared with 5,252.8 million, or 78.6%,  at December 31, 2022. Accordingly, business failure or insolvency of one of our main customers could result in significant credit losses.

All values are in Euros.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 RISK CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 60
Risk factors (continued)
3. Partners
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Our success is highly dependent on the performance of a limited number of critical suppliers<br><br>of single-source key components
Risk category:
Supply chain disruption, Supplier strategy and performance
We rely on outside vendors for components and subassemblies<br><br>used in our systems, including the design thereof. These<br><br>components and subassemblies are obtained from a single supplier<br><br>or a limited number of suppliers. As our business has grown, our<br><br>dependence on single suppliers or a limited number of suppliers has<br><br>grown. The highly specialized nature of many of our components,<br><br>particularly for EUV systems, means it is not economical to source<br><br>from more than one supplier. In many cases, our sourcing strategy<br><br>prescribes ‘single sourcing, dual competence’. Our reliance on a<br><br>limited group of suppliers involves several risks, including a potential<br><br>inability to obtain an adequate supply of required components or<br><br>subassemblies in time and at acceptable costs, and reduced<br><br>control over pricing and quality. Delays in supply of these<br><br>components and subassemblies could occur due to disruptions<br><br>experienced by our suppliers for reasons including work stoppages,<br><br>fire, energy shortages, pandemic outbreaks, flooding, cyberattacks,<br><br>blockades, sabotage or other disasters, natural or otherwise. This<br><br>could lead to delays in delivery of our products, which could impact<br><br>our business. For example, certain of our suppliers experienced<br><br>disruptions in their operations as a result of material shortages and<br><br>cyberattacks. Consistent delays or prolonged inability to obtain<br><br>adequate deliveries of components or subassemblies, or any other<br><br>circumstance that requires us to seek alternative sources of supply,<br><br>could significantly hinder our ability to deliver our products in a<br><br>timely manner. This could damage relationships with our customers<br><br>and materially impact our business. The number of lithography systems we are able to produce is<br><br>limited by the production capacity of one of our key suppliers, Carl<br><br>Zeiss SMT, is our sole supplier of lenses, mirrors, illuminators,<br><br>collectors and other critical optical components (which we refer to<br><br>as optics). We have an exclusive arrangement with Carl Zeiss SMT.<br><br>If this supplier became unable to maintain and increase production<br><br>levels, we could be unable to fulfill orders. This could have a material<br><br>impact on our business and damage relationships with our<br><br>customers. Furthermore, if Carl Zeiss SMT were to terminate its<br><br>supply relationship with us or be unable to maintain production of<br><br>optics over a prolonged period, we would effectively cease to be<br><br>able to conduct our business.<br><br>From time to time, we experience supply constraints which can<br><br>impact our production. In 2023, we were impacted by delays and<br><br>shortages in our supply chain, resulting in a late start on the<br><br>assembly of a number of systems. We and our suppliers are<br><br>investing in additional capacity to meet the demand. However,<br><br>increasing capacity takes time, and we may be unable to meet the<br><br>full demand of our customers for a few years. Further, we face the<br><br>risk that demand may decrease, which could result in overcapacity<br><br>and loss of investment in increasing capacity. In addition, most of<br><br>our key suppliers, including Carl Zeiss SMT, have a limited number<br><br>of manufacturing facilities, the disruption of which may significantly<br><br>and adversely affect our production capacity. Lead times in obtaining components have increased as our<br><br>products have become more complex. A failure by us to adequately<br><br>predict demand for our systems, or any delays in the shipment of<br><br>components, can result in insufficient supply of components. This<br><br>could lead to delays in delivery of our systems and could limit our<br><br>ability to react quickly to changing market conditions. Conversely, a<br><br>failure to predict demand could lead to excess and obsolete<br><br>inventory. We are also dependent on suppliers to develop new models and<br><br>products to meet our development roadmaps. If our suppliers do<br><br>not meet our requirements or timetable in product development, our<br><br>business could suffer. ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 RISK CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 61
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Risk factors (continued)
3. Partners (continued) 4. People
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A high percentage of net sales is derived from<br><br>a few customers Our business and future success depend on our ability to manage the growth of our organization and attract and retain a sufficient number of adequately<br><br>educated and skilled employees
Risk category: Risk category:
Customer dependency Human resources, Knowledge management, Organizational effectiveness
Historically, we have sold a substantial number of lithography<br><br>systems to a limited number of customers. Customer concentration<br><br>can increase because of continuing consolidation in the<br><br>semiconductor manufacturing industry. In addition, although the<br><br>applications part of our holistic lithography solutions constitutes an<br><br>increasing portion of our revenue, a significant portion of those<br><br>customers are the same customers as those for our systems.<br><br>Consequently, while the identity of our largest customers may vary<br><br>from year to year, sales may remain concentrated among relatively<br><br>few customers in any particular year.<br><br>The recognized total net sales to our largest customer amounted to<br><br>€8,772.9 million, or 31.8% of total net sales in 2023, compared with<br><br>7,046.9 million, or 33.3% of total net sales in 2022. In 2023, 53.9%<br><br>of total net sales were made to two customers. The loss of any<br><br>significant customer or any significant reduction or delay in orders<br><br>by such a customer may have a material adverse effect on our<br><br>business, financial condition and results of operations. Our business success depends significantly on our ability to attract<br><br>and retain employees, including a large number of highly qualified<br><br>professionals. Competition for talent is intense and has intensified in<br><br>recent years. Continuing to attract sufficient numbers of qualified<br><br>employees to meet our growing needs will remain a challenge. Our<br><br>business has grown significantly and the risk of not being able to<br><br>attract, onboard and retain qualified personnel increases as our<br><br>business grows.<br><br>Our R&D programs require a large number of qualified employees. If<br><br>we are unable to attract sufficient numbers of such employees, this<br><br>could affect our ability to conduct R&D on a timely basis. The loss of<br><br>key employees for unexpected reasons such as resignation or long-<br><br>term illness is also a risk. As a result of the uniqueness and complexity of our technology,<br><br>qualified engineers capable of working on our systems are scarce<br><br>and generally not available from other industries or companies. We<br><br>invest a significant amount in educating and training our employees<br><br>to work on our systems and their retention is a critical success factor<br><br>for us.<br><br>The increasing complexity of our products results in a longer learning<br><br>curve for new and existing employees and suppliers. Our suppliers<br><br>face similar risks in attracting and retaining qualified employees,<br><br>including those in connection with programs that will support our<br><br>R&D programs and technology developments. If our suppliers are<br><br>unable to attract and retain qualified employees, this could impact<br><br>our R&D programs or delivery of components to us. Our organization has grown significantly in recent years. We may be<br><br>unable to effectively manage, monitor and control our employees,<br><br>facilities, operations and other resources. Our rapid growth driven<br><br>by strong customer demand has put pressure on our organization<br><br>and employee well-being. This may negatively impact the efficiency<br><br>of our operations, our ability to comply with laws and regulations<br><br>and our reputation as an employer. ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 RISK CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 62
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Risk factors (continued)
5. Operations
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We may face challenges in managing the industrialization of our products and bringing them<br><br>to high-volume production We are dependent on the continued operation of a limited number<br><br>of manufacturing facilities
Risk category: Risk category:
Product industrialization Continuity of own operation
Bringing our products to high-volume production at a value-based<br><br>price and in a cost-effective manner depends on our ability to<br><br>manage the industrialization of our products and to manage costs.<br><br>Customer adoption of our products depends on the performance of<br><br>our products in the field. As our products become more complex,<br><br>we face an increasing risk that products may not meet development<br><br>milestones or specifications and may not perform according to<br><br>specifications, including quality standards. If our products do not<br><br>perform according to specifications and performance criteria, or if<br><br>quality or performance issues arise, this may result in additional<br><br>costs and reduced demand for our products. Our customers may<br><br>not be able to meet planned wafer capacity.<br><br>Transitioning newly developed products to full-scale production<br><br>requires the expansion of infrastructure, including enhancing<br><br>manufacturing capabilities, increasing the supply of components<br><br>and training qualified personnel. It may also require our suppliers to<br><br>expand their infrastructure capabilities. If we or our suppliers are<br><br>unable to expand infrastructure as necessary, we may be unable to<br><br>introduce new technologies, products or product enhancements, or<br><br>to reach high-volume production of newly developed products on a<br><br>timely basis or at all. When we are successful in industrializing new products, it can take<br><br>years to reach profitable margins. New technologies might not have<br><br>the same margins as existing technologies, and we might not be<br><br>able to adjust value-based pricing and/or cost in an effective<br><br>manner. In addition, the introduction of new technologies, products<br><br>or product enhancements also impacts ASML’s liquidity. New<br><br>products may have higher cycle times, resulting in increased<br><br>working capital needs. As our products become more complex, the<br><br>investments needed before new product introduction and the timing<br><br>of revenue recognition of these products may have a significant<br><br>negative effect on our cost structure and margins.<br><br>The capability, capacity and costs associated with providing the<br><br>required customer support to cover the increasing number of<br><br>shipments and service a growing number of EUV systems that are<br><br>operational in the field could affect the timing of shipments. It could<br><br>also impact the efficient execution of maintenance, servicing and<br><br>upgrades, which are key to our systems continuing to achieve the<br><br>required productivity. All of our manufacturing activities, including subassembly, final<br><br>assembly and system testing, take place in (cleanroom) facilities in<br><br>Veldhoven, Oirschot (the Netherlands), Berlin (Germany), Wilton, San<br><br>Diego (US), Pyeongtaek (South Korea), and Linkou and Tainan<br><br>(Taiwan). These facilities may be subject to disruption for reasons<br><br>including work stoppages, fire, energy shortages, pandemic<br><br>outbreaks, flooding, cyberattacks, blockages, sabotage or other<br><br>disasters, natural or otherwise. We cannot be sure that alternative<br><br>production capacity would be available if a major disruption were to<br><br>occur. We are not able to fully insure our risk exposure and not all<br><br>disasters are insurable. As a result, we may be subject to the<br><br>financial impact of uninsured losses, which could have an adverse<br><br>impact on our financial condition and results of operations. ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 RISK CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 63
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Risk factors (continued)
5. Operations (continued)
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We face challenges to meet demand Our operations expose us to health, safety and<br><br>environment risks
Risk category: Risk category:
Manufacturing and install, Human resources, Supplier strategy and performance Environment, health and safety
In recent years, we have experienced significant demand across all<br><br>our market segments and product portfolio. This high level of<br><br>demand brings challenges. We have and are continuing to increase<br><br>production capacity in our end-to-end supply chain to meet<br><br>demand, but we face challenges in increasing capacity. For<br><br>example, we depend on our suppliers increasing their capacity and<br><br>their ability to invest, and it takes time to build the production space<br><br>and equipment required for expansion. We and our supply chain<br><br>also need to obtain permits to make expansion possible, and the<br><br>time it takes for these to be granted may cause delays. It is a challenge for ASML and its suppliers to hire and retain<br><br>employees to support expansion. Our processes and systems and<br><br>that of our supply chain may also not be able to adequately support<br><br>our growth. If we are not successful in increasing our capacity to<br><br>meet demand, this could impact our relationships with customers<br><br>and our competitive position. The increased demand and resultant<br><br>supply constraints that we are continuing to experience lead to<br><br>longer lead times for customers. This could result in customers<br><br>changing their sourcing strategy to become less dependent on<br><br>ASML, impacting our market share in certain product offerings. Hazardous substances are used in the production and operation of<br><br>our products and systems. Their use subjects us to a variety of<br><br>governmental regulations relating to environmental protection and<br><br>employee and product health and safety. This includes the<br><br>transport, use, storage, discharge, handling, emission, generation,<br><br>and disposal of toxic or other hazardous substances. In addition,<br><br>operating our systems (which use lasers and other potentially<br><br>hazardous systems) can be dangerous and can result in injury.<br><br>Failure to comply with regulations could result in harm to people and<br><br>environment. Substantial fines could be imposed on us, as well as<br><br>suspension of production, alteration of our manufacturing and<br><br>assembly and test processes, damage to our reputation and/or<br><br>restrictions on our operations or sale or other adverse<br><br>consequences. Additionally, our products have become increasingly complex. This<br><br>requires us to invest in ongoing risk assessments and development<br><br>of appropriate preventative and protective measures for health and<br><br>safety for both our employees (in connection with the production<br><br>and installation of our systems and field options and performance<br><br>of our services) and our customers’ employees (in connection with<br><br>the operation of our systems). Our health and safety practices may<br><br>not be effective in mitigating all health and safety risks. Failure to<br><br>comply with applicable regulations, or the failure of our<br><br>implemented practices for customer and employee health and<br><br>safety, could subject us to significant liabilities. ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 RISK CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 64
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Risk factors (continued)
5. Operations (continued)
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Cybersecurity and other security incidents, or disruptions in our processes or information technology<br><br>systems, could materially adversely affect our business operations
Risk category:
Security, Information technology, Process effectiveness and efficiency
We rely on the accuracy, availability and security of our information<br><br>technology (IT) systems. Despite the measures that we have<br><br>implemented, including those related to cybersecurity, our systems<br><br>could be breached or damaged by malware and systems attacks,<br><br>natural or man-made incidents, disasters or unauthorized physical<br><br>or electronic access. We have experienced some of these incidents<br><br>in the past.<br><br>We are experiencing an increasing number of cyberattacks on our<br><br>IT systems as well as the IT systems of our suppliers, customers<br><br>and other service providers, whose systems we do not control.<br><br>These attacks include malicious software (malware), attempts and<br><br>acts to gain unauthorized access to data, and other electronic and<br><br>physical security breaches of our IT systems. They also include the<br><br>IT systems of our suppliers, customers and other service providers<br><br>that have led and could lead to disruptions in critical systems,<br><br>unauthorized release, misappropriation, corruption, or loss of data<br><br>or confidential information (including confidential information relating<br><br>to our customers, employees and suppliers). Further, we depend on our employees and the employees of our<br><br>suppliers to appropriately handle confidential and sensitive data and<br><br>deploy our IT resources in a safe and secure manner that does not<br><br>expose our network systems to security breaches or the loss of<br><br>data. Inadvertent disclosure, actions or malfeasance by our<br><br>employees, those of our suppliers or other third parties have<br><br>resulted and may in the future result in a loss or misappropriation of<br><br>data or a breach or interruption of our IT systems. This could result<br><br>in competitive harm and violate export controls and other laws and<br><br>regulations which could result in fines and penalties, business<br><br>disruption, reputational harm and additional regulatory scrutiny or<br><br>export control measures.<br><br>Any system failure, accident or security breach could result in<br><br>business disruption, theft of our intellectual property or trade<br><br>secrets, unauthorized access to, or disclosure of, customer,<br><br>personnel, supplier or other confidential information, corruption of<br><br>our data or of our systems, reputational damage or litigation and<br><br>violation of applicable laws. Furthermore, malware may harm our systems and software and<br><br>could be inadvertently transmitted to our customers’ systems and<br><br>operations. This could result in loss of customers, litigation,<br><br>regulatory investigation and proceedings that could expose us to<br><br>civil or criminal liabilities and diversion of significant management<br><br>attention and resources to remedy the damages that result. We may<br><br>also incur significant costs to protect against or repair the damage<br><br>caused by these disruptions or security breaches, including, for<br><br>example, rebuilding internal systems, implementing additional threat<br><br>protection measures, providing modifications to our products and<br><br>services, defending against litigation, responding to regulatory<br><br>inquiries or actions, paying damages, or taking other remedial steps<br><br>with respect to third parties. Further, remediation efforts may not be<br><br>successful and could result in interruptions, delays or cessation of<br><br>service, unfavorable publicity, damage to our reputation, customer<br><br>allegations of breach-of-contract, possible litigation and loss of<br><br>existing or potential customers that may impede our sales or other<br><br>critical functions.<br><br>Cybersecurity threats are constantly evolving. We remain potentially<br><br>vulnerable to additional known or as yet unknown threats, as in<br><br>some instances, we and our customers, partners and suppliers may<br><br>be unaware of an incident or its magnitude and effects. We also face the risk that we could unintentionally expose our<br><br>customers to cybersecurity attacks through the systems we deliver<br><br>to them, including in the form of malware or other types of attacks,<br><br>which could harm our customers.<br><br>Overall, cybersecurity incidents have not had a material impact on<br><br>our results of operations. However, ASML’s visibility and importance<br><br>for the semiconductor industry continues to increase. There is a risk<br><br>that this may lead to actions that may adversely impact the security<br><br>of ASML or the safety of its employees.<br><br>In addition, processes and systems may not be able to adequately<br><br>support the growth that we have experienced in recent years and<br><br>continue to experience. From time to time, we implement updates<br><br>to our IT systems and software which can disrupt or shut down our<br><br>IT systems. We may not be able to successfully launch and<br><br>integrate IT systems as planned without disruption to our<br><br>operations.
Read more in How we manage risk and ESG integrated<br><br>governance ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 RISK CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 65
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Risk factors (continued)
6. Legal and compliance
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We are subject to regulatory and compliance obligations in the various countries where we operate<br><br>and as our business grows ensuring compliance becomes more challenging Changes in taxation could affect our future profitability
Risk category: Risk category:
Violation of laws and regulations Tax and customs
We are subject to a variety of laws and regulations across the<br><br>jurisdictions where we operate, including those relating to trade,<br><br>national security, tax, export controls, reporting, product<br><br>compliance, anti-corruption, antitrust, ESG, human rights, data<br><br>protection, spatial planning and environmental matters. With the<br><br>significant growth of our business in recent years, including an<br><br>increase in our sales, operations, workforce and infrastructure,<br><br>ensuring compliance with laws and regulations and our internal<br><br>policies across our continually expanding organization has become<br><br>more challenging. We face the risk that, despite our significant<br><br>efforts and proactive approach to compliance, we may fail to<br><br>comply with such laws, regulations or policies.<br><br><br><br>As a result of our expanding international operations, we operate in<br><br>a significant and growing number of countries in the world, and we<br><br>are therefore subject to numerous and differing, and sometimes<br><br>competing, regulatory frameworks, which can impact how we<br><br>operate our business. In particular, the trade and national security<br><br>regulatory environment has become increasingly restrictive, and as<br><br>a result, our ability to sell some of our products and services to<br><br>certain customers has been subject to restrictions, delays in<br><br>shipments due to a requirement to obtain permits, and a prohibition<br><br>on shipments of products to certain customers. Laws and regulations that impact our business are regularly<br><br>amended and we are subject to new laws and regulations, including<br><br>in response to changing global geopolitical dynamics. We are also<br><br>subject to the changing interpretations and positioning of regulators,<br><br>including in the granting of required licenses to ship products as well<br><br>as in investigations and enforcement. Additional or amended<br><br>regulations or changes in policies of governments and regulators<br><br>could increase compliance costs and risks associated with non-<br><br>compliance or further limit our ability to sell our products and<br><br>services in certain jurisdictions.<br><br><br><br>We are subject to investigations, audits and reviews by regulatory<br><br>authorities in the various jurisdictions where we operate regarding<br><br>compliance with laws and regulations, including tax laws. These<br><br>may arise due to misunderstandings, disputes, or suspicions of<br><br>non-compliance or otherwise, and can be resource-intensive and<br><br>have reputational and financial implications for us. Despite our<br><br>efforts and proactive compliance program, we may be found to be<br><br>non-compliant with applicable regulations.<br><br><br><br>Compliance with existing and new regulations can result in<br><br>compliance costs, increased risk of non-compliance and limitations<br><br>on our business which can impact our results of operations. The<br><br>consequences of non-compliance include fines, penalties and<br><br>litigation, as well as business disruption, the loss of trade or export<br><br>privileges, reputational harm, additional regulatory scrutiny<br><br>measures and the erosion of stakeholder trust, which could have a<br><br>material adverse impact on our business and results of operations. We are subject to income taxes in the Netherlands and other<br><br>countries in which we are active. Our effective tax rate has<br><br>fluctuated in the past and may fluctuate in the future.<br><br>Changes in our business environment can affect our effective tax<br><br>rate. The same applies to changes in tax legislation in the countries<br><br>where we operate, together with developments driven by global<br><br>organizations such as the Organization for Economic Co-operation<br><br>and Development (OECD), as well as any change in approach to tax<br><br>by tax authorities. These initiatives have already resulted in and may<br><br>result in further increased compliance obligations for ASML.<br><br>Additionally, this may result in an increase in our effective tax rate in<br><br>future years. Changes in tax legislation may adversely impact our tax position<br><br>and consequently our net income. Our worldwide effective tax rate<br><br>is heavily impacted by R&D incentives included in tax laws and<br><br>regulations in the countries where we operate. Examples include<br><br>the so-called innovation box in the Netherlands and the R&D<br><br>credits we obtain in the US. If jurisdictions alter their tax policies/<br><br>laws in this respect, it may have an adverse effect on our worldwide<br><br>effective tax rate. In addition, jurisdictions levy corporate income tax<br><br>at different rates. The mix of our sales over the various jurisdictions<br><br>in which we operate may vary from year to year, resulting in a<br><br>different mix of corporate income tax rates applicable to our profits.<br><br>This can also affect our worldwide effective tax rate and impact our<br><br>net income. ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 RISK CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 66
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Risk factors (continued)
7. Other risk factors
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Restrictions on shareholder rights may dilute<br><br>voting power We may not declare cash dividends, conduct share buyback programs or cancel shares at all or in any<br><br>particular amounts in any given year
ASML's Articles of Association provide that it is subject to the<br><br>provisions of Dutch law applicable to large corporations, called<br><br>‘structuurregime’. These provisions concentrate control of certain<br><br>corporate decisions and transactions in the hands of the<br><br>Supervisory Board. As a result, holders of ordinary shares may have<br><br>more difficulty in protecting their interests in the face of actions by<br><br>members of the Supervisory Board than if we were not subject to<br><br>the ‘structuurregime’.<br><br>Our authorized share capital includes a class of cumulative<br><br>preference shares. We have granted our preference shares<br><br>foundation (Stichting Preferente Aandelen ASML), an option to<br><br>acquire, at the nominal value of €0.09 per share, such cumulative<br><br>preference shares. Exercise of the preference share option would<br><br>effectively dilute the voting power of our outstanding ordinary shares<br><br>by one-half, which may discourage or significantly impede a third<br><br>party from acquiring a majority of our voting shares. We aim to pay a quarterly dividend that is growing (on an annualized<br><br>basis) over time, and we conduct share buybacks from time to time.<br><br>The dividend proposal, amount of share buybacks and cancellation<br><br>of shares in any given year is subject to the availability of distributable<br><br>profits, retained earnings and cash. It may also be affected by,<br><br>among other factors, the Board of Management’s views on our<br><br>potential future liquidity requirements, including for investments in<br><br>production capacity and working capital requirements, the funding of<br><br>our R&D programs and for acquisition opportunities that may arise<br><br>from time to time, and by future changes in applicable tax and<br><br>corporate laws (for example plans of the Dutch government to tax<br><br>share buy backs). The Board of Management may decide not to pay a dividend or to<br><br>pay a lower dividend and may suspend, adjust the amount of or<br><br>discontinue share buyback programs, or we may otherwise fail to<br><br>complete buyback programs. ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 RISK CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 67
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Risk factors (continued)

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Q Why is ESG sustainability<br><br>such an important topic for<br><br>ASML?

Christophe: ESG sustainability is a key

challenge for all companies because it is a

challenge for the world in general. In our

personal lives as well as our working lives,

everybody is increasingly aware of how our

actions impact the world beyond our

immediate horizons. Almost everything we

do at ASML – from how we design and

deliver solutions to the technologies our

products enable for the end users of

technology – can affect the environment or

society.

Where I think ASML is different to other

companies lies in how we are working to

manage that impact. Our ESG sustainability

strategy is now established and driving

progress toward more inclusive and

sustainable growth for all. As Chief Business

Officer, I’m responsible for this strategy at

Board level, and I work closely with the total

organization to make sure it delivers on its

promises.

Our core belief is that ESG sustainability is

not a fluffy nice-to-have attribute or

something you do with reluctance because

of regulation. For us, ESG sustainability is a

real competitive advantage and we embrace

it wholeheartedly. It powers our innovation

mindset because it underpins diversity and

inclusion, and it forms the structure against

which we can measure our impact on the

world.

Q What are the main aims of<br><br>the ESG sustainability<br><br>strategy?

Christophe: We provide comprehensive

details on how we aim to deliver on our ESG

sustainability commitments, as on page 70,

but its main objectives can be broken down

into the three E, S and G areas. Regarding

the Environment, we are working to reduce

the environmental footprint of our operations

and supply chain as well as the

environmental impacts of our products and

services. In the Social arena, we aim to have

positive impact by providing an attractive

workplace, ensuring a responsible supply

chain, supporting an innovation ecosystem

and being a valued partner in our

communities. And looking at Governance,

we take an integrated, responsible approach

that considers the needs of all our

stakeholders.

Q Where are ASML’s<br><br>greatest ESG<br><br>challenges?

Christophe: Our environmental

commitment is clear and

unequivocal: We expect to meet

our target of net zero scope 1 and

2 emissions by 2025. We have also

committed to achieving net zero

emissions in our supply chain by

2030, and with our customers by

  1. The question is no longer

about where we want to get to, but

how fast we can get there. Is it

possible to do more and go even

faster? That is an area where our

teams are working hard internally,

on our own emissions, and also

with our suppliers and customers.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 Q&A WITH THE CBO STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 68
Developing our competitive advantage
In conversation with our Executive Vice President and Chief Business Officer
Christophe D. Fouquet on his responsibility for the ESG sustainability strategy
For us, ESG sustainability is a real competitive<br><br>advantage and we embrace it wholeheartedly.”
---
Christophe D. Fouquet
Executive Vice President and Chief Business Officer On November 30, 2023, the Supervisory Board of ASML announced its intention to appoint Christophe Fouquet, currently<br><br>ASML’s Chief Business Officer and member of the Board of Management, as the company’s next President and Chief<br><br>Executive Officer. The appointment is subject to notification of the Annual General Meeting of shareholders on April 24, 2024.
---

New_CBO_Page2_Background_050124.jpg

Diversity is a true strength of ours as well as

one of the key challenges we are addressing

through the social element of the strategy.

Our success springs from innovation and

teamwork delivered by very effective, high-

performing people. We believe that it is vital

to have people who look at things differently

– who come from different backgrounds,

cultures and experiences. Although 144

different countries are represented in our

workforce, there is an opportunity to be even

more diverse. But we can only hire a diverse

set of employees if education systems

across the world provide them. When only

around 25% of STEM

Our success springs<br><br>from innovation and<br><br>teamwork delivered<br><br>by very effective,<br><br>high-performing<br><br>people.”
Christophe D. Fouquet
Executive Vice President and Chief Business Officer

students are women, it is difficult to have a

higher percentage in the business. This is

why we engage so deeply with educational

institutions – not only high schools and

universities but also primary schools –

because we need to show young children

that a career in science and technology is a

good and realistic option.

From a governance perspective,

transparency and responsibility around our

governance capability are non-negotiable.

We are fully committed to complying with

laws and regulations and are focused on

internalizing upcoming legislation, such as

the Corporate Sustainability Reporting

Directive (CSRD), which is phased in from

the start of 2024 and raises the bar on ESG

matters. But it is important to emphasize that

we see ESG as far more than a compliance

topic – we regard it as the right thing to do to

secure the long-term success of our

company. Our ESG sustainability activities

are right for the people who work for us, right

for everyone in our ecosystem and right for

everybody on the planet.

Q Does the semiconductor<br><br>industry have a positive or<br><br>negative influence on the<br><br>environment?

Christophe: I think our industry is on the

positive side of the equation, because the

benefits of the technologies, products and

services we enable far outweigh the

negatives.

Of course, you can’t ignore the fact that

double-digit growth for many years has led

to an increase in the semiconductor

industry’s environmental footprint. Energy

consumption by fabs and server farms is

significant, and this adds to the energy used

by the everyday electronics we all depend

on. So at first glance our industry has a

negative impact on the environment. On the

other hand, semiconductors are essential to

many of the technologies that aim to reduce

energy consumption and emissions, such as

electrification, smart grids and the whole

energy transition. For example, smart grids

cannot exist without microprocessor-based

measurement, control and switching.

As an industry leader, we're keen to share

our expertise and use our influence to

persuade our peers and our ecosystem to

focus on sustainability. We were one of the

founding members of the Semiconductor

Climate Consortium (SCC) of the industry

body SEMI, and we take part in many

conferences every year. We also regularly

engage with our customers, suppliers and

others to identify ways to further reduce the

industry’s emissions. We not only talk with

our suppliers about how they can do this,

but also walk alongside them and give them

realistic incentives to improve their

environmental performance. For customers,

ASML’s EUV systems already use 30-40%

less energy per wafer pass than they did five

years ago, and we plan to improve this by

another 30-35% by 2025.

Q How important are ASML’s<br><br>people to the company’s<br><br>success?

Christophe: Our vision is to enable ground-

breaking technology to solve some of

humanity’s toughest challenges. We

empower our people to deliver that vision by

ensuring they are proud to work with us and

engaged with our ambitions.

One of the reasons why talented individuals

choose to work at ASML is because they

want to make a positive contribution to the

world. They want more than a career – they

want to help develop solutions that will

ultimately transform everything from

healthcare and transport to how humanity

combats climate change.

We help them achieve those broad aims in

many different ways. For example, we are

ramping up our Community Partnership

Program and aim to spend €2,500 per

employee per year by 2025 on community

projects that support education, inclusivity

and ESG innovation as well as very practical

initiatives that address local needs, such as

the lack of housing in the Veldhoven area,

close to our headquarters. Our teams

worldwide are similarly energized in

identifying opportunities where we can make

a difference.

Q How would you sum up<br><br>ASML’s commitment to ESG<br><br>sustainability?

Christophe: ASML has a big responsibility

to lead the way on ESG sustainability. Not

long ago, we were the biggest company that

nobody had ever heard of. That’s very

different now, and with increased profile

comes increased responsibility. People look

up to us – so, by becoming role models on

issues such as reducing our environmental

footprint or increasing our diversity and

inclusivity, we can inspire others to make

good progress themselves.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 Q&A WITH THE CBO CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 69
Developing our competitive advantage (continued)
In conversation with our Executive Vice President and Chief Business Officer
Christophe D. Fouquet on his responsibility for the ESG sustainability strategy

New_ESG_AtAGlance_Background_150424.jpg

Our contribution to a digital,<br><br>sustainable future<br><br>Increasing digitalization can pave the way to a society<br><br>that is more environmentally and socially sustainable<br><br>for everyone. The large-scale digitalization that is<br><br>required to achieve a sustainable future relies on the<br><br>semiconductor industry’s ability to produce faster,<br><br>more powerful microchips that are energy-efficient<br><br>and affordable. Together with our partners, we<br><br>provide the patterning solutions that can help make<br><br>this possible. The benefits our industry brings come at<br><br>a cost, including energy and resource use. We are<br><br>committed to innovating and investing to enable our<br><br>company and the industry as a whole to reduce these<br><br>and other negative impacts. Our vision is to enable ground-breaking technology that solves some of humanity’s toughest challenges
> > >
1 Grow our holistic<br><br>lithography business 2 Secure unique supply chain capabilities<br><br>to ensure business continuity 3 Move toward adjacent<br><br>business opportunities 4 Deliver on our ESG<br><br>sustainability<br><br>commitments
Environmental Social Governance
Read more on page 75 > Read more on page 104 > Read more on page 155 >
We want to help drive expanding computing<br><br>power while minimizing waste, energy use and<br><br>emissions. Our focus on energy efficiency and<br><br>climate action, and the circular economy, is<br><br>fundamental to achieving this goal. We also want to deliver responsible growth that<br><br>benefits all our stakeholders – to provide an<br><br>attractive workplace for all, build a responsible<br><br>supply chain, fuel innovation in our ecosystem<br><br>and be a valued partner to communities. As a foundation, we commit to act<br><br>on our responsibilities and anchor<br><br>them across our entire business through<br><br>integrated governance, engaged<br><br>stakeholders and transparent reporting.
Energy efficiency<br><br>and climate action<br><br>page 76 > Circular economy<br><br>page 91 > Attractive workplace for<br><br>all<br><br>page 107 > Responsible supply chain<br><br>page 126 > ESG integrated<br><br>governance<br><br>page 156 > Engaged<br><br>stakeholders<br><br>page 37 >
Innovation ecosystem<br><br>page 137  > Valued partner<br><br>in our communities<br><br>page 146  > Transparent reporting<br><br>page 174 >
Our ESG sustainability strategy is underpinned by targets which are detailed across the following pages
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 ENVIRONMENTAL, SOCIAL AND GOVERNANCE STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 70
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ESG at a glance
To be a sustainability leader, we must drive progress toward a sustainable society. This means enabling ground-breaking<br><br>technology that solves some of humanity’s toughest challenges.
Why it matters
---

Environmental, social and governance (ESG) topics have

become increasingly important to our customers, employees,

suppliers, shareholders and society. We aim to respond

to the continuously evolving needs of our stakeholders in

the best way with our ESG sustainability strategy.

How we’re managing<br><br>our impact

When we act sustainably as a business, it benefits

everyone. We want to grow our company and increase

our positive impact while minimizing our negative impacts

on the environment and people. We do this by focusing

on the ESG sustainability topics where we can have the

biggest impact. For these so-called material topics, we

define policies, targets and actions, and disclose progress

against them in our ESG sustainability reporting.

Environmental – We want to continue to expand<br><br>computing power but with minimal waste, energy<br><br>use and emissions. Our focus is on energy efficiency<br><br>and climate action, and the transition to a circular<br><br>economy.
Social – We want to ensure responsible growth that<br><br>benefits all stakeholders – to provide an attractive<br><br>workplace for all, build a responsible supply chain, fuel<br><br>innovation in our ecosystems and be a valued partner<br><br>to communities.
Governance – We want to anchor our responsibilities<br><br>in the way we do business through integrated<br><br>governance, engaged stakeholders and transparent<br><br>reporting.

We update our material topics annually using insights

from ongoing stakeholder engagement, developments

within ASML and the evolving context in which we

operate.

In 2023, a double materiality assessment was conducted

as input for the ESG sustainability strategy and in

preparation for the CSRD requirements that are currently

being phased in.

Double materiality reflects the following: (1) our most

significant impacts on people and the environment, and

(2) the most significant sustainability-related risks and

opportunities affecting our value drivers, competitive

position and long-term shareholder value creation.

We used the 'impact' part of this assessment to

determine the material topics for this Annual Report, in

line with GRI (Global Reporting Initiative) requirements.

Our process for determining impact materiality can be

summarized in four steps, as shown on the right of this

page. The assessment identified three new topics for

2023: Pollution of air, training and development, and

quality of life.

How we identified our material topics
Step 1: Understand the context Step 2: Identify sustainability matters and impacts
Identifying affected stakeholders and users of<br><br>sustainability information is the foundation of our<br><br>materiality assessment process. We identify five<br><br>relevant stakeholder groups: customers, employees,<br><br>suppliers, shareholders and society. We continually<br><br>engage with these groups to understand their<br><br>concerns and how their interests may be impacted.<br><br>This engagement informs improvement actions and<br><br>feedback on performance and progress. We use the insights gained from stakeholder<br><br>engagement and other relevant sources to identify<br><br>sustainability matters and impacts that are relevant to<br><br>us. This results in an overview that includes positive<br><br>and negative, actual and potential, and short-,<br><br>medium- and long-term impacts. The aim of the<br><br>overview is to cover all impacts that might be material,<br><br>considering our business activities and relationships<br><br>across our value chain.
Read more in Our business model - Engaging with our<br><br>stakeholders
Step 3: Assess the significance of the impacts Step 4: Prioritize the most significant impacts
ASML subject matter experts assess the materiality of<br><br>negative impacts based on scale, scope and irremediable<br><br>character, also referred to as severity. In case of potential<br><br>impacts, likelihood is considered. The materiality of positive<br><br>impacts is assessed based on scale and scope, and, in<br><br>case of potential impacts, likelihood. For potential negative<br><br>human-rights-related impacts, severity takes precedence<br><br>over likelihood. The assessment results in a materiality score for each<br><br>impact, and we use these materiality scores to<br><br>determine thresholds for materiality. Thresholds are<br><br>determined separately for negative impacts and<br><br>positive impacts, as these cannot always be<br><br>compared. Impacts that meet the materiality threshold<br><br>are clustered into material sustainability matters.<br><br>The outcomes of the materiality assessment are used<br><br>to shape our strategy and targets, with the aim of<br><br>sustainable long-term value creation for all our<br><br>stakeholders. The Board of Management sets this<br><br>strategy.
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 ENVIRONMENTAL, SOCIAL AND GOVERNANCE CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 71
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Our material ESG sustainability topics
To create long-term value for our stakeholders, we focus our strategy<br><br>on the sustainability topics where we can have the greatest impact.
Material topics (positive or negative, actual or potential) which are considered material for 2023 based on the materiality assessment
--- --- --- --- --- --- ---
Material topic name Material impacts Positive or negative impact Actual or potential impact Impact area value chain Please read more in
Energy<br><br>management &<br><br>carbon footprint –<br><br>Operations Impact on climate change through energy use and GHG emissions from manufacturing, buildings,<br><br>business travel and employee commuting Negative Actual Own operations Energy efficiency and climate<br><br>action – Emissions from our<br><br>own operations –<br><br>Manufacturing and buildings<br><br>and Business travel and<br><br>commuting
Energy<br><br>management &<br><br>carbon footprint –<br><br>Supply chain Impact on climate change through energy use and GHG emissions from purchased goods and<br><br>services and logistics Negative Actual Upstream – suppliers Energy efficiency and climate<br><br>action – Emissions from our<br><br>supply chain (including<br><br>logistics)
Energy<br><br>management &<br><br>carbon footprint –<br><br>Product use Impact on climate change through energy use and GHG emissions from use of our products at our<br><br>customers Negative Actual Downstream – customers Energy efficiency and climate<br><br>action – Emissions from<br><br>product use at our customers
Energy<br><br>management &<br><br>carbon footprint –<br><br>Downstream<br><br>impact Impacts in the ICT industry and society through the use of our customers' products in all kinds of<br><br>applications that contribute to climate change or support climate change mitigation and adaptation Positive and negative Actual Downstream – beyond<br><br>customers Energy efficiency and climate<br><br>action
Pollution of air Impacts on the environment through emission of nitrogen oxides (NOx), non-methane volatile<br><br>organic compounds (NMVOC) and hydrogen (H2) from manufacturing Negative Actual Own operations Energy efficiency and climate<br><br>action – Emissions from our<br><br>own operations –<br><br>Manufacturing and buildings
Circular economy Impacts on the environment through resource use and waste related to systems, parts, tools,<br><br>packaging, real estate and non-product-related activities Negative Actual Own operations & customers Circular economy
Circular economy Impact on the transition to a regenerative and circular economy through the use of our customers'<br><br>products in all kinds of applications Positive and negative Actual Downstream – beyond<br><br>customers Circular economy
Diversity<br><br>and inclusion Impact on employees by providing equal opportunities for all, including gender equality, fair<br><br>remuneration, measures against discrimination and harassment, and promotion of diversity and<br><br>inclusion Positive Actual Own operations Attractive workplace for all –<br><br>Inspiring a unified culture
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 ENVIRONMENTAL, SOCIAL AND GOVERNANCE CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 72
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Our material ESG sustainability topics (continued)
Material topics (positive or negative, actual or potential) which are considered material for 2023 based on the materiality assessment (continued)
--- --- --- --- --- --- ---
Material topic name Material impacts Positive or negative impact Actual or potential impact Impact area value chain Please read more in
Talent attraction,<br><br>employee<br><br>engagement<br><br>and retention Impact on employees' well-being through labor conditions, including social protection, fair<br><br>remuneration practices, freedom of association and collective bargaining, and existence of works<br><br>councils Positive Actual Own operations Attractive workplace –<br><br>Providing the best employee<br><br>experience
Training and skills<br><br>development Impact on employees’ well-being and careers by providing training and development opportunities Positive Actual Own operations Attractive workplace –<br><br>Providing the best employee<br><br>experience
Occupational<br><br>health and safety Impacts on employee health, safety and well-being in case of incidents with hazardous substances<br><br>or systems and work-related pressure on physical and mental health Negative Potential Own operations Attractive workplace –<br><br>Ensuring employee health and<br><br>safety and Providing the best<br><br>employee experience
Responsible<br><br>supply chain<br><br>and product<br><br>stewardship Potential impacts on the environment and workers in the supply chain, including labor conditions,<br><br>forced and child labor, and management of those impacts through product stewardship and<br><br>supply chain due diligence Positive and negative Potential Upstream – suppliers Responsible supply chain
Innovation<br><br>ecosystem Impacts in society through supporting the innovation ecosystem and contributing to R&D, public –<br><br>private partnerships, academic, industry and other research, STEM education and ESG innovation Positive Actual Downstream – beyond<br><br>customers Innovation ecosystem and<br><br>Valued partner in our<br><br>communities
Community<br><br>engagement Impacts on local communities through job creation and pressure on housing, infrastructure, social<br><br>cohesion and access to talent Positive and negative Actual Own operations Valued partner in our<br><br>communities
Quality of life Impacts on people’s well-being, health, safety and human rights through the use of technology in<br><br>all kinds of applications that affect quality of life Positive and negative Actual Downstream – beyond<br><br>customers Responsible supply chain ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 ENVIRONMENTAL, SOCIAL AND GOVERNANCE CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 73
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Our material ESG sustainability topics (continued)

New_Contribution_UN_SDGs_Background.jpg

Why it matters<br><br>The UN’s Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)<br><br>represent the global sustainable development agenda<br><br>and inform public policy. As a responsible business, we<br><br>support the SDGs, and it is critical that we accelerate<br><br>action to play our part. Our ESG sustainability strategy<br><br>supports this ambition, focusing on the six SDGs where<br><br>we can contribute most. We also became a signatory to<br><br>the UN Global Compact in 2023.<br><br>How we’re managing our contribution<br><br>We contribute to SDG 4 (Quality education) by<br><br>developing our people and promoting lifelong learning<br><br>opportunities for the communities where we operate.<br><br>SDG 8 (Decent work and economic growth) is covered<br><br>by our commitment to provide an attractive workplace<br><br>that promotes sustained, inclusive growth, full and<br><br>productive employment, and decent work for all<br><br>throughout our supply chain, including protecting labor<br><br>rights and promoting a safe and secure working<br><br>environment for everyone. Our contribution to SDG 9<br><br>(Industry, innovation and infrastructure) is demonstrated<br><br>by our work to build a resilient ecosystem that fosters<br><br>innovation while promoting inclusive and sustainable<br><br>industrialization. We contribute to SDG 11 (Sustainable<br><br>cities and communities) by working with our community<br><br>outreach partners to make cities and human<br><br>settlements inclusive, safe, resilient and sustainable. We<br><br>contribute to SDG 12 (Responsible consumption and<br><br>production) via our circular economy work and our work<br><br>to achieve environmentally sound management of<br><br>chemicals and all wastes throughout their life cycles, in<br><br>accordance with agreed international frameworks. We<br><br>contribute to SDG 13 (Climate action) by promoting<br><br>energy efficiency and climate action across our value<br><br>chain.
SDG 4 SDG_EN-11_rgb.jpg SDG 11
Quality education Sustainable cities<br><br>and communities
Ensure inclusive and equitable quality education and promote lifelong<br><br>learning opportunities for all Make cities and human settlements inclusive, safe, resilient and<br><br>sustainable
Our contribution Our contribution
– Attractive workplace for all Read more on page 107 > – Valued partner in our communities Read more on page 146 >
– Valued partner in our communities Read more on page 146 >
SDG 8 SDG_EN-12_rgb.jpg SDG 12
Decent work and<br><br>economic growth Responsible consumption<br><br>and production
Promote sustained, inclusive and sustainable economic growth, full<br><br>and productive employment and decent work for all Ensure sustainable consumption and production patterns
Our contribution Our contribution
– Attractive workplace for all Read more on page 107 > – Circular economy Read more on page 91 >
– Responsible supply chain Read more on page 126 > – Responsible supply chain Read more on page 126 >
– ESG integrated governance Read more on page 156 > – ESG integrated governance Read more on page 156 >
SDG 9 SDG_EN-13_rgb.jpg SDG 13
Industry, innovation<br><br>and infrastructure Climate action
Build resilient infrastructure, promote inclusive and sustainable<br><br>industrialization, and foster innovation Take urgent action to combat climate change and its impacts by<br><br>regulating emissions and promoting developments in renewable<br><br>energy
Our contribution Our contribution
– Innovation ecosystem Read more on page 137 > – Energy efficiency and climate action Read more on page 76 >
– Responsible supply chain Read more on page 126 >
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 ENVIRONMENTAL, SOCIAL AND GOVERNANCE CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 74
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Contributing to the UN's Sustainable Development Goals
The UN’s 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development provides a shared blueprint for peace and prosperity,<br><br>for people and planet, now and in the future.

New_EnvironmentalAtAGlance_Intro_Background_050124.jpg

ENVIRONMENTAL
76 Energy efficiency and climate action
80 Scope 1 and 2 emissions from our own<br><br>operations – Manufacturing and buildings
84 Scope 3 emissions from our own operations –<br><br>Business travel and commuting
85 Scope 3 emissions from our supply chain<br><br>(including logistics)
86 Scope 3 emissions from product use at our<br><br>customers
91 Circular economy
94 Prevent waste
95 Extend the lifetime of our products
97 Reuse resources
99 Recycle materials
103 Water management Energy efficiency<br><br>and climate action
---
We are working to reduce our carbon<br><br>footprint to achieve net zero emissions<br><br>across our value chain by 2040.
Broadening energy efficiency<br><br>efforts across our product<br><br>portfolio. Circular economy
---
We aim to maximize the value of our systems, reusing resources as much as possible, while<br><br>minimizing waste, decoupling our growth from resource consumption, and recycling materials.
Aiming for zero waste from operations to landfill or incineration by 2030.
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 ENVIRONMENTAL STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 75
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Environmental at a glance
We are committed to reducing the environmental footprint of our operations<br><br>and supply chain as well as the environmental impacts of our products and services.
IN THIS SECTION
--- ---
79 Our overall performance in 2023
80 Scope 1 and 2 emissions from our own<br><br>operations – Manufacturing and buildings
84 Scope 3 emissions from our own operations –<br><br>Business travel and commuting
85 Scope 3 emissions from our supply chain<br><br>(including logistics)
86 Scope 3 emissions from product use at our<br><br>customers Why it matters
---

As the world turns to technology to help solve its pressing

challenges, our goal is to expand the availability of

computing power and data storage capability while reducing

the environmental footprint of our operations, our supply

chain, and from the use of our products and services.

The growing demand for enhanced chip functionality means

that the complexity and energy consumption of the overall

microchip patterning process is increasing. Aiming for net

zero emissions across our entire value chain by 2040 while

energy demand is increasing is a complex challenge that

can only be achieved by working closely with our partners,

suppliers, customers and other stakeholders.

Our ambition is to achieve carbon neutrality with net zero

emissions across our manufacturing and buildings

(scope 1 and 2) by 2025. With regard to scope 3, we aim

to achieve net zero emissions from business travel and

commuting (travel to and from work) by 2025, in our

supply chain (scope 3 upstream) by 2030, and from the

use of our products and services by customers (scope 3

downstream) by 2040.

35.1 kt 15.0 Mt 1.06 kt 0.55 kt 7.7 kWh
Scope 1 and 2<br><br>CO2e emissions<br><br>(2025 target: net zero) Scope 3<br><br>CO2e emissions<br><br>(2040 target: net zero) Scope 3 CO2e<br><br>emissions intensity<br><br>(per €m gross profit)<br><br>(2025 target: 1.016) Net scope 3 CO2e<br><br>emissions intensity<br><br>(per €m revenue) NXE energy use per<br><br>wafer pass<br><br>(NXE:3600D, measured in 2023)<br><br>(2025 target: 5.1 kWh) How we’re managing<br><br>our impact
---

Our goal is to reduce our climate impacts, working

closely together with our peers in the entire

semiconductor value chain – in our own operations

together with our suppliers, in our customers’ production

process and through reducing the energy used by

semiconductors in operation by enabling scaling.

Increasing energy efficiency is one of the key levers – our

efforts range from optimizing the technical installations in

our buildings to supplying more energy-efficient products

(in terms of energy spent per wafer exposure) to

customers. Other ways we are working to reduce our

GHG emissions include reducing business travel,

commuting more sustainably, using renewable electricity

and minimizing our use of natural gas by reusing waste

heat and electrification.

We measure our performance<br><br>in the following ways:
•Scope 1 and 2 CO2e emissions<br><br>•Scope 3 CO2e emissions<br><br>•Scope 3 CO2e emissions intensity (per €m<br><br>gross profit)<br><br>•Scope 3 CO2e emissions intensity (per €m revenue)<br><br>•NXE energy use per exposed wafer Our environmental management system
---
We have implemented an environmental management<br><br>system (EMS) to monitor energy use and emissions<br><br>and improve performance and enhance efficiency<br><br>across our global operations. The EMS is integrated<br><br>into the overall environmental, health and safety (EHS)<br><br>management system operated by all ASML facilities.<br><br>This system was recertified for ISO 14001 (the<br><br>standard for environmental management systems) in<br><br>2023 and structured in accordance with ISO 45001<br><br>(the standard for occupational health and safety<br><br>management systems) requirements.
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 ENVIRONMENTAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 76
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Energy efficiency and climate action
We are working to reduce our carbon footprint to achieve net zero emissions<br><br>across our value chain by 2040.

Our journey to net zero emissions in our value chain

We have set a target to achieve net zero emissions in our

value chain by 2040. Our approach to achieving this is

based on three principles:

1 Reduce energy use and innovate to achieve greater<br><br>energy efficiency by redesigning our assets, products<br><br>and processes.
2 Aim to lead the shift toward 100% credible,<br><br>renewable energy.
3 Compensate for residual emissions if no reasonable<br><br>other improvement actions are available.

We will need to work closely with our customers,

suppliers and partners to achieve the milestones in our

journey to net zero emissions in our value chain.

As part of our journey to net zero emissions, we are a

signatory to the Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi)

and we currently have two SBTi-approved near-term

targets. These are:

•Reduction of 25.2% of our combined scope 1 and 2

emissions in 2025, compared to base year 2019,

without offsetting

•Reduction of 35.3% in scope 3 intensity (emissions per

unit of gross profit) in 2025 compared to 2019, without

offsetting

| The diagram below illustrates our journey to net zero emissions in our value chain: | | --- || 2025 | Net zero scope 1 and 2 emissions<br><br>from manufacturing and buildings | | --- | --- | | | We use natural gas resulting in direct emissions<br><br>(scope 1). In some parts of the world, we have<br><br>been unable as of yet to buy green electricity.<br><br>This results in local emissions caused by fossil<br><br>power plants (scope 2). | | 2025 | Net zero scope 3 emissions<br><br>from business travel and commuting | | | Emissions from employees traveling to our<br><br>customers, suppliers and other parts of ASML,<br><br>and from employees traveling to and from work. | | 2030 | Net zero scope 3 emissions<br><br>from our supply chain (including logistics) | | | A significant portion of our GHG emissions are<br><br>generated indirectly in our supply chain, as we<br><br>mainly assemble modules that we source from<br><br>suppliers. Parts and modules have to be<br><br>transported to us or our customers directly, and<br><br>our assembled systems are shipped from ASML<br><br>premises to customers. As today’s freight<br><br>logistics, especially air transportation, are still<br><br>carbon-intensive, a significant part of our supply<br><br>chain emissions stem from logistics (operated<br><br>by our logistics suppliers). | | 2040 | Net zero scope 3 emissions from product<br><br>use at our customers | | | The largest portion of our indirect emissions arises<br><br>during use of our systems at customers’ factories.<br><br>Our customers are not always able to use 100%<br><br>renewable electricity to run their business. | | ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 | ENVIRONMENTAL CONTINUED | STRATEGIC REPORT | CORPORATE GOVERNANCE | FINANCIALS | 77 | | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | | Energy efficiency and climate action (continued) | | | | | |

We identify and assess the impact of climate-related

risks and opportunities using the assessment guidelines

of the Task Force on Climate-related Financial

Disclosures (TCFD).

Read more in our TCFD Recommendations – Climate-related

disclosure, available at asml.com

Alongside our efforts to lower our carbon footprint, we

are committed to using our innovations and digital

technologies to enable the wider semiconductor industry

to reduce its overall environmental footprint.

Our participation in the annual Carbon Disclosure Project

(CDP) assessment helps steer our environmental

initiatives. CDP runs the global disclosure system that

drives actions and transparency for environment impacts.

Our score in the most recent CDP Climate Change 2023

questionnaire was B, with C being the global average.

We continuously aim to improve and execute emissions

reduction plans throughout the value chain to achieve

our net zero commitment, aiming to maintain good

progress in fighting climate change and to be recognized

by the CDP in the A-list.

How semiconductors support climate action
While we measure and aim to reduce the impacts of our<br><br>operations, supply chain and product use, ASML’s climate<br><br>impacts extend far beyond these areas to include the<br><br>benefits and risks that our technology brings to society.<br><br>The technology pioneered by our R&D teams and<br><br>partners sits at the heart of global digitalization and has<br><br>the potential to transform how we all live and work. We<br><br>enable our customers to innovate the semiconductor<br><br>technologies that can help humanity manage its<br><br>challenges and seize opportunities by facilitating<br><br>sustainable living and mobility, accessible healthcare, food<br><br>security and the transition to renewable energy.<br><br>For example, semiconductors are harnessing,<br><br>converting, transferring and storing energy from<br><br>sources such as solar and wind power as electricity<br><br>and helping to ensure that national power grids are<br><br>both responsive and robust. Mitigating climate change means reducing energy<br><br>demand by developing end-use applications that are<br><br>as energy efficient as possible. Digital technology can<br><br>help businesses and citizens cut energy consumption<br><br>and save money. Smart sensors can detect room<br><br>occupancy, allowing lights and heating to be switched<br><br>off and on automatically. Smartphone applications<br><br>make it possible for people to remotely control their<br><br>appliances or get from A to B through car-sharing,<br><br>ride-sharing or other demand-driven, flexible ways of<br><br>transportation. And as we transition away from fossil<br><br>fuels, electric vehicles will become the norm and will<br><br>require new, potentially diverse electronic solutions.<br><br>On the adverse side, we acknowledge the effects of<br><br>digital technologies that increase energy demand, such<br><br>as AI, IoT, blockchain and cryptocurrency mining.
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 ENVIRONMENTAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 78
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Energy efficiency and climate action (continued)

Our overall performance in 2023

Progress tracking
Topic Target 2025 Performance indicator 2021 2022 2023 Status
Climate action Net zero Scope 1 – Direct emissions from fossil fuels in our operations (kt) 19.3 17.3 19.2
Net zero Scope 2 – Indirect emissions from energy consumption (kt) [market-based]2 20.1 20.8 15.9
Climate_Action_Logo.jpg Net zero (2040) Scope 3 – Indirect emissions from total value chain (kt)3 11,426.2 11,936.3 15,025.2 n
Total footprint (in kt)1 11,465.6 11,974.4 15,060.3 n
No target Scope 3 CO2e emissions intensity (per €m revenue)3 0.61 0.56 0.55 n/a
1.016 Scope 3 CO2e emissions intensity (per €m gross profit)3 1.165 1.116 1.060
No target Reduction in GHG emissions from projects (kt) n/a 2.6 1.6 n/a
Energy efficiency 5.1 Products – NXE energy use per wafer pass (in kWh) 8.3 (NXE:3600D) 8.3 (NXE:3600D) 7.7 (NXE:3600D) n
No target Products – NXT energy use per wafer pass (in kWh)4 0.56 (NXT:1980Ei) 0.55 (NXT:2100i) 0.52 (NXT:1980Fi) n/a
Energy_Efficiency_Logo.jpg No target Energy consumption (in TJ) 1,689 1,633 1,729 n/a
100 TJ Energy savings worldwide through projects (in TJ)5 12.7 31.7 47.3
100% Renewable electricity (of total electricity purchased) 92% 91% 91% n
(10)% Energy consumption (NXE) (reduction in % of baseline 2018 1.4 MW) (6)% (NXE:3600D) (6)% (NXE:3600D) (12)% (NXE:3600D) n
No target Throughput (in wph) (NXE) 160 (NXE:3600D) 160 (NXE:3600D) 160 (NXE:3600D) n/a
(60)% Energy use per wafer pass (NXE) (reduction in % of baseline 2018)6 (35)% (NXE:3600D) (35)% (NXE:3600D) (40)% (NXE:3600D) n

1.The guidance from the GHG Protocol – the organization that provides widely used international standards for emissions reporting – is used for the calculation of the emission scope. Market-based conversion factors are used to calculate the scope 2 CO2e emissions in kt.

2.We report the market-based emissions after purchase of renewable electricity – the electricity is proven emission-free by tracking energy attribute certificates. ASML currently does not compensate any emissions, resulting in no differences between our gross and net emissions.

3.The 2023 figure includes nine months of actual data and three months of estimates. The 2022 figure has been adjusted with data for the entire year (11,900 kt best estimate in the 2022 Annual Report). The 2021 figure has been adjusted to report the exact figure instead of a rounded figure.

4.Since 2023, when we measure the energy efficiency of our DUV immersion and DUV dry systems, the laser is included within the measurement. The comparative figures have been revised.

5.In 2021, we started a new master plan period for 2021-2025, with a target to achieve 100 TJ energy savings by the end of 2025. The savings reported are cumulated compared with the base year; therefore, they are not comparable between years.

6.The baseline figure of the NXE:3400B energy use per exposed wafer pass has been corrected, from 13.08 kWh to 12.8 kWh, due to an incorrect rounding being used in the past.

Read more in Non-financial statements – Non-financial indicators – Energy efficiency and climate action

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 ENVIRONMENTAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 79
Energy efficiency and climate action (continued)
On track •<br><br>Ongoing focus area n
How we’re managing<br><br>our impact
---

As we work toward net zero emissions in our value chain,

our most immediate task is to manage the climate

impacts of our own operations and buildings.

Scope 1 emissions comprise direct CO2 emissions

from use of fossil fuels – mainly natural gas – in our

operations. The majority of natural gas consumption is

used for heating our buildings and for humidification of

our cleanrooms.

Scope 2 emissions arise from our purchased electricity,

which accounts for 80% of the energy we use at ASML.

Most of our electricity consumption relates to the

manufacturing of chipmaking equipment – assembly and

testing of lithography, metrology and inspection systems

– and maintaining consistent climate conditions such as

temperature, humidity and air quality.

We aim to achieve our targets for scope 1 and 2 by:

1 Reducing energy consumption
2 Using renewable energy
3 Compensating CO2 emissions Our targets and performance<br><br>in 2023
---

Our target is to achieve net zero scope 1 and 2

emissions by 2025. This target exceeds the reductions

needed to limit global warming to 1.5°C. We report

market-based emissions after purchase of renewable

electricity – the electricity is proven emission-free by

tracking energy attribute certificates (EACs).

Despite an increase in our electricity and gas

consumption due to company growth of 30.2%, the

share of renewable electricity remained comparable to

2022 at around 91.4%.

For the third year in a row, our net scope 1 and 2 CO2

emissions have decreased – from 39.4 kt in 2021 and

38.1 kt in 2022 to 35.1 kt in 2023. This decrease in 2023

was due to a combination of business growth (2 kt) and

adding process CO2 emissions (1 kt) to scope 1

reporting, consistent with reporting guidelines,

compensated by a 4.9 kt reduction in Taiwan following a

change in contract in 2022 to reduce our CO2 (reduction

of CO2 emission scope 2), and a 1.1 kt reduction due to

our energy savings master plan.

Our actions in 2023

1. Reducing energy consumption and use of natural gas

Our energy-saving master plan covers each of our five

largest industrial sites and includes over 80 projects. It

aims to reduce energy consumption through direct

annual savings of at least 100 TJ (or 5 kt CO2e). The

main components of the master plan are improving the

efficiency of our technical installations used for our

operation, and optimizing our portfolio by building new

offices that meet the latest green building standards,

such as BREEAM (Building Research Establishment

Environmental Assessment Method) in Europe, LEED

(Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) in the

US or G-SEED (Green Standard for Energy and

Environmental Design) in South Korea. We are also

investing in renewable energy production at our sites.

Reducing our use of natural gas is a key objective. We

have a multi-year project to implement an energy grid to

reuse waste heat from our factories and offices on our

site in Veldhoven. The energy grid is a two-pipe loop that

makes waste heat available for heating in winter and

energy-efficient cooling in summer. Based on our plans,

we estimate that the use of natural gas in Veldhoven will

be reduced from around 4.9 million m3 to around 1.2

million m3 in the next three to four years, driven by the

energy grid and other energy-saving measures.

As we grow as a company, we strive to optimize our real

estate portfolio because our buildings account for a

significant percentage of our scope 1 and 2 emissions.

When building new offices and manufacturing sites,

we seize the opportunity to make them sustainable,

and several of our existing buildings have been assessed

for performance against BREEAM guidelines. Two

additional buildings in the Netherlands achieved a

BREEAM 'Excellent' rating in 2023: our logistic center

and one large office building. Five more buildings are in

the process of achieving a BREEAM 'Excellent' rating in

2024.

With an eye on future growth, our new campus in

Veldhoven is being designed with a strong focus on

sustainability. We are applying the latest building

sustainability standards to our real estate worldwide,

wherever possible. Besides the Netherlands, we have

projects ongoing in South Korea (G-SEED) and Taiwan

(LEED).

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 ENVIRONMENTAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 80
Energy efficiency and climate action (continued)
Scope 1 and 2 emissions from our own operations – Manufacturing and buildings
Key projects in 2023
---
In 2023, as part of our energy savings master plan, we<br><br>executed key projects in the Netherlands, the US and<br><br>Taiwan which resulted in around 16 TJ annual energy<br><br>savings. The total energy savings delivered by projects<br><br>executed between 2021 and 2023 amounted to 47 TJ.<br><br>In 2023, if we include part of the savings realized by<br><br>projects started in 2022 and not accounted for in<br><br>2022, we realized savings of:
•11 TJ per year through operationalizing systems of<br><br>the energy grid and implementing H2 venting in two<br><br>manufacturing buildings in Veldhoven<br><br>•3 TJ per year in Wilton by installing sand filters on<br><br>cooling towers<br><br>•1 TJ in San Diego through the installation of solar<br><br>panels<br><br>•1 TJ in Taiwan factories by optimizing the operation<br><br>of cooling installations and replacing ventilation<br><br>systems
The remaining 31 TJ is from savings realized by<br><br>projects executed in 2021 and 2022.

2. Using renewable energy

We are driving a shift to renewable energy by increasing

the share of direct green energy purchases (so-called

bundled renewable electricity) from renewable electricity

generated close to our premises. In the Netherlands, we

are in the third year of a 10-year purchase agreement for

green electricity for our installations. This enables us to

achieve our goal of using 100% renewable electricity in

the country. In 2023, 100% of the electricity used in our

US and Chinese facilities was also from renewable

sources.

In 2023, we managed to secure a long-term power

purchase agreement (PPA) in Taiwan. The contract will

be operational in 2024 and help us with our aim to

reduce our emissions, with 16 kt on a yearly basis as of

  1. We continue to face challenges in South Korea,

where there is little to no credible renewable electricity.

100%
of the electricity used in the EU, US and China<br><br>was from renewable sources

3. Compensating for CO2 emissions

We aim to reduce energy consumption and use

renewable energy as much as possible. Where this is not

feasible, we intend to purchase voluntary emission

reduction certificates (VERs) no later than 2025.

Promoting industry-wide collaboration to reduce GHG emissions across the value chain
Established in November 2022 with ASML as a<br><br>founding member, the Semiconductor Climate<br><br>Consortium aims to address the challenges of climate<br><br>change and speed up the industry’s efforts to reduce<br><br>GHG emissions throughout the value chain.<br><br>Founding members have affirmed their support of the<br><br>Paris Agreement and related accords driving the 1.5⁰C<br><br>pathway.<br><br>The consortium’s members are committed to working<br><br>toward the following pillars and objectives: by reducing the carbon footprint stemming from<br><br>electricity usage for semiconductor manufacturing<br><br>and for powering chips in electronics devices.<br><br>3.Investment and innovation to solve remaining 16%:<br><br>Reducing emissions from the supply chain and from<br><br>manufacturing process gases will require<br><br>considerable R&D, necessitating investments now.<br><br>4.Future manufacturing emissions scenarios: Current<br><br>government and company commitments will<br><br>substantially reduce manufacturing emissions, but<br><br>they are still forecasted to overshoot the carbon<br><br>budget for the 1.5°C pathway.<br><br>5.Dilemma of value chain emissions: Digital<br><br>technologies that require semiconductors play a<br><br>crucial role in reducing energy use and emissions<br><br>across industries while simultaneously adding to the<br><br>overall carbon footprint.<br><br>Read more at the Semiconductor Climate Consortium (SCC)<br><br>website
Transparency – Publicly report progress and scope<br><br>1, 2 and 3 emissions annually
Ambition – Set near- and long-term decarbonization<br><br>targets with the aim of reaching net zero emissions<br><br>by 2040
Collaboration – Align on common approaches,<br><br>technology innovations and communication channels<br><br>to continuously reduce GHG emissions
On September 20, 2023, the SCC published its first report<br><br>providing an in-depth analysis of the semiconductor value<br><br>chain’s carbon footprint and priority-ranked carbon emission<br><br>sources for the industry to address. The main takeaways<br><br>include:<br><br>1.Baseline of value chain emissions: Semiconductor<br><br>devices produced in 2021 have a lifetime CO2e<br><br>footprint of 500 Mt – 16% from supply chain, 21%<br><br>from manufacturing and 63% from device use.<br><br>2.Low-carbon energy is a key lever: Bold and decisive<br><br>investments in low-carbon energy sources can<br><br>address more than 80% of industry emissions primarily
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 ENVIRONMENTAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 81
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Energy efficiency and climate action (continued)
Scope 1 and 2 emissions from our own operations – Manufacturing and buildings (continued)
Looking ahead
---

Our energy savings master plan will continue to provide

savings in 2024-2025. In 2024, we expect an

acceleration of the energy-saving projects in the five-year

energy master plan. These include installation of solar

panels in San Diego that are expected to lead to 8 TJ per

year savings in 2024, while the operationalization of the

energy grid and renovation of buildings in the

Netherlands are expected to lead to an additional 25 TJ

per year at the end of 2024. We believe that this will

enable us to achieve our target of 100 TJ (or 5 kt CO2e)

per year by 2025.

We have signed a five-year Corporate Power Purchase

Agreement (CPPA) in Taiwan with the aim of providing

our operations there with about 70% renewable

electricity in 2024. Since we do not use gas in Taiwan,

our ambition is to reach 100% renewable by the end of

  1. While the renewable electricity market in South

Korea is limited, we will continue to look for alternative

solutions to procure renewable energy in South Korea

and will use offsetting in case we are not able to reach

our net zero target.

In the coming years, we plan to expand the use of solar

panels on our sites in EMEA, the US and Asia. We aim to

have more than 20,000 solar panels on our roofs by

  1. This would give us a total energy saving of around

40 TJ per year and a total CO2 emission reduction of

around 5 kt per year. This is equivalent to the energy use

of (on average) 3,900 households per year, taking 2,100

cars off the road or planting around 250,000 new trees

(around six trees for every ASML employee).

Lastly, we are working on a plan for compensating our

emissions to reach net zero scope 1 and 2 emissions by

2025.

We will also work toward reporting on the environmental

footprint of our approximately 160 buildings globally,

which include ASML-owned buildings such as

manufacturing buildings, offices and a few warehouses

and buildings leased by ASML.

In 2023, we identified our impact on the environment

through emission of nitrogen oxides (NOx), non-methane

volatile organic compounds (NMVOC) and hydrogen (H2)

from manufacturing as a new material topic. We are

developing a process to formally manage and report this

topic starting in 2024.

How we get to net zero emissions by 2025

3208

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 ENVIRONMENTAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 82
Energy efficiency and climate action (continued)
Scope 1 and 2 emissions from our own operations – Manufacturing and buildings (continued)
Reducing upstream and downstream scope 3 emissions
---

Scope 3 emissions include both upstream and downstream

activities and comprise the emissions that are generated in

our supply chain, through business travel and commuting,

and through use of our products at our customers. We

measure progress in reducing our scope 3 emissions by

emission intensity, i.e. total scope 3 emissions (tonnes CO2e)

against total gross profit (€ millions).

Our overall target for 2025 is to reduce the intensity of

scope 3 emissions to 1,016 tonnes CO2e per € million

gross profit, in line with our SBTi commitment. This

represents a 35.3% intensity reduction compared

with 2019.

Our scope 3 intensity for 2023 was 1,060 tonnes CO2e

per € million gross profit (2022: 1,116 tonnes). Our

results indicate that the scope 3 emissions account for

15.0 Mt, or 99.8%, of our total emissions footprint (scope

1, 2 and 3). Of this, 5.5 Mt are ‘upstream’ emissions

(mainly related to the goods and services we buy and

ship), 0.1 Mt are from business travel and commuting,

and 9.4 Mt are indirect ‘downstream’ emissions (use of

sold products at our customers’ sites). As of 2023, we

report indirect climate change effects of air travel

(radiative forcing, non-CO2 emissions) separately and not

as part of our scope 3 emissions. This is to align with

current reporting practices of airlines and in line with

recommendations from SBTi. This has resulted in

comparative figures being updated.

Read more in Non-financial statements – Non-financial

indicators – Energy efficiency and climate action

Our overall emissions are increasing due to the growth

of ASML. We expect emissions to continue rising in the

short term due to our continued growth and more

complex products. To ensure that we meet our

ambition for net zero emissions by 2040, we need to

work closely with our value chain partners, for example

on increasing the capacity of renewable electricity in

some regions of the world.

We are still on track to achieve our SBTi target of 1,016

tonnes CO2e per € million gross profit in 2025.

On the following pages you can read more about how

we're tackling scope 3 emissions specifically related to

business travel and commuting, our supply chain, and

through the use of our products by customers.

Our overall target for 2025 is to reduce<br><br>the intensity of scope 3 emissions to<br><br>1,016 tonnes CO2e per € million gross<br><br>profit, in line with our SBTi commitment.
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 ENVIRONMENTAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 83
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Energy efficiency and climate action (continued)
Scope 3 emissions: An introduction

291920337174565

How we’re managing<br><br>our impact

We are using the following levers, aiming to reduce our

impact:

•Business travel: Reducing the volume of business

travel through stricter policies, raising awareness and

use of remote working and servicing options.

•Commuting: To reduce the percentage of car commutes

in our Veldhoven region (NL), we focus on developing a

mix of sustainable commuting options by encouraging

people to travel to work by bicycle or public transport.

Alongside this, we provide shuttle bus services from

Park & Ride locations, offer satellite offices and

promote a balanced working-from-home policy.

Our targets and performance<br><br>in 2023

Our target is to achieve net zero emissions from business

travel and commuting by 2025.

In 2023, taking into account Sustainable Aviation Fuel

(SAF) purchases, our total emissions due to business

travel and commuting were 70 kt CO2e and 54 kt CO2e,

respectively (see graphs). Due to the increasing number

of employees at all locations and the ending of COVID-19

travel restrictions, our emissions increased by 13%

compared to 2022 (69 kt CO2e and 41 kt CO2e,

respectively). Commuting emissions are predominantly

related to commuting by car. The impact of the indirect

climate change effects of air travel are excluded from our

business travel emissions, as explained on the previous

page.

291920337184040

Our annual emissions (in kt) from business travel (2019-2023)

291920337184072

Our annual emissions (in kt) from commuting (2019-2023)

Our actions in 2023

For business travel, we created and launched a travel

dashboard for managers to provide clear insights into

travel cost, broken down into the underlying elements

such as hotel and air travel. This dashboard aims to drive

behavioral change, as it also shows the related CO2

emissions. We reduced our global travel budget per FTE

by 30% from pre-COVID-19 travel patterns of 2019.

We stimulated green travel modes by encouraging

employees to use train travel for specific destinations,

such as Berlin and London. We have launched a project

aiming to use SAF for air travel. In 2023, ASML

purchased 4,341 tonnes of SAF, which has avoided

10,198 tonnes of CO2 emissions. From January 2024,

we aim to use only electric vehicles in our rental car

program in Veldhoven.

In 2023, we also joined 'Anders Reizen', a coalition of

more than 70 organizations in the Netherlands which

aims to reduce CO2 emissions related to business travel

and commuting of its members by 50% in 2030

compared to 2016.

To enable employees in the Netherlands to commute for

free between their home and work on public transport,

we provided them with a business card of the Dutch

railways ('Nederlandse Spoorwegen'). In addition,

exclusive shuttle bus services have been set up between

Eindhoven central station and the Veldhoven campus,

and shared e-bikes are available as a successful,

sustainable solution.

Looking ahead

For 2024, we aim to strengthen our partnership with

KLM to further reduce our emissions from aviation so

that we will be able to meet ASML's ambition of net zero

CO2 emissions in 2025 for business travel.

The year will also see us commence a project that will

better quantify emissions from employee commuting in

our operating regions outside the Netherlands. This is

likely to lead to targeted interventions to further reduce

the commuting emissions in later years.

Where there are no alternatives, we aim to offset our

residual emissions from employee commuting and

business travel by purchasing VERs in the coming years.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 ENVIRONMENTAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 84
Energy efficiency and climate action (continued)
Scope 3 emissions from our own operations – Business travel and commuting
How we’re managing<br><br>our impact
---

Reducing emissions arising from upstream activities in

our supply chain – for example, by sharing data and

targets – requires close collaboration with our suppliers

and other upstream stakeholders.

ESG sustainability has become a major theme in our

supplier relationships. Our Sourcing & Procurement (S&P)

ESG sustainability program is a key enabler in our efforts

to reduce scope 3 emissions by actively engaging and

collaborating with suppliers, to drive further progress. We

depend on our suppliers and other upstream value chain

partners to work with us to jointly reduce our carbon

footprint.

Our targets and performance<br><br>in 2023

In 2023, total emissions due to upstream activities

(excluding business travel and commuting) were 5,458 kt

CO2e, an increase of 14% from 2022 in line with our

increase in sales (since we use the spend-based

approach for calculating emissions). Purchased goods

and services and capital goods contribute to 82% of

these emissions. Most of the remaining emissions are

from transportation and distribution.

291920337222568

Our scope 3 CO2e emissions in the (upstream) supply chain

(2019-2023)

Our actions in 2023

Improving our scope 3 upstream emissions data

quality

We calculate our scope 3 emissions using guidance from

the GHG Protocol – the organization that provides widely

used international standards for emissions reporting. We

currently use the spend-based methodology for

calculating supplier emissions.

We constantly seek to improve data quality by working

with our suppliers – for example, while the spend-based

methodology is useful, it fails to reflect improvements that

reduce GHG emissions.

In previous years, we have seen a mix of supplier

maturity levels in reporting scope 1 and 2 emissions

data. We obtain GHG emissions data (scope 1, 2 and

limited scope 3) from our suppliers. Our aim is to use this

information to compare spend-based emissions data

with actual emissions data, to help drive meaningful

progress. We learned that spend-based emissions are

overestimated compared to actual emissions data. As a

result, our next step to improve data quality is to include

actual supplier emissions data in our calculations for

scope 3.

It will take time before we can reliably assess all our

suppliers’ scope 3 emissions data, as not all of them

have visibility of their own supply chain emissions. To

support them, we have introduced an IT dashboard that

will capture and display the relevant data.

In 2023, we made progress by requesting CO2e

emissions data directly from our suppliers through our

S&P ESG sustainability program. We aim to use this data

as part of our move from spend-based to hybrid-based

data.

In 2023 we also improved our knowledge within

Development and Engineering (D&E) in estimating CO2e

emissions from our suppliers by building competence on

life-cycle analysis. We are investigating how to determine

the impact of the design and have started developing

tooling for our engineers. With this, we aim at raising

awareness, finding hotspots in the design and making a

start with steering for design changes.

Looking ahead

One of our future key focuses will be building on the

supplier GHG emissions baseline – and we will be

working with our top 100 suppliers toward commitment

on net zero scopes 1, 2 and 3 by 2030. We will also be

encouraging suppliers to develop roadmaps for

improving energy efficiency in their production

processes, using renewable energy and (as a last resort)

offsetting.

We expect that new EU regulations and other directives

around mandatory disclosure of scope 3 emissions data

will help to increase transparency across our supply

chain, and will result in firm actions to reduce scope 3

upstream emissions.

Read more in Social – Responsible supply chain

To support the optimization of the design, in the D&E

ESG sustainability program we will work toward

improving the data, automating the GHG emissions

calculations and providing consistent data on the design

connected to a product roadmap. This will include actual

supplier data where available. Also, we will aim to have a

first CO2e footprint estimate available based on the

design information of an ASML product.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 ENVIRONMENTAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 85
Energy efficiency and climate action (continued)
Scope 3 emissions from our supply chain (including logistics)
How we’re managing<br><br>our impact
---

As demand for enhanced chip functionality grows,

the complexity and energy consumption of the overall

microchip patterning process – including that of our

lithography and metrology and inspection systems – is

increasing.

To measure CO2e emissions from product use, we

calculate emissions generated by our customers’

electricity usage while operating ASML machines. In line

with the GHG Protocol, we calculate these emissions

based on the number of newly installed machines at our

customers’ sites during the reporting year multiplied

by the lifetime of the machine (estimated at 20 years).

When we design new systems, we increasingly focus on

reducing energy consumption and cost, while increasing

performance and availability. The EUV light source is the

key focus of our current engineering efforts, because it

accounts for the largest portion of an EUV system’s total

energy consumption. In addition, we have started to

better assess the energy efficiency of our other product

families – in DUV, metrology and inspection,

computational lithography, and scanner and process

control software solutions.

We’re working with peers and partners – including

through the SCC (read more in our case study on page

81) – to accelerate efforts to reduce GHG emissions,

share knowledge and technology and stimulate the

adoption of renewable energy worldwide.

Reducing energy consumption by introducing sleep mode in our lithography systems
Semiconductor manufacturing processes are designed<br><br>to maximize the utilization of the critical lithography<br><br>systems. However, there will be times when a system is<br><br>not in use. Up to now, the lithography system has<br><br>remained fully powered on to ensure the system is<br><br>perfectly conditioned at all times to deliver nanometer-<br><br>accurate performance.<br><br>In order to reduce energy consumption of our systems,<br><br>we have introduced a sleep mode, which allows for<br><br>powering down of subsystems to conserve energy.<br><br>This does affect thermal conditioning of the system,<br><br>which requires a few minutes of reconditioning to get<br><br>the system fully production-ready again. The key here is to give our customers control over a<br><br>system's state. The customer has insight into when<br><br>these idle periods occur, which enables them to put<br><br>the lithography system into sleep mode without<br><br>impacting wafer output. Triggered by a command from<br><br>the fab automation system, the lithography system<br><br>temporarily powers down some subsystems and then,<br><br>again triggered by fab automation, returns them back<br><br>to production mode in time for the next lot. Most of the energy of an EUV lithography system is<br><br>used by the CO2 drive laser, so this is a prime<br><br>candidate for introducing our sleep mode solution. In<br><br>the drive laser, CO2 gas is compressed and<br><br>subsequently exited (via nitrogen) by radio frequency<br><br>(RF) generators. A seed laser is used to trigger<br><br>stimulated emission of infrared light, which is<br><br>subsequently used to generate EUV light.<br><br>We will soon introduce sleep mode for the RF<br><br>generators. We have developed a software interface<br><br>that allows our customers to send sleep and wake-up<br><br>commands to the system, which power down the RF<br><br>generators via internal control software. This RF sleep<br><br>mode has been tested in-house, confirming the<br><br>energy-saving potential as well as fully meeting system<br><br>specifications immediately after the reconditioning<br><br>sequence.<br><br>RF sleep mode has the potential to reduce EUV<br><br>system energy consumption by approximately 2.5%,<br><br>averaged over time, when utilized in high-volume<br><br>manufacturing at our customers' sites.<br><br>The sleep mode interface will also act as a foundation<br><br>for implementing sleep mode in other sub-modules,<br><br>further increasing the energy-saving potential.
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 ENVIRONMENTAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 86
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Energy efficiency and climate action (continued)
Scope 3 emissions from product use at our customers
Our targets and performance<br><br>in 2023
---

Our target is to reduce the overall energy consumption of

our future-generation EUV systems by 10% compared

with the 2018 baseline model (NXE:3400B) by 2025,

while increasing productivity.

We have also set a 2025 target to reduce the energy

consumption per exposed wafer by 60%, compared with

the 2018 baseline (NXE:3400B).

Reaching our targets has our full attention, and we plan

to measure our NXE:3800E in 2024, which we expect will

bring us closer to achieving our 2025 target.

Based on the latest measurement of the NXE:3600D,

energy use per exposed wafer pass was 7.7 kWh (versus

our NXE platform 2025 target of 5.1 kWh) which shows

an improvement from the last measurement taken in

2021 of 8.3 kWh.

Based on the latest measurement of the NXT:1980Fi,

energy use per exposed wafer pass was 0.52 kWh.

In 2023, total emissions from the use of sold products

were 9,443 kt CO2e, of which EUV accounted for 5,757

kt CO2e, DUV for 3,488 kt CO2e and metrology and

inspection systems for 198 kt CO2e. The emissions have

increased in line with an increase in sales.

291920337237962

Scope 3 CO2e emissions (in kt) as a result of product use by our

customers for each of our product categories

The table below provides an overview of our systems' energy use, acceptance test protocol (ATP) throughput and<br><br>energy efficiency.
Platform DUV<br><br>immersion1
System type NXT:1980Di NXT:2000i NXT:2050i NXT:1980Ei NXT:1960B<br><br>i + PEP-B NXT:2100i NXT:1980Fi
Year of energy measurement 2015 2017 2020 2021 2021 2022 2023
Energy consumption (in MW) 0.16 0.15 0.16 0.16 0.15 0.16 0.17
ATP throughput (in wph) 275 275 295 295 250 295 330
Energy use per wafer pass (in kWh) 0.59 0.56 0.54 0.56 0.60 0.55 0.52 Platform DUV<br><br>dry1 YieldStar HMI
--- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---
System type XT:860M XT:1460 NXT:1470 XT:860N NXT:870 XT:400M YS350E YS375F YS-380 YS385 eScan<br><br>1100
Year of energy<br><br>measurement 2017 2020 2020 2022 2022 2023 2017 2019 2020 2023 2023
Energy consumption<br><br>(in MW) 0.07 0.07 0.13 0.07 0.13 0.07 0.01 0.01 0.01 0.01 0.06
ATP throughput (in<br><br>wph) 240 209 277 260 330 250 n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a
Energy use per wafer<br><br>pass (in kWh) 0.31 0.34 0.47 0.27 0.38 0.30 n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a Platform EUV<br><br>20 mJ/cm2<br><br>dose EUV<br><br>30 mJ/cm2 dose
--- --- --- --- --- ---
System type NXE:3350B NXE:3400B NXE:3400C NXE:3600D NXE:3600D
Year of energy measurement 2015 2018 2020 2021 2023
Energy consumption (in MW) 1.2 1.4 1.3 1.3 1.2
ATP throughput (in wph) 59 107 136 160 160
Energy use per wafer pass (in kWh)2 19.5 12.8 9.6 8.3 7.7
1.Since 2023, when we measure the energy efficiency of our DUV immersion and DUV dry systems, the laser is included within the<br><br>measurement. The comparative figures have been revised.<br><br>2.The baseline figure of the NXE:3400B energy use per exposed wafer pass has been corrected, from 13.08 kWh to 12.8 kWh, due to an<br><br>incorrect rounding being used in the past.
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 ENVIRONMENTAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 87
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Energy efficiency and climate action (continued)
Scope 3 emissions from product use at our customers (continued)
Our actions in 2023
---

In 2023, we continued working on energy efficiency

improvements for future products, which require long

lead times and take multiple years to achieve. Progress

on these projects is monitored on a quarterly basis.

We proved the capability of the NXE:3600D system to

reach productivity targeting 175 wph (as compared with

the current specification of 160 wph). In 2024, this will be

introduced to the market as the NXE:3600 PEP-D

package.

For our DUV systems, we identified possible energy-

saving options, among others around wafer stage and

reticle stage magnet innovations, adaptive cooling water

flows, reducing the power consumption when systems

are idle (similar to the sleep mode in EUV) and reusing

the otherwise directly emitted CO2 from the immersion

hood in our immersion scanners.

For our metrology and inspection systems, we also

identified possible energy-saving options, among others

around exhaust management and cooling and creating a

sleep mode to reduce power consumption when

systems are idle.

We also worked on improving the data quality of our

inventory for scope 3 downstream emissions. This year

we included the use of HMI e-beam inspection systems

in our inventory. We also included the laser contribution

into our reported values for DUV systems, as well as the

process CO2 gas, which is released during operation of

some of our immersion scanners. Operation and idle time

were updated to better represent actual usage, based on

customer data.

Looking ahead

In 2024, we will continue to work on the energy efficiency

of our systems and other product families. At the

moment, we see no reason to adjust our 2025 targets

regarding the energy consumption of our systems.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 ENVIRONMENTAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 88
Energy efficiency and climate action (continued)
Scope 3 emissions from product use at our customers (continued)

New_Story3_IntroPage_180124.jpg

Sustainability is a design<br><br>challenge that must be<br><br>solved in parallel with system<br><br>cost and performance –<br><br>that’s how we will make<br><br>the biggest difference.”
Ton van der Net
Principal Architect, D&E
25 years at ASML A sustainability mindset
---
Ton van der Net specializes in<br><br>improving the energy efficiency and<br><br>overall sustainability of lithography<br><br>systems. He has been at the forefront<br><br>of ASML’s sustainability efforts as they<br><br>have grown from a team-led initiative to<br><br>a corporate-level commitment that is<br><br>becoming integral to how we develop<br><br>our systems.
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SMALL PATTERNS. BIG IMPACT. STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 89
--- --- --- --- --- ---

New_Story3_Page2_Background_050124.jpg

Taking the first steps

About seven years ago, in response to

customers’ concerns, we started looking at

the scale of the infrastructure, like cooling

and power, needed to run lithography

systems. These support facilities needed as

much space as the production lines. When

we estimated the total power they required, it

was huge – around 1.3 MW for our EUV

systems (as much as a few thousand Dutch

homes)  – and projected to grow further.

Continuing that trajectory wasn’t

environmentally responsible. So, a small

team of ASML engineers – including me –

started exploring ways to reduce energy

consumption in lithography. For example, a

lot of that 1.3 MW went into cooling the

system and handling the hydrogen flow used

to prevent contamination build-up. Was all

that cooling necessary? Could we handle the

hydrogen more efficiently?

Our initial list of ideas inspired ASML’s first

KPI for sustainable system development.

Some of these ideas looked at how the

systems were used, while others required

changes to the system. For example, if we

redesigned the cooling features, customers

could use warmer cooling water – reducing

the need for power-hungry chillers.

Building a case for sustainability

Any redesign would need buy-in from the

business. So, we teamed up with system

engineering to engage the people who make

the day-to-day design decisions. These early

discussions triggered us to build a business

case for our ideas. That meant thinking – and

encouraging others to think – about the value

of our changes beyond purely financial

terms.

This is quite a radical change in mindset for

any company. However, publications from

the likes of McKinsey have shown that

companies who perform well in sustainability

typically outperform their competitors in

market share and brand image. What’s

more, around this time, ASML announced a

corporate commitment aiming to have net

zero emissions in our value chain by 2040.

And the largest contribution to our current

carbon footprint is the energy our systems

use at customers.

We have made good progress toward that

goal. Between 2018 and 2023, we reduced

the energy per wafer for EUV lithography by

almost 40%. And we have a roadmap for

another 20% of reductions by 2025.

The new normal

Sustainability is now becoming a business

driver at ASML, due partly to the corporate

commitment and partly to the internal

motivation of individuals. Our Green ASML

employee network has over 2,000 people

looking at everything from the food we serve

in the cafeteria to system energy

consumption. We’ve even had internal

‘Shark Tank’ style events to generate new

ideas to make our whole operation more

sustainable.

Many of that initial team – including myself –

are still active in driving a sustainable

innovation culture within ASML. We are

looking to embed sustainability even more

fully into ASML’s PGP, because you get

better results faster and at lower cost if you

build sustainability in from the start. To this

end, our system design specifications – the

handbook for what we want to achieve in a

new system – now include maximum power

consumption and a power breakdown as

standard. By making sustainability part of our

standard processes, we have switched on

the innovation power of 20,000 ASML

engineers.

A greener future

We are also looking at the materials we use

to build our systems. There are standard

ways of estimating the sustainability of

materials in terms of their energy cost to

produce and recyclability, but they are very

approximate. We want to develop more

accurate methods based on actual materials

and processes. The sustainability of materials

could then become another driver for

innovation.

Sustainable innovation is becoming part of

our business as usual, just another design

specification for our engineers alongside

performance, cost and time to delivery.

Because, in the end, all those factors must

be balanced. Our sustainability efforts only

have value if they come in a system that

meets our customers’ business needs.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SMALL PATTERNS. BIG IMPACT. CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 90
IN THIS SECTION
--- ---
93 Our overall performance in 2023
94 Prevent waste
95 Extend the lifetime of our products
97 Reuse resources
99 Recycle materials Why it matters
---

Our materiality assessment identified the impact of our

use of materials and resources as a material topic – and

our focus on a circular economy is the cornerstone of our

commitment to managing this challenge.

A circular economy enables sustainable economic

growth by creating business loops, ensuring efficient use

of resources and driving an innovative business model.

This approach is an essential part of decoupling our

growth from the increasing consumption of resources.

Through our circular economy initiative, we aim to ensure

our products and services retain and create as much

value as possible for us and our partners in the

ecosystem.

| Our circular economy strategy is based on the<br><br>following four principles:<br><br>•Prevent waste<br><br>•Extend lifetime<br><br>•Reuse resources<br><br>•Recycle materials | | --- || How we’re managing<br><br>our impact | | --- |

A successful transition toward a circular economy means

improved designs, operational resilience, reduced

emissions and reduced costs. Improved designs are

achieved through learning from use cases – both

successes and failures – to improve products, solutions

and processes. The availability of parts and access to

material to support ASML’s growth, while decoupling it

from material consumption and closing the loops, will be

key for operational resilience. This will lead to reduced

emissions through disposing locally and eliminating

waste ending in incineration, energy recovery and landfill.

Cost reduction can be achieved by optimizing the

amount of purchased goods while avoiding surplus and

reusing resources to eliminate waste. In summary,

ASML’s approach to circular economy is designing

products for longevity and reuse, creating closed-loop

supply chains and encouraging the recycling of materials.

95% 88% 8,279 t 300 kg 55%
Systems sold in the past 30<br><br>years still active in the field Reuse rate of parts returned<br><br>from field and factory Total waste from operations Waste generated per €m<br><br>revenue Recycling rate
(2025 target: >95%) (2025 target: 95%) (excl. construction) (2025 target: 209 kg) (excl. construction)
(2025 target: 90%)
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 ENVIRONMENTAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 91
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Circular economy
We aim to maximize the value of our systems, reusing resources as much as possible, while<br><br>minimizing waste, decoupling our growth from resource consumption, and recycling materials.

CircularEconomy_OurApproach_Diagram2.jpg

The diagram on the right illustrates our circular economy

approach.

We have an ambition to reduce waste in our operations:

| By 2030, we aim to send zero waste from operations<br><br>to landfill or incineration1. | | --- || We have therefore developed a<br><br>strategy which includes the<br><br>following principles:<br><br>•Prevent waste from our assets,<br><br>systems and processes by<br><br>redesigning them, in collaboration<br><br>with our suppliers and customers,<br><br>to limit their environmental impact<br><br>•Extend the lifetime and productivity<br><br>of our systems and assets to<br><br>maximize their usage throughout<br><br>their life cycles<br><br>•Reuse resources, parts, tools,<br><br>packaging and goods across the<br><br>value chain<br><br>•Recycle materials if we can no<br><br>longer apply any of the previous<br><br>principles, avoiding incineration and<br><br>landfill | | --- |

1.Incineration is defined to include processes with and without energy

recovery.

Our different types of waste
We measure our impact in tonnes of waste, by<br><br>category (hazardous and non-hazardous) and by<br><br>material type (such as plastics, paper, wood and<br><br>hazardous liquids). We include data on the CO2e<br><br>impact of processing our waste in our scope 3<br><br>emissions. Within our operations, we divide our waste<br><br>into two broad categories:<br><br>Non-hazardous waste, such as packaging material,<br><br>product-related waste from parts resulting from<br><br>upgrades or defects, and general waste. This<br><br>category also includes construction waste from<br><br>building activities – the amount of construction waste<br><br>tends to fluctuate over the years.<br><br>Hazardous waste, such as the chemicals we use in<br><br>our manufacturing processes. This can include<br><br>everything from lamps, batteries and liquids to<br><br>cleaning wipes and filters. Most of our hazardous<br><br>waste is in the form of liquids, including acetone and<br><br>piranha acid.
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 ENVIRONMENTAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 92
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Circular economy (continued) Our circular economy approach
---

Our overall performance in 2023

Progress tracking
Topic Target 2025 Performance indicator 2021 2022 2023 Status
Circular economy >95% % of lithography systems sold in the past 30 years still active in the field 94% 95% 95%
Circular_Economy_Logo.jpg 95% Reuse rate of parts returned from field and factory 85% 87% 88%
No target Savings from reused parts (€, in millions) 686 781 1,311 n/a
No target Value of scrapped parts (€, in millions)1 269 146 206 n/a
209 kg/€m Total waste from operations (excl. construction2) normalized to revenue 305 315 300 n
90% Recycling rate (excl. construction2) 77% 75% 55% n
No target Total waste from operations (excl. construction2) (in tonnes) 5,679 6,675 8,279 n/a

1.This reporting indicator follows the principle of prior-year indicator ‘Value of scrapped parts (in € millions)'; however it does not include packaging. The 2022 comparative figure has been restated.

2.Construction waste is excluded from the calculation of this indicator. The amount of construction waste tends to fluctuate over the years and can therefore make the trend of the indicator unclear.

Read more about our performance indicators (PIs) and related results in Non-financial statements – Non-financial indicators – Circular economy

In 2023, we generated 8,932 tonnes of waste from our

operations overall (including construction waste). This

was an increase of 29% over 2022 (6,913 tonnes).

Our total amount of waste increased due to ASML’s

growth, despite the impact of projects to reduce waste.

However, the amount of waste from operations

normalized to revenue showed a decrease in 2023.

During the year, 7% of total waste (653 tonnes) was related to

construction (2022: 238 tonnes, or 3%). The amount of

construction waste increased compared to 2022. During 2023,

significant demolition activities were ongoing on our Veldhoven

main campus.  Since we hand over the responsibility of the

construction sites to the building contractor, the demolition

waste is excluded from our waste data. Although we do not

report on it, we work with our contractors to try to ensure

maximum recycling of this waste.

In 2023, 43% of the total waste from operations (including

construction waste) was sent to landfill, incineration with energy

recovery or incineration (2022: 25%).

The presence of hazardous materials is a risk to our ability to

achieve our goal of sending zero waste from operations to

landfill or incineration. In some countries, there is also the risk

that our waste hauler may not be able to identify companies

able to recycle some of our waste.

Our total waste in 2023

283124244200072

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 ENVIRONMENTAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 93
Circular economy (continued)
On track •<br><br>Ongoing focus area n
How we’re managing<br><br>our impact
---

The first principle of our circular economy is to prevent

waste. This involves eliminating or limiting waste at its

source by rethinking and redesigning processes to avoid

waste, focusing on design, sourcing and quality, among

others. We aim to design our systems, products and

processes to maximize their value by focusing on

commonality, modularity, compatibility, standardization,

reusability, reliability and recyclability, while opting for

mono-material components and eco-design

methodology, minimizing the use of critical raw materials

like rare earths and hazardous materials.

We aim to collaborate with product- and non-product-

related suppliers that deliver durable and efficient

products with recycled material, which can be upgraded,

refurbished, repaired, reused and recycled. We improve

the quality of our systems by avoiding defects on arrival,

and implementing lean principles in all processes,

specifically in manufacturing and logistics, to eliminate

waste.

We design our systems to last for as long as possible in

order to prevent waste. Built-in feedback loops ensure

that we continuously improve product designs by

learning from failure modes and repair activities.

We have a team dedicated to ensuring we take a

sustainable packaging approach that maximizes the use

of our resources and minimizes waste while ensuring the

safe transport of our systems. We also have activities

that aim to minimize waste across the value chain – from

sourcing to customer support – enabling improvements

in both hazardous and non-hazardous waste streams.

We actively prevent waste by agreeing with suppliers of

IT hardware to deliver in bulk instead of individual

packaging. This limits the amount of packaging material.

We also focus on preventing waste by agreeing with IT

suppliers to only ship parts that we actually use. For

example, the stands were previously included with every

computer monitor ordered, even though we do not use

those stands. Now the stands are no longer included in

the order and therefore not produced by the

manufacturer, which prevents waste.

Materials used in EUV sources undergo rigorous

conditions, including exposure to high temperatures,

thermal cycling, corrosive liquid tin, high pressures,

pressure cycling and hydrogen. These materials, such as

strategic tantalum alloys and molybdenum, are both

limited in availability and costly. Ongoing trials are

focused on preventing the use of virgin material by

extending the lifespan of materials used in the system,

enhancing material quality in the production process and

improving application conditions.

Our targets and performance<br><br>in 2023

Although addressing our waste performance is a

relatively new focus area for us, we have already made

some progress. For example, while our sales have grown

by 30.2%, our waste generation from our own operations

has increased at a lower rate of 24%.

Read more in Our overall performance in 2023

Our actions in 2023

We have continued to focus on embedding a circular

approach more deeply in our design processes. By

thinking about modularity, commonality and repairability

during the design phase, we can extend the lifetime of

our machines and increase reuse opportunities for parts

in the future, aiming to prevent waste.

We have started a project to embed design for reuse in

our PGP. This means that, as an example, the PGP

includes a default design of a repair method for any

service part. This enables parts in the installed base

systems to be repaired even after any engineering

change, so the new functionality may not hinder the

repairability of the legacy parts.

Modular design of products and components enables

future upgrades, worn parts and components to be

replaced as a single unit. In 2023, we successfully

concluded the first phase of a feasibility study

demonstrating the manufacturability of modular wafer

tables, aiming to secure the reusability of over 2,600

wafer tables by 2028.

We couple learnings from remanufacturing back to the

design process. In 2023, for example, we improved the

design of our in-line refill module, which we have been

remanufacturing since we designed it in our system.

Another example is the learnings from our local repair

center team in South Korea. By enabling the repairability

of one of our alignment lasers, they were able to correct

for the key failure mode on the ‘shutter’ that lets the light

out of the laser module.

Commonality in the parts design process enables a part

to be used in multiple contexts within a product and in

future product generations.

Looking ahead

Starting from 2024, we aim to have zero waste from

operations to landfill or incineration from our newly

designed products, with repair and reuse requirements

as part of the product requirement specification. This is

part of our customer proposition.

In our D&E teams, we will set up a specific ‘repair

competence', which will enable people to specialize and

be the subject matter experts in this field. These

dedicated repair-focused teams will work with all

functions in D&E and across ASML’s business.

We are setting up a packaging waste reduction program

with the aim to reduce waste by 2025, with targets

toward 2030 under discussion.

In 2024, the feasibility study for modular wafer tables for

Wilton and Berlin will be finalized.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 ENVIRONMENTAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 94
Circular economy (continued)
Prevent waste
How we’re managing<br><br>our impact
---

As a well-maintained ASML system can last for decades

and create value for more than one customer, the

second principle in our circular economy approach is to

extend the lifetime of our products.

ASML aims to maintain systems in use as long as

economically and environmentally possible, focusing on

service, upgrades and refurbishment of assets, systems

and goods. We are establishing customer contracts to

maintain systems in the market for as long as possible,

maximizing their value and avoiding obsolescence. We

develop refresh packages to extend the life while

maintaining a high performance. We develop lifetime

extension and performance packages – productivity

enhancement packages (PEPs) and system node

extension packages (SNEPs) – to enhance the systems’

running period and performance.

We also refurbish systems across the business – our

refurbishment strategy focuses on buying back systems

that are not operational in the field, harvesting parts from

decommissioned systems and managing the continued

availability of spare parts. This is key to the extended

lifetime service we offer for our systems. We also re-sell

systems as long as we can guarantee the parts.

Once a fab needs to upgrade, an ‘older’ lithography

system is given a new purpose in a new fab producing

comparatively less sophisticated chips, such as

accelerometers or radio-frequency chips.

We provide our customers with a guaranteed service

roadmap until at least 2030. This means that all the

support and necessary services and spare parts required

to maintain their systems are expected to be available

until at least 2030, subject to export control limitations.

We focus on refurbishing a number of product families:

PAS 5500 (with almost 1,800 systems at customer sites

worldwide), TWINSCAN XT systems (2,000 systems)

and, as of 2021, NXT:1950-1980 systems (1,000

systems). For the approximately 200 TWINSCAN AT

systems that are still in operation, we focus on measures

to proactively manage their end of life. We do this by

guaranteeing the availability of spare parts for as long as

possible and providing customers with sufficient notice if

we can no longer guarantee part supply.

Our targets and performance<br><br>in 2023

Our target for 2025 is that more than 95% of systems

sold in the past 30 years should still be active in the field.

To date, we have refurbished and resold almost 570

lithography systems. As of the end of 2023, 95% (2022:

95%) of all systems sold in the past 30 years are still

active in the field.

New_CircularEconomy_ExtendLifetime_Image_050124.jpg

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 ENVIRONMENTAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 95
Circular economy (continued)
Extend the lifetime of our products
Our actions in 2023
---

Refurbishment is a multi-year program in which we

continually invest to ensure the supply of more than

2,000 service parts for our PAS platform. This is

achieved either through redesigns, harvesting parts or

finding an alternative with the same form, fit and function.

Where this is not possible, we are generally able to

secure components through ‘last time buy’ – a supplier’s

‘last call’ for a part or component before production

switches to its successor. When a part is no longer

available, we redesign the parts.

In 2023, we acquired a PAS 5500 parts repair company

in the US that will support our ambition to sustain PAS

not only through 2030, but also beyond. In addition, we

intend to extend their capability to accelerate our XT

parts repair competence.

We track the spare parts in our portfolio to see how they

are being used and identify when we expect to run out of

individual items. For PAS and XT systems, we use this

information to update our priorities for redesign. For

TWINSCAN AT systems, we aim to continue supplying

parts by harvesting them from systems that are

decommissioned by our customers.

95% of all lithography systems sold in the past 30 years still active in the field

311711546484405

Looking ahead

We have identified and plan to execute more than 100

redesign projects for nearly 300 parts in the coming

years. This is particularly relevant for electronic parts, for

which the evolution of technology has been faster than in

any other field.

We will continue to increase our focus on local repair to

extend the life of the mature installed base at lower cost,

reducing the need to redesign and buy new materials

and parts.

The refurbishment activities we have been doing for

years on our PAS systems will be extended to cover both

XT and NXT systems. We are currently on track to meet

our target of >95%.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 ENVIRONMENTAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 96
Circular economy (continued)
Extend the lifetime of our products (continued)
How we’re managing<br><br>our impact
---

ASML is committed to reusing parts, packaging, tools

and non-product-related resources in the value chain,

focusing on the return, recondition and repurposing

processes. We optimize return flows by collaborating

with customers and suppliers, while learning from system

usage and product returns. We recondition parts and

packaging through global and local repair centers,

suppliers and partners, at the best location with the

lowest environmental impact. We repair buildings, assets

and infrastructure. We enable the repurposing of parts,

packaging, tools and devices in a new life cycle inside

and outside ASML.

We maximize the reuse of system parts, packaging and

tools in our value chain to reduce waste and meet

customer demand.

Reuse is also a key contributor to our ability to ramp up

capacity to cope with strong customer demand. We

retrieve parts from inventory or through repair or

harvesting.

88%
reuse rate of defective parts,<br><br>up from 87% in 2022

Reuse also offers learning opportunities to improve the

performance and lifetime of our parts and systems. We

work closely with our customers and suppliers to embed

learnings in design and processes throughout the value

chain.

We aim to reuse workplace IT assets obtained (e.g.

monitors) when buildings are decommissioned. Instead

of assets being disposed of at the end of their economic

lifespan, they are used to set up work environments in

other buildings where and when possible.

Key improvement areas
We focus on the following key improvement areas:<br><br>•Repair centers: Repair close to where parts are<br><br>needed to improve parts repair yields by reducing<br><br>cycle time of root-cause analysis and repairs.<br><br>•Predictable external repair flow: Simplify and<br><br>standardize return and repair flows to enable us to<br><br>scale activities.<br><br>•Circular supplier collaboration: Incentivize<br><br>suppliers to prioritize reuse over new materials.<br><br>•Return quality: Ensure that parts are returned with<br><br>reuse in mind – quality returns lead to quality repairs.<br><br>•Packaging and transportation tools: Increase<br><br>reuse of packaging, which is the main contributor to<br><br>our waste (from operations). Our targets and performance<br><br>in 2023
---

Our overall target is to increase the reuse rate of

defective parts in ASML factories and in the field to 95%

by 2025. This means successfully reconditioning at least

95% of our parts.

In 2023, our reuse rate of parts was 88%, up from 87%

in 2022 – on target to achieve our goal. The savings we

generated from reused parts amounted to €1,311 million

(2022: €781 million) and the value of scrapped parts was

€206 million (2022: €146 million).

Our actions in 2023

Repair centers

We are extending the number of repair centers

worldwide to support the reuse of parts by returning,

cleaning and reconditioning them close to where they are

needed. Demand for these parts can be driven by our

customers needing service parts for their installed base,

or by our factories requiring parts for new systems.

Currently, we have several repair centers in Asia (South

Korea, Taiwan and China), the US (Wilton, San Diego)

and the EU (Veldhoven). We are investigating our options

to extend our network of local repair centers to other

locations.

Our repair centers work with local suppliers and

specialized repair partners to create a local ecosystem.

By enabling repair and reuse activities and taking

ownership of repairs close to where materials are

needed, we are able to reduce logistics time, cost of

stocking parts and our environmental impact (by

reducing scrap and GHG emissions). Our customers

benefit from reduced service costs and improved

material availability.

In 2023, we launched a dedicated cross-company team

to further explore local reuse activities in Taiwan, and

have begun the process of setting up a similar operation

in the US. We intend to empower local teams to initiate

reuse activities, as local business requirements and

situations may vary. The central reuse team provides

guidance and support where needed and drives roll-out

of local best practices across other locations.

With over 1,200 m2 of cleanroom, our dedicated reuse

facilities in Veldhoven will be instrumental in this.

Predictable external repair flow

We are working to increase the scalability and

predictability of our reuse flows in order to future-proof

return and recondition processes to deal with growing

demand. This includes forecasting repairs to help

suppliers prepare capacity. By combining service and

factory return flows – and simplifying and automating

operational planning and repair order management – we

are increasing the availability of repaired parts. Our aim is

to maximize reuse of parts and ensure it is the preferred

option over new purchases.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 ENVIRONMENTAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 97
Circular economy (continued)
Reuse resources

Circular supplier collaboration

We are collaborating with suppliers to incentivize reuse

over new purchases. We are investigating transferring

used parts back to our suppliers to repair, refurbish or

harvest for reuse in their new buying process, giving

them more flexibility in how they can reuse parts.

In 2023, we investigated how to support a new

collaboration model with suppliers for reusing materials

and how to adjust our processes and systems to enable

it. We piloted the new way of working with eight suppliers

and have started engagements with additional suppliers.

Return quality

Challenges that occur downstream in the value chain

during the repair phase often have their origins upstream

and are related to the quality of returns, for example

through incorrect labeling or packaging.

In 2023, we started piloting barcode scanning of defect

parts in the return flow to support correct labeling. In

2024, this project will ramp up to a program to also

cover all root causes of poor return quality.

Packaging and transportation tools

Valuable transportation materials – such as packaging,

locking and plug materials – are used to safely transport

our modules and systems, either from our suppliers to

our factories or from our factories to our customers.

Instead of being thrown away once they reach their

destination, these materials are reused.

Before parts are returned for reuse, they undergo an

identification process and quality check, followed by the

logistical and financial processes required to bring them

back into the supply chain (either to the original module

suppliers or to ASML). Our goal is to standardize these

processes and create a network-related solution to

enable high flexibility and reduce transport, which also

reduces our CO2e footprint.

We are improving the reuse of packaging, lockings and

plugs from the field and factory. We aim toward 100%

recyclable packaging with an eye on minimizing waste

and environmental impact.

In 2023, we made progress in reusing thousands of small

auxiliary materials, such as plugs, flanges, caps and

brackets. These are now being reused for system parts

in our factories or for shipping machines to our

customers. Furthermore, we developed a solution to

embed the reuse requirements in our design processes –

and this will be fully implemented in 2024.

Circular Innovation Program
The circular innovation program (CIP) is a<br><br>collaboration with ImpactX and Brainport Industries. It<br><br>is a four-day tailor-made program focusing on<br><br>building a stronger relationship with our supply base<br><br>by creating circular competencies.<br><br>In 2023, we consolidated CIP with the participation of<br><br>eight suppliers divided into two cohorts. We run two<br><br>cohorts per year and four suppliers are invited each<br><br>time. Through the program we are able to close<br><br>business loops, boost supplier impact and<br><br>strengthen collaboration overall. The benefits are the<br><br>creation of a shared vision on the circular economy,<br><br>peer learning, and the joint building of competencies<br><br>and knowledge around reusing products, parts and<br><br>materials in the value chain.<br><br>The participants invited so far are first-tier suppliers;<br><br>however, we want to extend the program to other<br><br>tiers as well. Additionally, we have the ambition to<br><br>expand CIP beyond the Brainport Eindhoven region<br><br>in the Netherlands, to other locations around the world. Looking ahead
---

Reuse roadmap

In 2024, we will have more focus on the reuse program,

with teams dedicated to repairs, reverse logistics, reuse-

related engineering, local harvesting and repair centers

worldwide.

In the context of supplier capacity, our supplier backlog

is building up. We need stronger supplier collaboration,

focusing on reuse over new, and working on forecasting

and planning of repairs to reduce supplier repair cycle

time.

We are implementing a structural improvement roadmap

related to repair and reuse across all functions in ASML

in order to meet our 2025 targets.

New_CircularEconomy_ReuseResource_Image_050124.jpg

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 ENVIRONMENTAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 98
Circular economy (continued)
Reuse resources (continued)

CircularEconomy_RecycleMaterials_Background.jpg

How we’re managing<br><br>our impact

ASML’s aim is to recycle material at end of life, focusing

on the collection, analysis and reporting processes. We

define the collection and sorting methods in collaboration

with partners to increase recycling rates of both

hazardous and non-hazardous materials, including local

recycling at end of life and construction waste. We

identify drivers of waste, gain insights into reasons for

disposal, provide feedback to prevent waste, and

improve designs and opportunities for recycling.

Following our principles hierarchy, recycling materials is

the final step in the process, in case we have not been

able to prevent the waste, extend the lifetime of our

systems and assets, or reuse our resources.

As our company grows, so too does the number of our

employees, the number of systems we produce, and the

number and size of our facilities. We are determined to

decouple growth from our overall resource consumption.

Recycling our waste plays a key role in closing the

material loop – by 2030, we want to avoid energy

recovery, incineration and landfill as much as possible.

Our aim is to recycle materials instead of incinerating or

disposing of them to landfill. Understanding our waste

streams is key to identifying opportunities to increase

recycling of both hazardous and non-hazardous waste.

We aim to maximize waste separation at our sites to

enable increased recycling rates and easy recycling at

the waste haulers'.

Understanding and managing our waste flows and impacts

The effective monitoring and managing of waste relies on

the availability of detailed and accurate insights into waste

streams to and from ASML. We manage our waste

through proper classification, separation, and safe disposal

by waste vendors.  Our contracts with waste vendors

state the need for compliance with local legislation and we

aim to improve how this is monitored.

Waste data is managed through our myEHS system,

which collects information from our local waste

vendors along with the relevant supporting

documentation, such as invoices. The data entered is

checked internally and by an independent party against

the supporting documentation.

Distribution of waste streams
(Total: 8,932 tonnes)

290820825553835

Non-hazardous waste recycling 53%
Non-hazardous waste disposed of 42%
Hazardous waste recycling 4%
Hazardous waste disposed of 1%

Non-hazardous waste accounted for 95% (2022: 95%

(6,533 tonnes)) of our total waste in 2023, of which 53%

was recycled.

Distribution of non-hazardous waste
(Total: 8,474 tonnes)

290820825553932

Wood 29%
General waste 28%
Paper and cardboard 11%
Electronics 2%
Metals 11%
Other non-hazardous waste 1%
Plastic 6%
Organic waste 4%
Construction waste 8%

Hazardous waste accounted for 5% (458 tonnes) of our

total waste generated, compared with 5% (380 tonnes)

in 2022. Of this, 83% was recycled.

Distribution of hazardous waste
(Total: 458 tonnes)

290820825554145

Hazardous liquids 83%
Other hazardous waste (e.g. packaging, filters, lamps, etc.) 12%
Cleaning wipes 4%
Batteries 1%
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 ENVIRONMENTAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 99
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Circular economy (continued)
Recycle materials

Recycling materials conserves natural resources and

reduces carbon emissions. In the Netherlands, after

investigating non-product-related activities, some

construction waste – such as concrete – has been

reused (after processing) in the construction of new

buildings.

Our targets and performance<br><br>in 2023

Our waste intensity in 2023 was 300 kg per €m revenue,

down from 315 kg per €m revenue in 2022. This remains

below the pre-COVID-19 waste intensity. To achieve our

target of 209 kg per €m revenue, we need to scale up

our efforts to reduce our waste streams in absolute

terms and improve our recycling rate.

We are increasing our efforts to reduce waste by setting

up specific projects on packaging, general waste and

hazardous materials. The main contributors to our

packaging waste are wooden pallets. We need to extend

their reuse even further and make a transition in waste

treatment, from energy recovery to recycling. Another big

challenge we are working on is to reduce packaging

waste generated by the materials used to transport our

systems and parts around the world. General waste from

our offices and facilities represented 28% of the total waste

in 2023. We have started projects on separation and sorting

to improve its recyclability and prevent its generation.

Our aim is to avoid landfill and incineration by 2030. In

2023, this accounted for 43% of our waste, including

hazardous substances and construction waste. We are

currently piloting an ASML solution which aims to reduce

our hazardous waste by approximately 65%.

Our target is to achieve a recycling rate (excluding

construction waste) of 90% by 2025.

We saw a significant decrease in the recycling rate, from

75% in 2022 to 55% in 2023.

The lower recycling rate in 2023 can be explained by an

increased focus on our waste. New insights show that

waste companies reported recycling rates using different

definitions. We will continue to improve the quality of data

next year and start initiatives with our waste companies

to increase the recycling rate.

Read more on our waste figures in

Non-financial indicators - Circular economy

Our actions in 2023

Waste reduction program

During the year we launched a program to reduce waste

coming from non-product-related resources. This

program features several different initiatives, with the first

focusing on creating clear governance processes to

improve waste recycling, and working on obtaining more

accurate and reliable data from our waste haulers. We

also gained a better overview of our waste and mapped

our waste streams at the Veldhoven site, which represent

60% of our total waste. We created a circularity plan for

our five largest industrial sites to improve our waste data

quality and recycling rate.

The full program, which covers plans for both<br><br>hazardous and non-hazardous waste, includes:<br><br>•Identifying where the waste comes from (inbound<br><br>versus operations) by organizing Gemba Walks<br><br>(opportunities for staff to walk the work floor) to see<br><br>the waste in the warehouse, factory and offices, and<br><br>also by visiting our waste haulers to understand<br><br>how our waste is processed<br><br>•Examining what the waste consists of through a<br><br>detailed sorting test (performed by one of our waste<br><br>haulers)<br><br>•Assessing the quantity of hazardous and non-<br><br>hazardous waste<br><br>•Identifying potentially large waste flows. The<br><br>Veldhoven campus non-product-related waste<br><br>flows are shown in the diagram on the next page<br><br>•Proposing actions and process optimizations to<br><br>achieve our targets

Other recycling initiatives

In 2023, we started local remanufacturing of modules

that capture tin from the EUV light source. As tin is a

consumable, these ‘tin catch’ modules fill up and get

contaminated by design. Local remanufacturing enables

fast, efficient reuse with minimal shipment miles, as well

as the possibility to reclaim tin for the next cycle of use.

We actively support extending the life cycle of IT assets

by giving them another life outside of ASML. In 2023, we

donated over 300 laptops to multiple charities, mainly in

the area of children's education.

All IT assets that ASML can no longer use are

professionally processed by a specialized partner after

the end of their life cycle, with the aim of life cycle

extension outside of ASML.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 ENVIRONMENTAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 100
Circular economy (continued)
Recycle materials (continued)

New_NPR_Diagram_310124.jpg

Veldhoven 2023 insight current non-product-related (NPR) campus waste flows
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 ENVIRONMENTAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 101
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Circular economy (continued)
Recycle materials (continued)

Improving waste stream management

We have improved the accuracy of our waste reporting

by increasing actual measurements of the amounts of

waste at our main production site in Veldhoven.

In addition, we have made progress across our wider

portfolio, including:

1.Preparing to align our boundary reporting from 57

locations to all locations worldwide – ready for

implementation in 2024

2.Recognizing the need to manage recycling centrally,

with implementation delegated to three groups with

central governance

3.Developing circularity master plans for infrastructure

and facility-related activities at the largest ASML

industrial sites – Veldhoven, San Diego, Wilton,

Linkou and Tainan. The master plans cover three

work streams with initiatives to: 1. Improve data

quality, 2. Prevent, extend, reuse during construction

and 3. Reduce waste/improve recycling in the short

term

4.Implementing a specific waste reduction program for

non-product-related resources:

a.Recognizing that waste is a challenge across the

organization

b.Focusing on our real estate, global manufacturing

and IT department in the coming years to reduce

waste

c.Initiating Gemba Walks in all of our largest sites to

improve understanding of waste composition for

future reduction initiatives, and to educate

stakeholders on improving waste stream quality

d.Improving waste data integrity (including data

completeness and relevance, among others). This

is being rolled out firstly in our large factories and

includes gap assessments, construction waste

definitions, improved reporting and an overview of

waste haulers

e.Implementing a program in the Netherlands to

improve waste segregation upstream/

downstream, as part of our objective to increase

waste recycling in the country to more than 90%

f.Engaging with a new waste hauler in Taiwan. We

anticipate that this change should lead to a 46%

improvement of our waste recycling in Tainan and

18% in Linkou in 2024

g.Implementing reuse of furniture in Taiwan

h.Starting to audit waste management in our factory

in Wilton (US)

i.Improving scrutiny of accurate binning of waste

categories in San Diego (US). This will provide

better direction for future waste reduction

initiatives

j.Removing single-use plastic-containing food

disposables (coffee cups/plastics in catering) in

line with new laws in the Netherlands

Construction waste

As we continue to expand our facilities, we aim to

maximize the recycling of waste from our construction

activities.

In 2023, we began to assess the completeness,

accuracy and consistency of our construction waste

reporting at four of our large industrial sites.

Our conclusion is that we need to focus on two specific

areas. Firstly, we must improve the data collection

process around our construction waste streams.

Secondly, we must improve data quality as part of our

circularity roadmap. This is a significant challenge,

because it means identifying construction waste over

several hundred projects every year, some of which have

already started, with multiple construction waste haulers.

We currently have circularity master plans in place at our

five biggest industrial sites and are working on improving

the waste data.

Looking ahead

Despite our many initiatives, achieving our waste

recycling targets remains a challenge.

Our actions in 2023 included the decision to reorganize

how we manage our waste. In the months ahead, we

intend to investigate the impact of this decision and

prepare to implement an organizational structure that will

be designed to help us achieve our recycling rate target.

Based on the insights gained in 2023, we will re-evaluate

the recycling rate target set for 2025.

When implemented, the changes will impact how we

categorize and manage our waste and will be designed

to improve the integrity of waste data across the

company. These enhancements will enable us to extend

our waste reporting to all sites during 2024.

Our so-called piranha solution – used in etching

processes to remove organic residues from substrates –

represents about two-thirds of our hazardous waste. We

will investigate specific solutions, such as the feasibility of

reprocessing our piranha solution for reuse as sulfuric

acid in a different market.

We will also investigate the feasibility of replacing single-

use disposable plastics for food and drinks in other large

industrial sites with reusable alternatives, which we

believe will lead to further reduction of our waste.

Finally, we will investigate scaling up our waste

segregation – collection and sorting – onsite to improve

the recycling rate.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 ENVIRONMENTAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 102
Circular economy (continued)
Recycle materials (continued)
Why it matters
---

Climate change and increased water demand combine

to mean that droughts have become more extreme and

unpredictable, and water is becoming a scarce resource

in some locations.

Water consumption at ASML accounts for only a tiny

fraction of the water consumed by the semiconductor

industry. Our water-related risk is therefore low

compared to that of our customers, who use a significant

amount of water during the semiconductor

manufacturing processes.

How we’re managing<br><br>our impact

Despite our relatively low level of water usage, as a

responsible business we promote efficient water use and

recycling across our sites and processes.

Read more in our TCFD Recommendations – Climate-related

disclosure, available at asml.com

In our factories, we use water in three key ways: Firstly,

we use it to remove heat loads and maintain the systems

at a constant temperature. Internal cooling circuits are all

designed as ‘closed-loop’ (recycling) systems to limit

water consumption. Secondly, these heat loads are

eventually removed in cooling towers using evaporation

of lower-quality water. Finally, DUV systems use ultrapure

water in the immersion hood – this water is currently only

partially recycled.

Our water consumption in 2023 remained stable around

1% higher at 1,173,990 m3, if compared to 1,161,850

m3 in 2022.

WaterManagement.jpg

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 ENVIRONMENTAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 103
Water management

New_SocialAtAGlance_Background.jpg

SOCIAL Responsible supply chain
107<br><br>111<br><br>114<br><br>120<br><br>122<br><br>126<br><br>130<br><br>137<br><br>139<br><br>142<br><br>146<br><br>149<br><br>151<br><br>153 Attractive workplace for all<br><br>Inspiring a unified culture<br><br>Providing the best employee experience<br><br>Enabling strong leadership<br><br>Ensuring employee health and safety<br><br>Responsible supply chain<br><br>Managing supplier capabilities<br><br>Innovation ecosystem<br><br>Partnerships for research and development<br><br>Supporting startups and scaleups<br><br>Valued partner in our communities<br><br>Attractive communities<br><br>Inclusive communities<br><br>Investing in STEM education
We depend on our suppliers to help deliver<br><br>our innovations. They are critical to<br><br>our value chain and our ambition to be<br><br>a sustainable leader in the<br><br>semiconductor industry.
57%
% supplier spend<br><br>covered with a<br><br>commitment to<br><br>sustainability New_SocialAtAGlance_IntroPage_Image1_111223.jpg
Attractive workplace for all
We need to empower our employees to<br><br>deliver our vision by ensuring they are proud<br><br>to be part of ASML and engaged with our<br><br>ambitions as a company. New_SocialAtAGlance_IntroPage_Image3_111223.jpg
80.3%
employee engagement score
---
Innovation ecosystem
We never innovate in isolation because developing technology in collaboration with partners across the innovation ecosystem maximizes our collective impact.
4.0bn
R&D investments

All values are in Euros.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SOCIAL STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 104
Social at a glance
We aim to have a positive social impact by providing an attractive workplace, ensuring a responsible<br><br>supply chain, supporting an innovation ecosystem and being a valued partner in our communities.

New_Story4_IntroPage_180124.jpg

ASML’s focus on technology<br><br>and its supportive culture<br><br>mean you can go wherever<br><br>your talent and ambition<br><br>take you.”
Anya Kish
Program Director, EUV Source
8 years at ASML Making a difference
---
Anya Kish moved from Russia to the<br><br>US for her graduate studies in plasma<br><br>physics. That willingness to take<br><br>opportunities however they present<br><br>themselves has seen her build a career<br><br>at ASML as a problem solver who<br><br>thrives under pressure. She now works<br><br>as project manager for the light source<br><br>for our next extreme ultraviolet<br><br>lithography system.
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SMALL PATTERNS. BIG IMPACT. STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 105
--- --- --- --- --- ---

New_Anja_Kish_Story_Page2.jpg

Finding a place to grow

I had wanted to work at ASML ever since I

was a graduate student, and a course mate

told me about the company. I read more

online and watched all the YouTube videos I

could find. I was blown away by the cutting-

edge technology.

Soon after graduating, I was lucky enough to

get a temporary contract and then a

permanent position as an engineer in the

Source Performance team in San Diego,

working to improve the performance of EUV

light sources. A fantastic manager suggested

that I may have a talent for project

management. I am someone who thrives on

a fast pace, pressure and action, so I said

why not?

A new journey

I started small, leading a team of one – me.

But I loved the energy and was eager for

more. The next opportunity came out of the

blue. I was on a trip to Veldhoven when key

customers reported an issue that was

impacting the lifetime of mirrors used in our

EUV light sources. This had become our

number one customer issue and could have

delayed the introduction of EUV lithography

into mass production.

ASML’s senior management needed an

update, and fast. As the subject matter

expert was absent and I was onsite, I was

asked to give a presentation the next day. I

had no prior knowledge of the issue, but

spent the night learning everything I could. I

read all the materials and phoned round

colleagues for more information. Everyone

was happy to help. The presentation went so

well that I was asked to head up a task force

to address the issue. A year later, the project

won awards from key customers and within

ASML, and mirror lifetime had gone from the

number one customer issue to something

people hardly ever mentioned.

A culture of support

That unexpected opportunity was the first

real step on my project management journey.

And it highlights two of my favorite things

about working at ASML: The technology and

the culture. I couldn’t have given that

presentation without the support of the

colleagues who took my calls and answered

my questions. The supportive culture is why I

feel confident to take on new challenges

here: There are always people around who

want to help you and ASML succeed.

Friends from outside ASML sometimes ask

me about working in technology as a woman

or working in the US as a Russian. Those

questions surprise me, as who I am has

never been a factor in my experience and the

opportunities I have had at ASML.

Yes, the industry has been male dominated,

but it is changing. When I started eight years

ago, I used to joke that I was given my own

private bathroom, as I was the only woman

on my floor. But that certainly isn’t true

anymore. And in my experience, ideas are

always judged on their merit.

There are programs to support different

groups within ASML. They do great things

bringing people together and raising issues,

but people here really don’t need much

education.

Source of inspiration

I joined ASML because I was blown away by

the technology as a student. And I still am. I

recently moved on to a new stage in my journey

here, managing the entire NXE:3800 source

that will be introduced to customers in 2024.

But even now, I sometimes go down to the lab

just to look at a source prototype with its

thousands of components. That we can make

that work seems almost like magic, even after

eight years of working for ASML.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SMALL PATTERNS. BIG IMPACT. CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 106

New_AttractiveWorkplace_Intro_Background_071223.jpg

f

IN THIS SECTION:
109 Our overall performance in 2023
111 Inspiring a unified culture
114 Providing the best employee experience
120 Enabling strong leadership
122 Ensuring employee health and safety Why it matters
---

To maintain our fast pace of innovation and our

leadership position for the long term, we need to attract

and retain the best talent and create a working

environment where people can develop their talents, feel

respected and safe, be healthy and thrive.

We work hard to attract the world’s top talent and invest

in helping them reach their full potential. The more we

can help our people to grow within ASML, the more our

company can grow.

Our growth in recent years has been accompanied by a

large increase in our workforce. This has brought benefits

– such as a more diverse employee base – as well as

challenges. As the organization becomes more complex,

and the expectations of our customers and stakeholders

increase, the need to engage all our employees and

ensure a truly inclusive environment becomes even more

crucial.

How we’re managing<br><br>our impact

ASML’s people vision sets our ambition for the long term,

supporting our values – challenge, collaborate and care –

and what we stand for:

We empower each other to thrive, fueling our growth,

happiness and business success.

Everyone throughout the organization has an important

role to play in realizing this vision. We work hard to create

an environment and tools that support the collaboration,

knowledge-sharing and autonomy of our diverse and

interdependent teams.

42,416 27% 80.3% 3.6%
Total employees (FTE) Gender diversity Employee engagement<br><br>score Attrition rate
40,747 FTE excluding Berliner Glas (ASML Berlin<br><br>GmbH) (basis for the non-financial reporting) (% inflow of women) (2025 target: -2% vs. top 25% performing<br><br>companies. Employee engagement score against<br><br>benchmark 2023 (1.3)%) (2025 target: <7%)
(EMEA: 23,413 Asia: 9,111 US: 8,223) (2025 target: 24%)
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SOCIAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 107
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Attractive workplace for all
We need to empower our employees to deliver our vision by ensuring they are proud to be part of<br><br>ASML and engaged with our ambitions as a company.

New_AttractiveWorkplace_Page2_Background_071223.jpg

As shown in the diagram below, our people strategy

focuses on three key areas to deliver on our

commitments to stakeholders and manage our day-to-

day challenges in attracting, onboarding, developing and

retaining talent.

Since the pandemic, employee expectations have

continued to change, especially around work-life

balance, hybrid working and well-being. Staying on top

of these trends and understanding how the world of

work and expectations is evolving is a key part of our

strategy to attract and retain talent.

Our people strategy
Our people strategy is our pathway to stay successful and meet our future goals
Inspiring a<br><br>unified culture<br><br>Our values – challenge,<br><br>collaborate and care – guide<br><br>our decisions and behavior<br><br>to deliver on our strategy. Providing the best<br><br>possible employee<br><br>experience<br><br>This will enable us<br><br>to attract, develop<br><br>and retain the best talent. Enabling our leadership<br><br>to bring out the best<br><br>in people<br><br>We aim to lead through trust,<br><br>empowerment and<br><br>accountability.

Across the business, targeted programs empower our

people with the autonomy to steer their development and

career aspirations in a safe environment and enable

leaders to guide the growth of the company.

We prioritize providing injury-free and healthy working

conditions for everyone on our premises by eliminating

hazards and reducing safety risks.

We empower each<br><br>other to thrive,<br><br>fueling our growth,<br><br>happiness and<br><br>business success.
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Attractive workplace for all (continued)

Our overall performance in 2023

Progress tracking
Topic Target 20256 Performance indicator 2021 2022 2023 Status
Attractive<br><br>workplace for all 24% Gender diversity – % inflow of women 21% 24% 27%
Attractive_Workplace_Logo.jpg 24% Gender diversity – % inflow of women to job grade 9+1 n/a n/a 25%
20% (2024) Gender diversity – % inflow of women to job grade 13+1 12% 35% 12% n
12% (2024) Gender diversity – % representation of women in job grade 13+ 8% 10% 11%
Target is relative<br><br>to the score of<br><br>the top 25% of<br><br>performing<br><br>companies by<br><br>+/-3%) (2024) Inclusion index 83.0% 85.2% 81.8%
NL top 5<br><br>Taiwan top 5<br><br>US top 75<br><br>China top 150 Attractiveness to talent (employer brand score)2 NL 6<br><br>Taiwan 6<br><br>S Korea3 14<br><br>US 177<br><br>China 148 NL 4<br><br>Taiwan 6<br><br>S Korea n/a<br><br>US 159<br><br>China 188 NL 1<br><br>Taiwan 5<br><br>S Korea n/a<br><br>US 167<br><br>China 189 n
2% below<br><br>benchmark of top<br><br>25% performing<br><br>companies Employee engagement score 78.0% 77.9% 80.3%
n/a (2.9)%4 (1.3)%
<7% Attrition rate 5.4% 6.0% 3.6%
0.16 Recordable incident rate5 0.17 0.18 0.21 n

1.We report the % inflow of women to job grade 13+, which includes both external hires and internal promotions. The % inflow of women to job grade 9+ is only external hires.

2.Employer brand ranking from Universum: engineering students. The 2025 targets have been adjusted in 2023 from the targets we reported last year which were NL top 10, Taiwan top 20, S Korea top 20, US top 75 and China top 100.

3.As of 2021, overall ranking for South Korea is no longer conducted by Universum. The result reported for 2021 is based on a customized ranking report.

4.In our 2022 Annual Report, we reported for our we@ASML survey a delta of (4.3)% instead of (2.9)% in comparison to our benchmark. This was due to the fact that the latest update of the benchmark numbers of our external vendor were not yet loaded into our systems when reporting on our

employee engagement scores. This led to a restatement of the external benchmark of the top 25% performing companies score in 2022 from 82.2% (reported last year) to 80.8%.

5.The 2021 recordable incident rates include recordable incidents related to workers who are not employees and are the number of cases that required more than first aid in a year per 100 FTE. From 2022, and in line with the GRI 403 standard, we separate incidents related to employees and

workers who are not employees, so the 2022 recordable incident rate only includes recordable incidents related to employees.

  1. Our targets and performance do not include ASML Berlin GmbH except for we@ASML results, which do include Berliner Glas (ASML Berlin GmbH).

Read more in Non-financial statements – Non-financial indicators – Attractive workplace for all

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SOCIAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 109
Attractive workplace for all (continued)
On track •<br><br>Ongoing focus area n

Our workforce in numbers

We hired 4,129 new payroll employees in 2023,

compared with 7,130 in 2022, growing our workforce to

40,747 employees (FTEs) at the year end (with a new

hires rate of 11%, down from 21% last year). In addition,

we employ 1,669 FTEs in our ASML Berlin entity, which

is not yet fully integrated in our reporting – this increases

our total workforce to 42,416 FTE. Our workforce

increased significantly over the past years.

Read more in Non-financial statements – Non-financial

indicators – Attractive workplace for all

Our workforce trend1

298517406994105

1. The 2020 to 2023 FTEs in the chart above do not include the FTEs acquired through the acquisition of Berliner<br><br>Glas (ASML Berlin GmbH).
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SOCIAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 110
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Attractive workplace for all (continued)

Attractive_workspace.jpg

How we’re managing<br><br>our impact

Our unique and diverse teams provide the skills and

capabilities we need to deliver our vision. As an equal

opportunity employer, we aim to cultivate a diverse and

inclusive workforce to drive innovation and accelerate

creativity.

We believe that promoting greater diversity in our

workforce will help us to attract and retain smart,

talented people, enabling us to drive technological

innovations that meet our customers’ needs. This means

diversity in all its dimensions, including but not limited to

gender, neurodiversity, nationality, sexual orientation,

people with disabilities and under-represented minorities.

Our core values – challenge, collaborate and care – are

at the heart of what we do and how we do it. They drive

our behaviors and lay the foundation for the culture we

aspire to. In this context, we aim to provide a working

environment where everyone feels valued and respected

and where employees at every level can fully contribute

and thrive.

We have made great strides, but we also realize we have

opportunities to be more inclusive and diverse. For

example, we are working to increase our diversity across

different dimensions, including increasing the number of

women at all levels and better understanding the

inclusivity of our work environment for all demographics,

including LGBTQIA+, under-represented minorities and

people with disabilities and neurodiversity.

Embedding diversity and inclusion in our company

The years 2020 through to 2022 were foundational in

terms of assessing our position and building our strategic

approach to diversity and inclusion (D&I). In 2023, we

leveled up to broaden accountability and strengthen

leadership on D&I, both internally and externally. Our

long-term goal is for inclusive practices to be fully

integrated into our ways of working. To help us achieve

this, we are aligning our work streams with the pillars of

ASML's people strategy: culture, talent and leadership.

Our Global D&I Council (GDIC), founded in 2021,

consists of senior leaders who act on behalf of ASML to

provide thought leadership. Chaired by a member of the

Board of Management, the GDIC proposes the D&I

strategy to the Board of Management, sets, promotes

and monitors D&I initiatives and leads company-wide

accountability for our goals. Our D&I team includes a

Global Chief Diversity Officer who is responsible for

driving initiatives across ASML. There is also a US D&I

Council with a similar make-up of business leaders

across the US. Currently, D&I initiatives are ramping up in

Asia, and the goal is to eventually have a similar

governance structure for this region.

ASML employee networks bring together employees

from diverse backgrounds with a common interest and

purpose, while at the same time spreading cultural

awareness across the organization. The networks help

nurture the connection between employees’

expectations and perspectives, and our global D&I

strategy. They also provide social and development

opportunities and events. These networks – which

include Atypical for neurodivergent employees, and

Proud for the LGBTQIA+ community – play an important

role in informing our approach, and we encourage

everyone to participate.

Our D&I approach
Our D&I approach is integrated in our people strategy and focuses on three key areas,<br><br>as shown in the diagram below:
Talent<br><br>We aim to increase the<br><br>representation of under-<br><br>represented groups by<br><br>addressing our systems<br><br>and end-to-end people<br><br>processes, including talent<br><br>acquisition, and by<br><br>providing career<br><br>advancement programs,<br><br>that positively impact<br><br>under-represented groups. Leadership<br><br>We are developing<br><br>inclusive leadership<br><br>programs and starting to<br><br>build accountability into<br><br>our performance and<br><br>development processes.<br><br>We engage leaders to<br><br>foster their commitment to<br><br>creating an inclusive<br><br>culture and building a<br><br>diverse workforce.
Culture<br><br>We strive to create an inclusive culture for<br><br>all in line with ASML's values by increasing<br><br>the capabilities of employees and leaders<br><br>to act inclusively and by empowering<br><br>our employee networks to expand their<br><br>impact and reach.
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Attractive workplace for all (continued)
Inspiring a unified culture
Our targets and performance<br><br>in 2023
---

We set targets to allow us to measure the effectiveness

of our approach:

1 Reach 24% women new hires by 2025
2 Reach 24% inflow of women to leadership levels (job<br><br>grade 9+) by 2025
3 Reach 20% inflow of women to leadership levels (job<br><br>grade 13+) by 2024
4 Reach 12% women at leadership levels (job grade<br><br>13+) by 2024
5 Score on par +/- 3 percentage points for inclusion,<br><br>against the top 25% of top-performing global<br><br>companies We are highly<br><br>motivated to<br><br>see more women<br><br>pursuing careers<br><br>in engineering<br><br>and science.
--- Women new hires
--- ---
Reach
24%
women new hires by 2025
We aim to create an inclusive environment by<br><br>proactively seeking out talented women from various<br><br>backgrounds and experiences to bring in fresh<br><br>perspectives and innovative approaches while<br><br>fostering a dynamic organizational culture.<br><br>In 2023, we increased the percentage of new women<br><br>hires to 27%, up by three percentage points over<br><br>2022.<br><br>We are highly motivated to see more women<br><br>pursuing careers in engineering and science to further<br><br>diversify the workforce at the heart of ASML. This<br><br>requires a variety of approaches, and the highly<br><br>specialized nature of our work means it will be a long-<br><br>term process. We acknowledge that the global<br><br>science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM)<br><br>talent pool is thinly populated with women. At the<br><br>same time, almost 90% of our job positions are<br><br>STEM-related. Therefore, taking a multifaceted<br><br>approach is crucial if we are to achieve our target of<br><br>24% in 2025. We believe we are well on track to<br><br>meet this target. Women and inflow at leadership levels
--- ---
Reach
12%
women at leadership levels (job grade 13+) by<br><br>2024
The representation of women at leadership levels<br><br>plays a pivotal role in our commitment to D&I. We<br><br>recognize the importance that exemplary role models<br><br>have for our entire workforce and beyond, because<br><br>they inspire others to follow the same path. In line<br><br>with this target, we continue to support the<br><br>development and advancement of women within<br><br>ASML. This includes mentorship programs,<br><br>leadership training, as well as reviewing performance<br><br>and succession plans to ensure equal treatment and<br><br>unbiased decision-making.<br><br>Current representation of women at leadership level is<br><br>11%, while our ambition is to reach 12% by 2024.<br><br>Achieving our ambition will require a significant inflow<br><br>throughout our entire leadership pipeline, starting with<br><br>job grade 9+ and the more senior level of 13+. We<br><br>have significant gaps at the 13+ level, so we need to<br><br>strengthen our efforts throughout the entire pipeline<br><br>to meet this ambition of 20% inflow of women at<br><br>leadership levels (job grade 13+) – we are working on<br><br>specific plans to achieve this. In 2023, there was an<br><br>25% inflow of women to job grade 9+ (2025 target of<br><br>24%) and a 12% inflow of women to job grade 13+. Inclusion index
--- ---
Score on par
+/- 3
percentage points for inclusion, against the top<br><br>25% of top-performing global companies
We are dedicated to creating a global workplace<br><br>where every individual feels valued, respected, and<br><br>empowered, regardless of their background. By<br><br>comparing our inclusion score with the top-<br><br>performing global companies, we aim to drive<br><br>continuous progress.<br><br>In 2023, our inclusion score was 82% (women: 80%<br><br>and men: 83%), in line with the benchmark of top-<br><br>performing global companies (82%).<br><br>In 2023, we added additional questions to the<br><br>Inclusion Index portion of the we@ASML engagement<br><br>survey in order to better understand each employee's<br><br>experience and garner a sense of their level of belonging.<br><br>Therefore, this year's results cannot be compared<br><br>directly to the 2022 results.<br><br>Overall, we were pleased to see feedback from<br><br>employees and gained insight on areas of opportunity.<br><br>Our goal is to meet or increase this level of inclusion<br><br>among our employees on an ongoing basis.
Read more in Corporate Governance - Other Board-related<br><br>matters
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SOCIAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 112
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Attractive workplace for all (continued)
Inspiring a unified culture (continued)
Our actions in 2023
--- ---
Women new hires
•Engaged actively with educational programs to<br><br>grow the talent pipeline, deploying multiple initiatives<br><br>to promote STEM education among the future<br><br>female talent pool<br><br>•Collaborated with universities and organizations<br><br>dedicated to building diversity and creating<br><br>opportunities for professional development and<br><br>engagement. ASML is a sponsor of the GEM<br><br>Fellowship Program in the US, which provides<br><br>funding for graduate education through corporate<br><br>sponsorships and a partnership with universities.<br><br>Students selected for the GEM Fellowship Program<br><br>are required to complete a corporate internship<br><br>during the summer and attend graduate school<br><br>during the fall and spring semesters. In 2023, we<br><br>had seven GEM engineering Fellows on campus in<br><br>the US.<br><br>•Provided financial support to six young women<br><br>pursuing engineering or computer science degrees Women and inflow at leadership levels
---
•Launched a global sponsorship program for ASML<br><br>women, as well as a program to empower women<br><br>to amplify their unique style and voice<br><br>•Engaged new specialized recruiting agencies<br><br>focusing on recruiting senior leaders<br><br>•Sponsored the European Women in Tech Conference<br><br>for the first time, with women from our technology<br><br>employee network speaking on the main stage<br><br>•Organized and participated in global and regional<br><br>events to attract diverse technical profiles and<br><br>promote ASML as an attractive employer, especially<br><br>to increase women leadership inflow Inclusion index
---
•Added a module on inclusive leadership to all our<br><br>leadership programs and worked to ensure inclusive<br><br>language in all programs<br><br>•Organized a global D&I month consisting of<br><br>numerous panels and events<br><br>•Continued to build our D&I curriculum by delivering<br><br>awareness sessions and incorporating D&I in our<br><br>global and sector onboarding programs<br><br>•Continued to grow our employee networks,<br><br>establishing additional chapters in the US (Atypical,<br><br>Women @ CS Sites) and Germany (Green, Next)<br><br>Listening to our female workforce<br><br>After input and feedback from female employees, we<br><br>organized several female listening sessions to have an<br><br>open dialogue within the company on any issues and<br><br>concerns related to inclusion of female employees.<br><br>Based on the feedback that we received in those<br><br>sessions, we will follow up on those aspects to ensure<br><br>that we safeguard and improve the inclusion of female<br><br>employees from a behavioral perspective and in our<br><br>processes. Looking ahead
---

In 2023, we continued to build on our initial D&I strategy.

The GDIC, together with the D&I Center of Excellence

(CoE), conducted an assessment of the current state of

the D&I agenda within ASML and defined priority areas

for 2023-2025:

•Increase representation of women in leadership,

including senior management positions (JG13+)

•Increase representation of under-represented

ethnic minorities in the US, while acknowledging

their relative under-representation in STEM fields

•Further recognize the wide range of nationalities

employed at ASML and support the promotion and

development of non-local employees globally, as

well as the retention of non-local employees in the

Netherlands

We will set targets for each priority, supported by a

roadmap to create impactful and systemic change within

ASML. Each of the defined priority areas will consist of

multiple initiatives that will be tackled integrally across the

employee journey (from recruitment, onboarding and

development to retirement or exit). Furthermore, we will

continuously reflect on the D&I dimensions currently

prioritized and aim to increase our scope in the years

ahead.

Our commitment to our core values – challenge,

collaborate and care – will continue to drive our focus on

strengthening the diversity of our workforce and ensuring

our culture is inclusive for all employees. This will be

exemplified by the D&I initiatives we plan to launch in

early 2024, all of which will support our priority areas.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SOCIAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 113
Attractive workplace for all (continued)
Inspiring a unified culture (continued)
How we’re managing<br><br>our impact
---

We want to offer our people the best possible employee

experience at all our sites. This means enabling them to

develop their talent, feel respected and achieve to the

best of their abilities.

By offering an outstanding employee experience, we are

able to attract and retain the best talent to support the

increased productivity and growth of the company. This

requires specific commitments related to delivering a

best-in-class employee experience and driving a unified

culture where people are supported in their learning,

leadership, advancement and well-being.

We define the employee experience as the sum of all

experiences an employee gains through the interactions

with ASML at each stage of the employee life cycle, from

attracting and onboarding to exit. To achieve the best

employee experience, we focus on our employer

branding and employee engagement. Our approach

covers a wide variety of factors and activities, including

talent attraction and retention, as well as employee

engagement and development – including the

onboarding experience and training – and labor practices

such as fair remuneration, working conditions and well-

being.

We measure our impact on the total employee

experience through our annual we@ASML employee

engagement survey.

Talent attraction and retention

Our aligned employer value proposition is the key

strategic lever that defines our global positioning and

embodies our strategic direction as an employer. It

outlines the beliefs and values we want current and

potential employees to feel, see and experience with us

as an employer. The employer value proposition is used

in communications with employees and potential

employees to drive engagement and retention both in the

short and long term.

Our targets and performance<br><br>in 2023

We have set a number of targets to drive progress and

measure the effectiveness of our approach:

1 Employer brand score – By 2025, maintain our<br><br>position in the Netherlands and Taiwan top 5, US top<br><br>75 and China top 150
2 By 2025 have an attrition rate (the percentage<br><br>of employees leaving our company) of < 7%

Employer brand

We measure our employer brand in the main locations

where we operate – the Netherlands, Germany, the US,

China, Taiwan and South Korea. These rankings show us

how we are converting talent through the attraction-to-

hire funnel. They look at how well ASML is known and

considered as an employer by external audiences and

potential employees, in particular by monitoring our

position in an independent external survey.

We have defined 2025 targets for our ranking in our different local labor markets:
Country Target 2025 2022 Ranking 2023 Ranking
The Netherlands Top 5 4 1
Germany N/A N/A N/A
Taiwan Top 5 6 5
South Korea N/A N/A N/A
US Top 75 159 167
China Top 150 188 189

Note: ranking from engineering students only

In 2023, we were ranked #1 in the Netherlands, #5 in

Taiwan, #167 in the US and #189 in China, with ranking

unavailable in South Korea. These rankings provide

detailed student preference research insights that we use

to create greater understanding of what technical talent

expects from an employer and whether we are a

competitive and an attractive employer.

Our score has improved significantly in the Netherlands,

where we moved up to the number one position for most

attractive employers for students and into the top three

for professionals. In Taiwan, an extremely competitive

market for semiconductor talent, we have moved up a

notch from position six to five through differentiated and

consistent engagement and communications with top-

tier universities.

The Chinese market is large and fragmented, and it

remains a huge challenge for ASML as a non-consumer

brand to become known among the general population.

In an unaided ideal employer ranking for students, we are

sixth out of 10 competitors in IT/high-tech (vs. no ranking

in 2020), and third out of 10 competitors in the

semiconductor sector (vs. no ranking in 2020).

The US is a large and fragmented market in which it is

difficult to reach everyone. We focus our employer-

branding efforts on the specific states where we operate

and target certain fields of study. Based on our survey of

the top 15 target schools, ASML reached 78%

awareness as an employer, an increase of 36% over

  1. Based on this same survey, ASML now ranks

ninth on the list of ideal employers out of a total of 25,

overtaking 12 competitors.

87%
of new hires indicated that they<br><br>had a positive onboarding<br><br>experience in 2023, with good<br><br>support from their managers.
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Attractive workplace for all (continued)
Providing the best employee experience - Talent attraction and retention

In 2022, we launched employer branding in Germany,

which mainly focuses on building brand awareness for

our R&D and manufacturing location in Berlin. Because

we are a new employer brand in Germany, we are not

yet included in the local research as a company of

choice.

We use the Universum research data to ensure a

consistent method of measuring our employer brand, but

also to understand what is most important to these

students when choosing an employer. In 2021,

Universum ceased providing its standard report for South

Korea, and we are unable to obtain comparable data.

However, based on our 2023 survey of the top 10 target

universities in South Korea, we ranked 13th out of 21

competitors. In addition, we were certified by the Ministry

of Employment and Labor of South Korea as one of

'Korea’s best job creators', and have twice won 'Best

Family-Friendly Management' approval from the Ministry

of Gender Equality and Family.

Employee retention

While employees leaving the company can lead to

knowledge gaps, we also view these events as

opportunities to bring in new talent and enhance existing

talent. We strive for a healthy attrition rate of below 7%.

Our overall attrition rate in 2023 was 3.6%, down from

6.0% in 2022. Our attrition rate is well within our target

range and below the industry average in every country in

which we operate. We attribute the decrease to the fact

that the labor market has cooled down industry-wide and

people are currently more cautious before changing jobs.

While this trend is relevant to many companies, our

efforts in employee onboarding and employee

engagement are also reflected in a lower attrition rate.

Our actions in 2023

To achieve our targets, we:

•Asked employees to share their stories on why they

join and stay with ASML and supported them as

ambassadors in sharing their stories with their

networks. This credible way of messaging helps us

target talent within earned media and drive awareness

and referrals – a high-quality source of hires.

•Continued to recognize that employees are our best

advocates and one of the most credible sources of

information about who we are as an employer. In 2023,

we expanded the Digital Ambassador program to

China alongside the Netherlands, Germany, the US,

Taiwan and South Korea. Over 1,000 employees

globally are now sharing curated content with their

local social media networks, generating millions of

impressions throughout each month.

•Held our Internal Career Festival onsite and virtually in

China, Germany, South Korea, the Netherlands, the US

and Taiwan. This global hybrid event aims to retain

talent by driving internal mobility and development.

•Ran 27 executive interviews, a global internal survey

with over 10,000 responses and targeted external

talent surveys in each ASML location. All were intended

to help us understand what (potential) employees

expect from an employer and how we stack up. Based

on these insights, we have updated our employer value

proposition to communicate who we are and what we

offer, authentically and in a differentiated way.

Read more in Enabling strong leadership

Looking ahead

Our key priorities for 2024 are the attraction and

retention of skilled talent to support our business growth.

We intend to do this by continuing to monitor and drive a

strong employer brand reputation.

We will continue to support and enable a (potentially)

best-in-class employee experience through focused

programs and communications around learning and

development, our commitment to well-being, diversity

and inclusion, and strong leadership. In doing this, we

aim to truly drive an employer brand experience from the

inside out.

We will run both global campaigns and events and drive

segmented outreach in each of our key locations. In this

way, we hope to showcase ASML and let potential

employees see, feel and experience what it’s like to work

for us. We will also focus on key areas such as talent

engagement with top-tier universities, candidate and

employee experience, and talent attraction to key roles.

To support and measure the effectiveness of our efforts

we will carry out talent surveys in each key location either

every 12 or every 18 months to monitor our progress in

each of the countries.

Lastly, we will continue to monitor and listen to (potential)

employees in an effort to continuously improve their

experience both before and after they join us.

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Attractive workplace for all (continued)
Providing the best employee experience - Talent attraction and retention (continued)
How we’re managing<br><br>our impact
---

We empower our people to take responsibility for their

own personal development, pursue their career

ambitions and thrive, by listening to their views and

offering tailor-made development opportunities.

We only succeed as an organization when everyone can

give their best. It is crucial that we take care of and

ensure the well-being of all our colleagues. This means

building and maintaining a working environment where

we can work together with positive energy and achieve a

healthy work-life balance.

We must ensure that our people have the right

knowledge and expertise to maintain our technological

leadership and the pace of innovation our industry

demands. To build a strong employer brand that attracts

talented people who are committed to their personal and

professional growth, we promote a culture of continuous

learning and development.

Onboarding and developing our people
A positive onboarding experience is vital to building a<br><br>sense of connection, and helping our employees add<br><br>value and quickly feel at home. Right from the start, we<br><br>want to unlock the potential of people and society by<br><br>pushing technology to new limits.<br><br>We measure the quality of our onboarding experience<br><br>through pulse surveys. On average, 87% of new<br><br>colleagues indicated that they had a positive experience<br><br>in 2023, with good support from their managers. 9% of<br><br>new colleagues had a neutral experience, while 4%<br><br>indicated that there is room for improvement in the<br><br>onboarding experience, particularly in the areas of training and access to relevant tools and information.<br><br>We use learning solutions and knowledge<br><br>management to unlock people’s potential and foster a<br><br>culture of learning. Once employees are on board, we<br><br>continuously invest in them in response to evolving<br><br>business requirements and developments in the labor<br><br>market. Enabling employees to identify and pursue<br><br>opportunities for professional development is central to<br><br>our approach, and we offer a wide range of career<br><br>paths and tools to support our employees’ career<br><br>navigation. The ASML Academy unites all learning and knowledge<br><br>management within ASML, enabling our employees to<br><br>easily access the knowledge, skills and expertise they<br><br>need to perform well in their roles. The new Learning<br><br>eXperience Platform (LXP) further enables people to<br><br>drive their own development and learn from each<br><br>other, and intuitively connects them to best-in-class<br><br>learning content created by ASML and external<br><br>providers.<br><br>We aim to provide the best possible employee<br><br>experience by enabling learning and knowledge<br><br>management to take place on the job, guided by the<br><br>70-20-10 approach for learning: 70% on-the-job<br><br>learning, 20% coaching and 10% training courses. We<br><br>are also focused on providing performance support to<br><br>employees when they need to learn while performing<br><br>on their job. Compared to 2022, the growth of our<br><br>workforce slowed significantly in 2023, and in some<br><br>areas we did not have nearly as many new roles as in<br><br>the previous year. We therefore shifted our focus<br><br>toward creating awareness and engagement. This<br><br>also allowed us to concentrate resources on<br><br>supporting programs and communications related to<br><br>internal mobility and development, and onboarding<br><br>the large number of people we hired in 2022 and 2023.
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Attractive workplace for all (continued)
Providing the best employee experience - Employee engagement and development
Our targets and performance<br><br>in 2023
---

Two key targets measure the effectiveness of our

approach:

1 Employee engagement score – By 2025 to be<br><br>within a 2% range of the top 25% performing<br><br>companies benchmark for our we@ASML employee<br><br>engagement survey
2 Achieve 78% for well-being in our engagement<br><br>survey in 2023

Employee engagement

We measure the overall impact of our activities on the

total employee experience using our we@ASML

employee engagement survey.

This annual survey provides insights that enable us to

improve the employee experience and refine our policies

and processes. To measure how well our values are

embedded in the organization, the survey also includes

questions about our culture and values that go beyond

the ‘what’ to the ‘how’.

Our 2023 we@ASML employee engagement survey

reported good results and a high participation rate of

86% (in line with previous years), along with valuable

feedback for improvement.

The engagement survey score was 80.3% in 2023 – five

percentage points above our external global benchmark

of 75.2%, and an increase of 2.4 percentage points on

the score from 2022. Against the 2025 target, we already

score within the 2% range of the top 25% performing

companies (with our 2023 engagement score just over

1.3 percentage points lower). On all underlying topics,

we see an improvement compared to the previous year.

Overall, we conclude that ASML has a highly engaged

population. People are proud to work for ASML and

would recommend ASML to others.

Responses indicate a high level of team spirit, where

sharing knowledge and getting the job done are strongly

embedded in our way of working. Our employees feel

respected and have trust in each other. They continue to

raise concerns about effective processes, and they like to

have more opportunities to participate in sustainability

initiatives. Cross-collaboration and sharing knowledge

across teams also remain subjects for improvement.

Inclusion, well-being and job enablement are the key

themes we will focus on to further increase our

engagement.

In the past year, we have improved the awareness on our

sustainability initiatives and opportunities for employees

to contribute to it. Our sustainability initiatives nowadays

make 79% of our employees proud and convinced that

they have a positive impact on the world. This is an

improvement of 9 percentage points compared to last

year and 1 percentage point above the external average

(78%). Next to this, 53% see the opportunity to

participate in sustainability initiatives. A positive effect

compared to last year (39%), but we will nevertheless

continue focusing to further improve this score.

Social protection and fair labor conditions and remuneration for our employees
Working practices and remuneration<br><br>ASML is committed to providing fair labor conditions<br><br>and social protection for all its employees, regardless<br><br>of their location and whether they are on fixed or<br><br>temporary contracts. We support the principles of the<br><br>International Labour Organization (ILO) and respect the<br><br>rights of all employees to form and join trade unions of<br><br>their own choosing, to bargain collectively and to<br><br>engage in peaceful assembly.<br><br>Freedom of association<br><br>We have no indication that we operate in countries<br><br>where the freedom of association and collective<br><br>bargaining for ASML employees is restricted. We strive<br><br>to comply with the relevant legislation in every country<br><br>where we operate.<br><br>In those countries where we have employee<br><br>representation, we engage in regular dialogue with the<br><br>different organizations representing our employees.<br><br>Topics are put forward and discussed by both the<br><br>company and the employee representatives. The<br><br>working conditions and terms of employment of<br><br>employees not directly covered by collective bargaining<br><br>agreements are influenced or determined based on<br><br>other collective bargaining agreements, labor market<br><br>developments and usage and habits in the specific<br><br>country. Fair remuneration<br><br>Our approach to remuneration is to be fair and<br><br>balanced. In our Remuneration Policy, we are<br><br>committed to gender equality and we strive for global<br><br>consistency while respecting common practice in local<br><br>markets. We continuously review how our<br><br>remuneration compares with the market benchmark for<br><br>technology professionals in each region where we<br><br>operate and, where necessary, make changes to our<br><br>remuneration policies and levels.<br><br>ASML is committed to meeting adequate living-wage<br><br>requirements. This means that employees earn salaries<br><br>that meet their and their families’ basic needs to<br><br>maintain an adequate standard of life in the<br><br>circumstances of each country where we operate, and<br><br>we also provide some discretionary income. Our<br><br>company has a predominantly highly educated<br><br>workforce with relatively high levels of remuneration<br><br>and, on average, our salaries are significantly above the<br><br>local living wage.<br><br>In 2022, as part of a two-year cycle, we conducted an<br><br>analysis of how our lowest base salary compared with<br><br>the local minimum wage and local ‘living wage’ in the<br><br>countries and regions where we operate. We did not<br><br>detect any gaps. We also analyze paid salaries for<br><br>gender disparity annually. In 2023, as in previous<br><br>years, we found no major differences in these salaries.<br><br>However, we would like to further investigate this<br><br>domain in the future, to ensure that we do not have<br><br>any major challenges.
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Attractive workplace for all (continued)
Providing the best employee experience - Employee engagement and development (continued)

Employee well-being.jpg

Employee well-being

Care is one of our values and we support our employees

in maintaining a healthy, productive and balanced life.

Our well-being framework brings together all well-being

activities at ASML and allows us to drive our initiatives

region-by-region to meet local needs.

We look at well-being from a holistic perspective, striving

to integrate it into everyone’s day-to-day work. We have

identified four well-being dimensions around which we

have defined and created our programs, tools and

resources – mental, physical, social and financial well-

being. We provide specific resources and initiatives for

teams and managers to get the right conversations going

and guide their well-being journeys.

Our offerings include general support for employees and

leaders, training courses and masterclasses, well-being

events, and physical and mental health checks. At our

head office in Veldhoven, a dedicated health and well-

being center provides several employee services

including an in-house physiotherapist and psychologist,

career center, indoor gym, yoga room and a running

track.

The biggest challenge we face is in encouraging people

to get into the habit of prioritizing their well-being as part

of their day-to-day work, and to help them find and use

the available support in their well-being journeys. We

have close to 300 well-being ambassadors helping us to

spread well-being across our global organization, and the

network continues to expand.

Well-being is measured primarily through the well-being

score in our we@ASML engagement survey. Our target

was to improve from 77% in 2022 to 78% in 2023.

2019 2020 2021 2022 2023
Well-being 74% 77% 69% 77% 81%

From the 2023 survey, our well-being score improved

from 77% in 2022 to 81% in 2023, which is above our

targeted score.

Through a deep dive into the actual survey results, we

have identified those groups of employees where well-

being scores need to be improved, and we will define

tailored interventions to execute on this in close

cooperation with managers and HR business partners.

For 2024, we aim to maintain an overall well-being score

of 81%, and no scores on individual questions within the

well-being index below 75%. We expect this to be a

stretch considering the circumstances in the world and

the semiconductor industry. Our key focus areas will be

maintaining a healthy work-life balance and managing

stress – we will work with leaders and managers to

consistently reduce work pressure.

~300
well-being ambassadors
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Attractive workplace for all (continued)
Providing the best employee experience - Employee engagement and development (continued) We focus on four well-<br><br>being dimensions –<br><br>mental, physical, social<br><br>and financial
---
Our actions in 2023
---

We saw significant progress within the Learning

eXperience Platform (LXP) in 2023, with content curation

and the creation of learning journeys helping our

employees to easily find the learning they need, when

they need it. We also embedded well-being principles in

learning program delivery.

We stepped up our use of data and metrics to improve

how we strategize our well-being programming and

updated the well-being section of the we@ASML survey.

We carried out additional research into well-being needs,

both in general and within diversity groups through our

employee networks.

We held the first Global Health & Well-being Week in

June and launched an enriched self-facilitation tool for

teams to work on well-being in 2023. A development

program that consisted of several workshops and

interactive sessions was exclusively offered to our

network of well-being ambassadors, which grew from

200 to 300 members.

In July, we launched an employee assistance program

(EAP) for Europe. As was already the case through EAPs

in Asia and the US, ASML employees and their families in

the EU can now also get 24/7 support, counseling and

help with anything that negatively impacts their mental

health, work-life balance and/or productivity at work.

Looking ahead

Our plans for 2024 are to:

•Create an ASML-wide learning and knowledge

management onboarding and off-boarding experience,

aligned across the ASML Academy.

•Strengthen the well-being strategy, governance and

internal branding

•Host a Global Well-being Month in June, with online

and onsite events, workshops and keynotes in all key

locations.

•Launch a new digital well-being platform as part of the

new ASML intranet, a digital hub for internal use to

connect, communicate, and collaborate. This will allow

employees to find and access the well-being resources

they need, quickly and easily, when they need them.

•Improve development for complex roles, functions and

skills by defining specific and targeted learning

journeys.

•Increase our focus on integrating well-being into our

day-to-day work by:

◦Deploying the well-being framework in additional

parts of the company and countries

◦Equipping leaders and people managers to act as

role models and hold regular well-being

conversations with their teams

◦Strengthening and professionalizing the well-being

ambassador network

•Enhance the use of data and metrics to gain insight

into the well-being of our people and strategize well-

being interventions.

In 2023, we identified a new material topic – how

providing opportunities for training and development can

impact employees' well-being and careers. We are

developing a process to formally manage and report on

this topic, starting in 2024.

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Attractive workplace for all (continued)
Providing the best employee experience - Employee engagement and development (continued)
How we’re managing<br><br>our impact
---

We operate in a world of volatility, uncertainty, complexity

and ambiguity. Successfully navigating these challenges

requires leaders with emotional intelligence and strong

business and people leadership skills.

Furthermore, to remain a market leader, we must provide

unified direction based on authentic leadership that gives

our people a clear picture of where ASML is heading.

This offers opportunities for all of us to contribute to

ASML’s success and make an impact.

As our company grows, so does the need for clarity

around roles and expectations – as well as our strategic

approach and vision. Our leaders play an important role

in communicating this. We strive to formulate and

capture the roles of our leaders and employees clearly so

that everyone understands what is expected of them and

can perform their roles to the best of their ability.

Launched in 2020, our leadership framework outlines

and clarifies a leader’s role in the business, role-modeling

the values within the company, and what it means to be

a people manager and coach for employees.

Leadership development
In 2023, we evaluated our leadership development<br><br>curriculum with the aim to:<br><br>•Support our leaders with easier access to<br><br>development opportunities<br><br>•Increase the scalability of our leadership curriculum<br><br>•Improve the quality of our leadership program<br><br>materials<br><br>•Improve how we measure the impact (ROI<br><br>methodology) of the leadership training programs<br><br>•Improve the content of and the relationship between<br><br>our leadership programs

We are evolving our approach to leadership

development. In addition to self-directed learning, we

now include organizational learning and invite leaders

from all target groups to join our leadership courses. We

develop roughly one-third of our leadership population

each year. We maintain our fast-track career programs

for our most promising managers – our future leaders.

New_LeadershipFramework_Diagram.jpg

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Attractive workplace for all (continued)
Enabling strong leadership
Our targets and performance<br><br>in 2023
---

We facilitated leadership journeys for 1,520 leaders and

we started leadership acceleration programs for 264

high-potential leaders.

Since 2022, we have specifically measured the quality of

each pillar of our leadership framework using our

we@ASML employee survey. In 2023, all four dimensions

of our leadership framework were evaluated: 82% of our

employees see their manager as a role model, 80% as a

coach, 79% as a business leader and 82% as a people

leader. We are happy with this upward trend and will

continue to invest in leadership development, as this is of

critical importance to us to ensure our growth.

Our actions in 2023

To support our leaders in understanding and adopting

our leadership model, we deployed a new leadership

curriculum for our total leadership population and

adjusted the content in line with their leadership

responsibilities (first-line leaders, leader of leaders,

executives) and their years in the role.

We also strengthened the narrative and content of our

leadership curriculum. For our learning initiatives we

implemented the ROI methodology to measure our

performance and will be able to monitor the performance

in 2024. We plan to update our whole curriculum every

year, with 25% of the curriculum based on the strategy of

ASML and 75% on the future or current skills and

behavior we expect from a leader, using the leadership

model as a basis. Based on the results of the we@ASML

employee survey in 2022, we specifically focused on

adding business acumen to our leadership curriculum,

for example in Taiwan.

In addition, we provided support to help our senior

leaders improve their coaching and mentoring skills,

which we believe will have a positive impact on business

acumen for all leaders in ASML. We also implemented a

new coaching and mentoring platform, and coaching is

now part of all our leadership programs.

Looking ahead

We plan to roll out a shared services platform for learning

in each region so that we are ready to develop even

more leaders in the future. While our plan is for this to be

completed by 2024, this target will be challenging. We

have identified that our structure and resources are

currently not able to deliver on the demand that we have

for our leadership programs – and we recognize the need

to step up our ability to deliver more efficiently.

Our key priority is to focus on scalability and quality –

making sure our leaders are accessing best-in-class

programs in an efficient and effective way. To be able to

do that, we will set up Learning Shared Service centers in

Asia in 2024. We already have these centers in Europe

and the US. Secondly, we will focus on improving the

impact of our programs, which will lead to a yearly

improvement process incorporating the feedback and

strategic direction we want to take.

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Attractive workplace for all (continued)
Enabling strong leadership (continued)
How we’re managing our<br><br>impact
---

More than just a priority, safety is central to everything

we do.

Our goal is to prevent occupational health and safety

incidents because in our view all are preventable. As

such, we are working toward a long-term ambition of

zero injuries and work-related illnesses.

We aim to provide injury-free and healthy working

conditions for everyone on our premises – employees,

contractors, suppliers, customers and visitors – by

eliminating hazards and reducing safety risks. To achieve

this, we focus on continuous improvement in our

processes, working conditions and mindset.

ASML is a complex, global organization. To improve, we

need to share and learn together, starting from our core

values – challenge, collaborate and care. With

continuous improvement as a key principle, we rely on

every person working at and for ASML to share our

safety commitment, because only by working together to

common standards can we keep each other safe.

While it is impossible to completely eradicate risk, we

work proactively at all levels to identify potential issues or

concerns and develop measures toward reducing them.

To minimize risk, we provide our people with the right

protection, procedures and processes to keep them

safe. We follow all government guidelines and safety

measures, and where appropriate we go further.

We focus our efforts on an environment, health and

safety (EHS) management system, safety culture and

training. Our commitment to employee and product

safety is captured in our Sustainability Policy, which

applies to ASML colleagues worldwide.

Read our Sustainability Policy at asml.com.

Occupational Health and Safety Environment

competence center

Our Occupational Health and Safety Environment (OHSE)

competence center drives learning and knowledge

sharing across the organization. It also connects subject

matter experts who cover EHS competences across the

organization. EHS Experts bring together best practices,

define the EHS standards for ASML and support

managers to implement these standards in the

workplace. Together, they drive improvement on EHS

matters to ensure employees can work safely, identify

areas for improvement and meet legal requirements.

EHS management system

ASML’s well-established EHS management system

enables our managers and employees to effectively

integrate EHS objectives, plans, processes, standards

and behaviors into their daily work and protect our

people, products, assets and the environment. The

system is based on and compliant with the ISO 45001

occupational health and safety standard. It is assessed

annually as part of our internal Corporate EHS audit

program, although it is not certified or audited by an

external party. We have implemented the system

worldwide at all our sites and customer services

locations. It covers everyone whose workplace is

controlled by ASML, including all our employees and

other workers not employed by us.

The Corporate EHS Committee, chaired by our Chief

Operations Officer, oversees and approves our EHS

strategy. Line managers are responsible for day-to-day

EHS management and performance.

The EHS standards describe the EHS requirements

ASML must adhere to worldwide. Locally, more stringent

requirements may apply. The ASML EHS Guide, available

on our intranet, provides practical, useful and essential

information for employees, contractors and any other

parties working for us. The guide explains our aims and

objectives, and how employees can contribute to a safe

and healthy workplace with minimum impact on the

environment.

Incident and risk management are key elements of the

EHS management system. An incident report must be

completed by any ASML employee who is involved in or

observes an unsafe situation or incident. We record and

investigate all incidents and high-risk unsafe situations to

determine the root cause and take actions to prevent

them from recurring.

EHS Experts conduct regular hazard and risk

evaluations, with a focus on preventing employees’

potential exposure to hazards such as chemicals,

radiation, mechanical handling and ergonomic risks.

These provide us with further insights into the main

hazard and risk areas at ASML. We take appropriate

action to mitigate these risks and ensure continuous

improvement through internal EHS audits as well as

inspections, risk assessments and incident

investigations. These are complemented by regular

‘Safety Gemba Walks’, where managers visit the

employees’ workplace, helping to increase safety

performance and strengthen our safety culture.

In the event of any incidents, company doctors or

external health services are available on all our sites.

Strengthening our safety culture

Safety extends beyond procedures, rules and the right

equipment to include human mindset, behavior, attitude

and habits. We carried out our second safety maturity

assessment based on the Bradley Curve in 2022, and we

continued the deployment of improvement roadmaps in

  1. Improvement areas are focused around

leadership, structure and process. As an example, we

have continued our improvement actions around the

ASML life-saving rules with focus on isolation and lock-

out. Our leadership development has continued with

specific training for leadership teams and providing a

sound foundation for all our people leaders. Across the

company, initiatives to develop the safety mindset are

being deployed with programs to increase risk

awareness and speaking up.

Our ambition is to reach the next level of safety maturity

by 2025. Improvement plans at corporate and sector

levels have been identified and are implemented,

supported by solid management commitment. We will

continue to engage with our partners, main suppliers and

customers to align our safety principles and processes.

To help build a strong safety culture and prevent serious

injury and fatalities in our operations, we apply basic

safety rules for five situations. Based on incident analysis,

these are: verify isolation and lockout before beginning

work; get authorization before entering a confined space;

take precautions while moving heavy loads; protect

yourself while working at heights; and drive safely.

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Attractive workplace for all (continued)
Ensuring employee health and safety

To improve our EHS performance, we encourage

employees to speak up whenever they encounter safety

risks. Every employee is empowered to stop working if

they feel unsafe. Line managers are responsible for

ensuring safe work conditions to enable their team to

work safely, and for following up on reported safety

incidents or unsafe situations by team members.

Dedicated EHS teams support our employees and their

line managers to work in a safe and healthy environment.

Safety training and engagement

At ASML, it is standard practice to inform our employees

and anyone else accessing our premises and customer

sites independently – including contractors and suppliers

– about our safety rules. Training ensures that our people

are prepared and informed about these safety

requirements.

Mandatory safety training is defined for different job roles

depending on the risk profile of the work activities:

•All new employees joining ASML are required to

complete our EHS Fundamentals e-learning module,

which covers all the ASML safety guiding principles to

recognize hazards and prevent injuries, as well as

where and how to find safety information. This training

is refreshed for all employees on an annual basis

•Our EHS Cleanroom Fundamentals training module is

mandatory to enter and stay safe within our cleanroom

environments

•Our EHS Fundamentals training for line managers

focuses on how to be a leader on safety. It comprises

three elements: risk management, enabling teams to

work safely, and following up after incidents

Our targets and performance<br><br>in 2023

To benchmark our performance against industry

standards, we use a benchmark recordable incident rate

of 0.16, which represents world-class performance.

We register EHS-related incidents in line with the US

Occupational Safety and Health Act (OSHA). Our

recordable incident rate – the number of cases that

required more than first aid in a year per 100 FTE –

increased from 0.18 in 2022 to 0.21 in 2023, higher than

our desired benchmark of 0.16.

290820825598573

We have seen an increase in our recordable incident

rate. We maintain our focus and actions to improve

safety in technology, systems and culture. First analysis

shows the increase over 2023 is primarily found within

the customer support area. An improvement plan has

been set regarding safety awareness (prevention slips,

trips and falls) and the use of cut-resistant gloves (to

prevent injuries from sharp objects). Our benchmark

compared to the OSHA industry data shows we remain

below the average recordable incident rate for the semi-

conductor industry. However, the increase has our full

attention. As part of our 2023 management review, an

overall deep dive into our performance will help to identify

necessary improvements.

As in previous years, we did not encounter any ASML

work-related fatalities. We reported four injuries due to

which the employee was away from work or had a job

transfer for >180 days.

Our actions in 2023

We must ensure people are informed, instructed and

supported while doing their work.

In response to the increased recordable incident rate in

2022 from 2021, during 2023 we deployed health and

safety improvements.

Following the five safety rules, we deployed various

department-specific awareness programs. For example,

we delivered safety and risk awareness campaigns to

further develop our safety maturity. We have also further

improved our EHS systems and processes, such as

industrial hygiene and incident management.

Based on our findings in 2022 that ergonomics was the

most common root cause for work-related illnesses

experienced by our employees, we developed and rolled

out new industrial ergonomics training to our operations

teams, supported by ergonomic workplace assessments

and improvements where needed. This includes

mandatory ergonomics training for all engineers in our

operations to prevent work-related illness due to manual

lifting, pushing and pulling, and awkward work postures.

We increased our focus on occupational health, with

ergonomics and hazardous substance management as

main topics, and on emergency response at large

industrial sites. With regard to travel safety, and to

reduce the risk of driving while fatigued, we have taken

measures to ensure our employees do not drive following

a flight of more than six hours.

Looking ahead

We will continue to deploy our safety maturity

improvement roadmaps and adapt our EHS processes

to the growth of the company to ensure safe and healthy

work conditions for all.

In 2024 we will focus on working at height

improvements, risk management, and further embedding

occupational health processes in the operations and

safety at our campuses.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SOCIAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 123
Attractive workplace for all (continued)
Ensuring employee health and safety (continued)

New_Story5_IntroPage_180124.jpg

Managing expansion in<br><br>high-stress situations means<br><br>focusing on your people<br><br>and their well-being.”
Mark Bergkotte
Director, Logistics Operations
13 years at ASML Helping our teams thrive
---
Mark Bergkotte has worked at ASML<br><br>for 13 years managing our supply<br><br>chain and logistics in various roles. As<br><br>Director Logistics Operations, he<br><br>oversaw the ramp-up of our logistics<br><br>to meet increased customer demand<br><br>in the face of formidable internal and<br><br>external pressures.
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SMALL PATTERNS. BIG IMPACT. STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 124
--- --- --- --- --- ---

New_Mark_Bergkotte_Story_Page2.jpg

Scaling up logistics

under pressure

In 2020, I started a new position with

responsibility for delivering materials and

tooling into our factories in Veldhoven and

shipping finished systems to our customers.

This was a time of rapid evolution for my

team. ASML was ramping up delivery of new

systems, which meant taking on many new

employees. And six months after I started,

we launched a new logistics setup including

new IT systems and much more automation.

All this was happening at the height of the

COVID-19 pandemic. Needless to say,

stress levels were really high and,

consequently, so were sickness and

employee absence. As a logistics organization,

we were struggling to meet targets.

Something had to change. There needed to

be more focus on the health and well-being

of our people. It’s a cliché to say that people

are our most important asset, but it’s a cliché

because it’s true.

Developing a culture

of well-being

The combination of work pressure and

external stress from the COVID-19 situation

was very difficult for many people. Working

with ASML’s health services team, we hired

a personal coach to help individuals find

ways to switch off at the weekends so that

the stress didn’t become too much. This

proved so popular that we have continued it

through the cost-of-living crisis and other

global events. Obviously, we can't solve

external non-work-related events, but we

can help our people to deal with these in the

best possible way.

We also made some organizational changes

to put the right people in the right jobs. A key

step was creating a new management

culture based on ‘servant leaders’, managers

who have the empathy to understand what

their people need to do their job effectively. I

also adapted my own management style to

become more visible on the shop floor and

set an example of how things should run. For

instance, as I really don’t like mess, I would

make a point of picking up any rubbish I saw

as I walked through the warehouse. As a

manager, I may be higher up the organizational

structure, but I still need to tidy up!

Focusing on health and well-being is

working. Sickness and absentee rates are

back to pre-COVID levels, and people are

more motivated and engaged in their work.

You see that in our employee engagement

numbers and, more importantly, the

atmosphere in the department. As a result,

our KPIs for on-time delivery have improved

from 98% to 99.9%.

Building a bright future

Throughout this process, we recruited many

new people. We made this growth as painless

as possible by decoupling our day-to-day

work from the onboarding of new recruits.

One team leader was focused exclusively on

supporting new hires, and each team was

supported by an onboarding coordinator.

We also teamed up with Summa College in

Eindhoven to create a new logistics degree-

level course – to give back to the institutions

that produce new talent and invest in future

generations. Students work at ASML for four

days a week. On the fifth day, teachers from

Summa come to ASML to give lessons and join

the students on the shop floor. This gives us a

chance to tailor the syllabus to our specific

challenges – for example, cleanroom logistics.

Students rotate through our various teams

every four months. Each team has a designated

‘buddy’ to support and mentor students during

their rotation. One of the most rewarding

aspects of this initiative is seeing how many of

these buddies have enjoyed their mentoring

experience so much that they are now stepping

up to leadership roles.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SMALL PATTERNS. BIG IMPACT. CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 125
IN THIS SECTION
--- ---
129 Our overall performance in 2023
130 Managing supplier capabilities €15.5bn 5,100 57%
--- --- ---
Total sourcing spend1 Total suppliers % supplier spend covered<br><br>by commitment<br><br>to sustainability
(Netherlands: 40% EMEA (excl. NL): 40%<br><br>North America: 13% Asia:7%) (Netherlands: 1,600 EMEA (excl. NL): 750<br><br>North America: 1,350 Asia: 1,400)
1 Reported for non-financial (GRI) reporting purposes (2025 target: 80%) Why it matters
---

A responsible supply chain is essential to deliver the

systems and new technologies that can provide answers

to the challenges faced by society.

ASML’s business success is centered on long-term

relationships and close cooperation with our suppliers

and partners. The performance and resilience of our

entire supply chain are critical to our ability to respond to

customer demand. To be able to deal with the highly

cyclical nature of our industry, we need to work closely

together. Our customers’ trust is key – greater

transparency and collaboration earn trust and are crucial

to success. Under dynamic market circumstances which

present challenges in their own right, we need our

suppliers to follow suit. Building strong, strategic, ‘win-

win’ relationships with our partners, while navigating

short-term challenges, is essential to our future success.

We operate in a niche market characterized by the

production of high-value products in relatively small

quantities and involving thousands of specialized parts.

We also experience fast development cycles and

business volatility due to supply-demand mismatches

and a changing global economic and geopolitical

outlook. We must be able to source the products,

materials and services we need to meet our short- and

long-term needs and support our operations from the

earliest moment of development to the end-of-life stages

of our systems. Developing and introducing new systems

and system enhancements, such as EUV lithography and

e-beam metrology and inspection, requires considerable

investment and collaboration. To make sure this runs

smoothly, we need to involve our suppliers at the earliest

possible stage in the product generation process (PGP).

This also enables us to increase product performance

and ensure manufacturability and serviceability.

Building strong relationships<br><br>with suppliers
With around 5,100 suppliers in our total supplier base,<br><br>we aim to develop and maintain strong, collaborative<br><br>and transparent relationships. We distinguish between<br><br>two types of suppliers: product-related and non-<br><br>product-related.
Product-related suppliers provide materials,<br><br>equipment, parts and tools used directly to produce<br><br>our systems. This category comprises approximately<br><br>800 suppliers and represents the highest percentage<br><br>(69%) of our procurement volume. We define around<br><br>280 of these suppliers as ‘critical suppliers’,<br><br>accounting for roughly 94% of the product-related<br><br>spend. Critical suppliers are responsible for delivering<br><br>a unique part and/or are single sourced, involve a<br><br>switching time to an alternative supplier of more than<br><br>12 weeks, or supply parts with long production times.
Non-product-related suppliers are goods and<br><br>services suppliers, providing the products and<br><br>services that support our operations, from temporary<br><br>labor to logistics, and from cafeteria services to IT<br><br>services. With around 4,300 suppliers, this group<br><br>represents 84% of our total supplier base.
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SOCIAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 126
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Responsible supply chain
We depend on our suppliers to help deliver our innovations. They are critical to our value chain and<br><br>our ambition to be a sustainable leader in the semiconductor industry.
How we’re managing<br><br>our impact
---

We work with our world-class supplier network to ensure

our sustainability principles are upheld throughout the

value chain. To maximize what we can achieve, we

develop the next generation of technology through our

knowledge and innovation ecosystem.

We focus on adding value through system integration

and developing key performance requirements for our

supply base. We are stepping up to achieve our net zero

upstream emissions by collaborating with our suppliers

while integrating this in our operational general, quality,

logistics, technology, cost and sustainability (GQLTCS)

performance targets and capability requirements.

To drive a sustainable and resilient supply chain, we place

high importance on supplier performance management,

supply chain risk management and playing a full part in a

responsible supply chain. We require our suppliers to:

•Secure materials from their suppliers to respond to

customer demand

•Enable our product roadmap through the development

and maintenance of best-in-class supplier

competencies and capabilities to secure the most

advanced technology and quickest time to market

•Drive cost reductions, quality and capability improvements

through efficient and dedicated operations

•Build a sufficiently broad customer base and scale to

share and spread the risks of volatile market cycles

and to increase flexibility and cost competitiveness

•Collaborate with us to achieve our ambition of net zero

GHG emissions in our supply chain by 2030

We have reorganized our sourcing and supply chain

organization, which is now known as Sourcing &

Procurement (S&P), to get closer to our suppliers, better

understand their capabilities and work with them to build

and improve our shared opportunities. We are working to

focus the efforts of our S&P organization through clear

interfaces and ways of working with our suppliers and

other parts of ASML. These changes reflect our

commitment to strengthening partnerships and

optimizing efficiency within our supplier network, while

increasing focus on our ESG sustainability strategy. In

addition, our planning- and delivery-related activities have

now been brought together to create a new Planning &

Delivery (P&D) department. The overall goal of this

transformation is to strengthen customer and supplier

trust with reliable and transparent planning, bringing

demand and supply perspectives closer together.

Supplier performance management

We continue to improve our key business processes to

manage ASML’s growth and future ambitions. Tight risk

control and continuous supply chain improvements are

crucial to securing product quality, long-term business

continuity and sustainability.

We develop and monitor our supply landscape to help suppliers

meet our requirements with regard to GQLTCS. Our supplier

profiling methodology measures supplier performance,

supplier capability and risk profile in all of these fields.

In 2023, we updated our supplier performance

methodology by:

•Introducing an overarching General (G) element to

bring more focus on topics such as strategic

alignment, cultural fit, performance management, N-tier

management and continuous improvement in our

relationship with suppliers

•Upgrading the Sustainability (S) element to better reflect

our ambition to be a leader in this field and to continue

driving progress toward inclusive and sustainable

growth for all. This is in addition to the existing

Responsible Business Alliance (RBA) Self-Assessment

Questionnaire (SAQ) and measures the maturity of a

supplier’s ESG policy, vision and ambition. It also

assesses their capability to measure environmental and

social performance and if they have a roadmap in place

to meet ASML’s ESG ambitions related to the

reduction of CO2e emissions, increase of reuse,

reduction of waste and a responsible supply chain

We have a framework in place to communicate clear

process requirements and compliance expectations to

our suppliers. This framework outlines our approach to

supplier management and development toward the desired

ASML supplier landscape. It also provides an enhanced

knowledge base to improve our dialog with suppliers

around their performance and development potential.

Our suppliers have access to our senior account leaders

(SALs) or our strategic account teams (SATs), whose job

is to manage supplier relationships. We conduct regular

operational and performance review meetings to ensure

suppliers continue to improve their performance and

processes. When supplier performance drops below our

set thresholds and persistently fails to recover upon

request and within a reasonable time frame, our policy is

to take action to secure reliable future supplies.

A structural internal audit program, led by a skilled and

experienced audit team, enables us to assess supply

chain risks and identify areas of improvement to mitigate

or reduce those risks.

Supply chain risk management

Due to the highly specialized nature of many of our parts

and modules, as well as the low volumes, it is not always

economical to source from more than one supplier. In

many instances, our sourcing strategy prescribes ‘single

sourcing, dual competence’, which requires us to

proactively manage supplier performance and risk.

In our risk management framework, we assess six risk

domains – business continuity management, ownership,

finance, intellectual property ownership, information

security and cyber resilience, and compliance. Since

suppliers operating in the same industry or market are

typically exposed to similar risks, we evaluate suppliers’

risk and performance within the context of their supply

market category. We adjust our category strategies

where required to meet ASML’s short- and long-term

business needs. In cases where risk exceeds the agreed

threshold, mitigation measures are taken. For example,

we have long-term supplier agreements (LTSAs) and/or

continuous supply agreements in place and we ensure

the availability of intellectual property in escrow.

Read more in Risk - How we manage risk

We conduct robust performance and risk management

of our supply base to assure and improve performance

and prevent business disruption and reputational

damage. Two key programs are central to our approach:

the suppliers' business continuity program is aimed at

securing continuity of supply; and the information

security and cyber resilience program is intended to

protect our intellectual property, maintain our leading

technology position and secure continuity of supply.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SOCIAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 127
Responsible supply chain (continued)

Strengthening our due diligence

As part of our supply chain due diligence, we have

adopted the RBA Code of Conduct, which sets out

ethical, labor, health and safety and environmental

standards. We expect our suppliers and their suppliers to

acknowledge and comply with its requirements. This

requirement is included in our long-term product-related

suppliers’ contracts and in the Master Service Agreement

for non-product-related suppliers.

With almost 5,100 Tier 1 (direct) suppliers in our supplier

base, it is important for us to identify and prioritize suppliers

at risk. We apply a risk-based approach to determine which

suppliers are in scope for our more detailed due diligence

process, which consists of three layers:

1 Determine inherent risk level by screening our full<br><br>supplier base on ethics, labor, health and safety and<br><br>environmental practices and management systems<br><br>using the RBA Risk Assessment Platform
2 Apply supplier risk profiling to critical suppliers. For<br><br>these suppliers we conduct risk assessment of<br><br>GQLTCS capability elements
3 Apply an RBA SAQ to major product-related and non-<br><br>product-related suppliers, labor agents and onsite<br><br>service providers, in which we consider the type and<br><br>geographical location of the supplier, as well as our<br><br>leverage over them. We focus on our product-related<br><br>suppliers, covering 80% of our product-related annual<br><br>spend, business-critical suppliers including non-<br><br>product-related suppliers, labor agents and on-site<br><br>service providers, and suppliers deemed high risk from<br><br>our annual RBA risk screening

We expect suppliers in scope for these detailed

procedures to complete the RBA SAQ each year to

validate their compliance with the RBA Code of Conduct

and to determine any potential gaps in relation to its

standards. We review all RBA SAQ results, evaluate high-

risk findings (if any) and determine the severity of the

finding. It is our policy to discuss all high-risk findings

with the supplier to evaluate the risk and determine if an

improvement plan is needed.

We actively pursue sustainable development of our

supply chain to ensure Tier 1 suppliers and contractors

conduct their business in a caring and accountable

manner, and that they act as responsible business

partners. Our responsible supply chain programs focus

on RBA commitments and standards, strengthening our

due diligence and delivering our S&P ESG Program.

In 2023, we investigated how we can step up our due

diligence in line with and in preparation for CSRD – we

will expand due diligence activities on environmental and

social themes further in the supply chain also

incorporating N-tier suppliers.

Read more in ESG integrated governance - Business ethics and

Code of Conduct

| We work with our world-<br><br>class supplier network to<br><br>ensure our sustainability<br><br>principles are upheld<br><br>throughout the value chain. | | --- || Conflict minerals | | | --- | --- | | Our products contain minerals and metals necessary to<br><br>the functionality or production of our products. Such<br><br>minerals and metals include tantalum, tungsten, tin and<br><br>gold. These are 3TG minerals, or so-called ‘conflict<br><br>minerals’. While we do not use a significant amount of<br><br>these in the manufacturing of our products, certain 3TG<br><br>minerals are necessary. Gold, for example, is used in<br><br>coating critical electronic connectors and tin is used for<br><br>welding electronic components and creating EUV light.<br><br>We have a conflict minerals policy for responsible<br><br>sourcing of materials in our supply chain. We support<br><br>international efforts to ensure the mining and trading of<br><br>3TG minerals from high-risk locations does not<br><br>contribute to conditions of armed conflict and/or serious<br><br>human rights abuses.<br><br>We have adopted a series of compliance measures<br><br>based on the legal requirements and guidelines of the<br><br>five-step framework set out by the OECD Due Diligence<br><br>Guidance for Responsible Supply Chains of Minerals<br><br>from Conflict-Affected and High-Risk Areas. As part of<br><br>our responsible sourcing program, we implement a<br><br>reasonable country of origin inquiry focusing on five<br><br>areas: a robust management system; risk identification;<br><br>risk mitigation; industry collaboration with the<br><br>Responsible Minerals Initiative (RMI); and public<br><br>reporting.<br><br>Despite our continuous efforts, we are unable to<br><br>determine the precise origin of the 3TG minerals<br><br>included in all our products. | This is due to several reasons: 3TG supply chain<br><br>complexity, the number of tiers of suppliers to trace<br><br>the source and the limited number of certified conflict-<br><br>free smelters for all conflict minerals. Obtaining correct<br><br>data from our supply chain is a challenge, and we<br><br>continue to encourage our suppliers to trace the<br><br>origins of the 3TG minerals within their supply chain in<br><br>accordance with applicable conflict minerals rules and<br><br>regulations. We also request our suppliers to report<br><br>smelters who are not listed or identified on the RMI<br><br>smelters list to the Responsible Minerals Assurance<br><br>Process (RMAP) audit for smelters.<br><br>In 2022, we expanded the scope of our conflict<br><br>minerals survey to global, reaching 319 suppliers in<br><br>total, with no non-compliances being recorded. We<br><br>received confirmation from 185 suppliers that their<br><br>sourced minerals were conflict-free, while 67 suppliers<br><br>confirmed there were no 3TGs in their product and 67<br><br>suppliers did not respond to the survey. | | | Read more in our Conflict Minerals report available at<br><br>asml.com | | ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 | SOCIAL CONTINUED | STRATEGIC REPORT | CORPORATE GOVERNANCE | FINANCIALS | 128 | | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | | Responsible supply chain (continued) | | | | | |

Our overall performance in 2023

Progress tracking
Topic Target 2025 Performance indicator 2021 2022 2023 Status
Our supply chain 80% % supplier spend covered by commitment to sustainability (LOI) n/a 59% 57% n
Our_Supply_Chain_Logo.jpg 90% RBA self-assessment completed (in %) 89% 93% 90%
100% Suppliers with high risk on sustainability elements evaluated and follow-up agreed (in %) 100% 100% 98%

Read more in Non-financial statements – Non-financial indicators – Responsible supply chain

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SOCIAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 129
Responsible supply chain (continued)
On track •<br><br>Ongoing focus area n
How we’re managing<br><br>our impact
---

Through our S&P ESG program, we aim to increase

suppliers’ engagement with our ESG sustainability

strategy. By organizing knowledge-sharing sessions, we

share knowledge and expertise on scope 1, 2 and 3

GHG emissions. Engaging with our suppliers in a

transparent way helps us reach mutual understanding.

We are collaborating on sharing actual GHG emissions,

transitioning from spend-based to hybrid-based

environmental data and driving GHG emissions down.

We work with our suppliers to minimize adverse<br><br>environmental and social impact in the supply chain.

The program focuses on helping suppliers engage with

our ESG ambitions around three key themes:

•Environmental (E) is related to energy efficiency, climate

action and circular economy. We work with our

suppliers toward net zero emissions by 2030,

maximizing reuse of materials and reducing waste.

•Social (S) focuses on creating and maintaining an

attractive workplace for all, a responsible value chain,

an efficient innovation ecosystem, and being a valued

partner in our communities.

•Governance (G) is related to integrated governance,

engaged stakeholders and transparent reporting. We

work together with internal stakeholders on internal and

external reporting.

We work with our suppliers to minimize adverse

environmental and social impact in the supply chain.

Read more in ESG at a glance

An important element in our S&P ESG program is the

‘Letter of Intent’ (LOI). By signing this letter, suppliers

agree to comply with a number of measures:

•To continue adhering to the latest version of the RBA

Code of Conduct

•To measure and share their CO2e emission data with

ecosystem partners

•To set ambitious targets to reduce CO2e emissions

•To collaborate with ASML and ecosystem partners to

remanufacture used system parts, tools, packaging

and other materials to maximize the reuse of materials

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SOCIAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 130
Responsible supply chain (continued)
Managing supplier capabilities

ResponsibleSupplyChain_PerfDrivenScenarios_Background.jpg

Our targets and performance<br><br>in 2023

We have three targets to drive a more sustainable supply

chain:

1 To have 80% of our top 60 suppliers (based on<br><br>spend) covered with a commitment to sustainability<br><br>(via LOI or by providing us with their scope 1, 2 and<br><br>3 CO2e emissions data by 2025
2 For 90% of all suppliers in scope of the RBA self-<br><br>assessment to have completed it by 2025
3 For 100% of our suppliers identified by the RBA self-<br><br>assessment as having high-risk sustainability<br><br>elements to be evaluated and follow-up action<br><br>agreed by 2025

We monitor targets and commitments monthly, tracking

progress and following up with the account lead and

supplier as needed.

Performance-driven scenarios
Total supplier base
15.5bn
Total spend
% of total spend
69%
31%
suppliers
2023
In 2023, 57% of the top 60 supplier spend<br><br>was covered with the LOI commitment to<br><br>sustainability
We apply due diligence screening to the total supplier base using the RBA Risk Assessment Platform. Suppliers in scope are determined by prior year total spend.

All values are in Euros.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SOCIAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 131
Responsible supply chain (continued)
Managing supplier capabilities (continued)

New_ManagingSupplierCapabilities_Backgroun_191223.jpg

By year end 2023, 57% of the top 60 suppliers in scope (based

on spend) had signed the LOI, acknowledging their joint

responsibility and commitment to reducing the collective

environmental footprint – in particular, the CO2e emissions

contributing to our scope 3 reduction and waste contributing to

our reuse ambitions. This % is below our original target set for

2025 of 80%. In 2023, we focused on setting up the new

strategy and targets for the coming years, including drafting a

new version of the LOI focusing on obtaining the actual

commitment of suppliers to our net zero target. More than 35

suppliers had provided data on CO2e emissions, which

contributes to our goal of being able to use actual emission data

rather than estimation based on spend. Therefore, due to the

focus on getting a signed commitment from suppliers, less focus

has been put into driving progress on the current target.

We have asked a total of 128 suppliers to complete the

detailed RBA SAQ, which is an increase in scope of 69

suppliers from 2022, when 59 suppliers were asked to

complete. In general, the RBA SAQ results show a relatively

low risk level in our supply base, as most of our suppliers

operate in countries which we believe generally have a

strong rule of law. By the end of 2023, 90% of the suppliers

in scope had completed the RBA SAQ (93% in 2022).

The RBA process did indicate high risks on labor, health and

safety, environment or ethics standards for several suppliers.

Further assessment of identified high risks revealed that the risks

were related to a missing 'third-party' management system in

place. After follow-up discussions, we assessed the risk as low/

medium. ASML does not require suppliers to have a formal

environmental/labor management system in place. All suppliers

that were followed up were able to show that they have a policy/

procedure in place to ensure compliance with ethics, labor,

safety and environmental requirements. At year end, there was

one supplier with an overall high risk. Since the RBA assessment

was completed at the end of December, our investigation is

ongoing – follow-up questions have been asked and follow-up

actions will be agreed. More details can be found in the table

below for 2021-2023.

| ASML suppliers | | --- || 5,100 | | --- | | Suppliers | | €15.5bn | | Total spend || Supplier base geographic split by percent spend | | | | | | | | | | | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | | | 1,600 suppliers | | | 750 suppliers | | | 1,350 suppliers | | 1,400<br><br>suppliers | | | | 40% | | | 40% | | 13% | | 7% | | The Netherlands | | | EMEA (excl. the Netherlands) | | | North<br><br>America | | Asia | | | Supplier risk profiles, created for business-critical, strategically important suppliers* | | | --- | --- | | 10.6bn | | | | | | | 4.9bn | | | | | Product-related spend | Non-product-related spend |

All values are in Euros.

1 Major suppliers are those that account for 80% of PR spend and any business-critical NPR suppliers.<br><br>Suppliers in scope are determined by prior year total spend.
The Responsible Business Alliance (RBA) self-assessment questionnaire completed by major suppliers1
--- ---
10.6bn
4.9bn
Product-related spend Non-product-related spend

All values are in Euros.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SOCIAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 132
Responsible supply chain (continued)
Managing supplier capabilities (continued)
Number of high risks identified from RBA SAQ
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Standard RBA commitment 2021 2022 20231 Main findings<br><br>2023
Labor To uphold the human rights of all workers (direct and indirect), and to treat<br><br>them with dignity and respect as understood by the international<br><br>community, including the International Labour Organization’s (ILO) eight<br><br>fundamental conventions 0 0 0
Health and safety To minimize the incidence of work-related injury and illness and to ensure a<br><br>safe and healthy working environment. Communication and education are<br><br>essential to identifying and solving health and safety issues in the workplace 0 1 1 Related to one supplier that is missing a Health and<br><br>Safety and Environmental policy and missing guidelines/<br><br>Code of Conduct related to Health and Safety towards<br><br>their suppliers.
Environment Environmental responsibility is integral to producing world-class products<br><br>and services. Adverse effects on the community, environment and natural<br><br>resources are to be minimized while safeguarding the health and safety of<br><br>the public 0 3 1 Related to one supplier that is missing a Health and<br><br>Safety and Environmental policy and missing guidelines/<br><br>Code of Conduct related to Health and Safety towards<br><br>their suppliers.
Ethics To meet social responsibilities and to achieve success in the industry, the<br><br>highest standards of ethics should be upheld, including but not limited to<br><br>business integrity, anti-bribery and corruption, antitrust and competition,<br><br>protecting privacy 0 1 0
Members and participants are committed to establishing a management system to ensure:
•Compliance with applicable laws, regulations and customer requirements<br><br>•Conformance with the code standards<br><br>•Identification and mitigation of operational risks<br><br>•Facilitation of continuous improvement
  1. A total of 128 suppliers were asked to complete the detailed RBA SAQ, which is an increase of 69 suppliers from 2022, when 59 suppliers were asked to complete.
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SOCIAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 133
Responsible supply chain (continued)
Managing supplier capabilities (continued)
Our actions in 2023
---

Reduction of CO2e emissions and waste

In 2021, we started collecting supplier data to create our

baseline and understand suppliers’ ability to report scope

1, 2 and 3 GHG emissions data. In 2022, we extended

the supplier environmental survey to understand whether

suppliers have an ESG roadmap and/or strategy in place,

their ambitions, and their scope 1, 2 and 3 data. This

process continued in 2023, with data quality improved by

tracking historical data next to data reported in 2022. We

also introduced an IT solution for suppliers to help

capture their GHG emissions data and monitor their

progression via a dashboard.

We work closely with the sourcing account teams (SATs)

and our senior account leaders (SALs) to connect with

key suppliers to understand and align their ESG

sustainability ambitions and data. In addition, our SATs

and SALs drive supplier commitment on our 2030 net

zero ambition and collaborate with our suppliers to

create and implement roadmaps.

We are defining and implementing environmental KPIs

that support us in monitoring whether our suppliers are

reducing their emissions.

Read more in Environmental - Energy efficiency and climate

action - Scope 3 emissions from our supply chain (including

logistics)

Business continuity program

In 2023, we included 251 business-critical product-

related suppliers in the business continuity program and,

in addition, extended the scope with HMI suppliers and

Cymer suppliers to ensure global risk management

coverage.

We strengthened the requirements towards our suppliers.

We now require them to have an organization resilient to

possible disruptions caused by internal and external threats,

physical or natural circumstances by:

•Building organizational resilience with the capability to

respond effectively, safeguarding ASML's and its

customers’ interests, reputation, brand and value-

creating activities.

•Ensuring the protection of buildings, equipment and

other assets, reputation, critical business functions,

processes and resources.

•Ensuring implementation and continuous improvement

of a business continuity management system and the

related business continuity processes in the

organization and ASML’s supply chain.

Information security and cyber resilience program

We continued to expand our information security and

cyber resilience program in 2023, leading to a current

scope of 345 suppliers compared with 314 in 2022.

Additionally, we utilize a cyber-risk monitoring tool to

monitor the internet presence of suppliers – in 2023, we

extended its scope from 256 to 469 suppliers.

Suppliers with access to top-secret information or with

privileged access to our IT systems were asked to

improve their cyber resilience through the ISO 27001

standard. To support our suppliers and other ecosystem

partners in this effort, we established a Security Circle of

Trust together with Cyber Weerbaarheid (resilience)

Brainport in the Netherlands.

Read more in ESG Integrated Governance - Information security

Engaging with suppliers

We held a number of engagement sessions with key

suppliers during the year, including a Supplier

Collaboration Day in June and a Suppliers’ Day in

October. During the Suppliers' Day, ASML leaders and

suppliers spoke openly about how to grow together, how

to plan for success and how to overcome challenges by

improving partnerships, increasing transparency and

trust, shortening feedback loops and embracing

sustainability. The panel discussion centered on supplier

collaboration efforts, the lessons learned and best

practice sharing. ASML leaders and suppliers agreed on

the importance of highlighting and learning from areas of

collaborative success. They concluded that this can only

be achieved by being transparent, listening and

developing mutual trust.

We also held brainstorming sessions with suppliers

specifically to share knowledge about our ESG sustainability

program, including information on CO2e emissions data, and

to identify areas to collaborate. These sessions enable active

engagement and mutual learning with our suppliers. We ask

suppliers to let us know their challenges when collecting

CO2e emissions data, and we discuss possible solutions.

Suppliers have indicated that these brainstorming sessions

are highly beneficial and contribute to best practice sharing

and the ability to tackle joint problems together.

Our experience during 2023 once again underlined the

importance of the S&P ESG sustainability program,

which encourages active engagement with suppliers on

ESG-related topics, GHG emissions, RBA and conflict

minerals.

Looking ahead

One of our key focuses for 2024 is to further build on the

supplier GHG emissions baseline and to understand our

suppliers’ ambitions, capabilities and performance. We

will assess suppliers against the S block of our supplier

profile and actively follow up on gaps.

Previous years have shown there is a mix of supplier

maturity in terms of reporting scope 1, 2 and 3 data, with

spend-based emissions sometimes overestimated

compared to actual emissions data. Gathering scope 3

supplier data will take more time due to the complexities

and challenges around visibility of emissions in suppliers’

own supply chains.

We built the S&P ESG roadmap and strategy during

2023, with an initial focus on our internal stakeholders

and the roll-out to suppliers taking place in the second

half of the year. We are working on targets to drive

sustainability improvements in our supply chain, and we

expect these to be formalized in 2024.

With respect to the S of the ESG program, we will

execute on the expanded due diligence process and use

these learnings and findings to further update our

procurement policies. We will actively follow up on

identified high risks.

Upcoming trends that we expect to support this work

include CSRD requirements and other directives that will

compel companies to transparently disclose their ESG

performance data.

In 2023, we identified our impact on people’s well-being,

health, safety and human rights through the use of

technology in all kinds of applications that affect quality of

life as a new material topic, the strategy for which will be

further developed in 2024.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SOCIAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 134
Responsible supply chain (continued)
Managing supplier capabilities (continued)

New_Story6_IntroPage_180124.jpg

The interaction among<br><br>supply chain partners<br><br>helps us all improve to<br><br>support faster growth.”
Manon Hendriks
Senior Director, Sourcing & Procurement
16 years at ASML Working together,<br><br>growing together
---
In 2023, after 15 years in finance at<br><br>ASML, Manon Hendriks stepped into<br><br>a new commercial role as Senior<br><br>Director Sourcing & Procurement.<br><br>The experience in building relationships<br><br>that she developed in her finance<br><br>career is now not only underpinning<br><br>the success of ASML, but also of<br><br>one of our key suppliers.
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SMALL PATTERNS. BIG IMPACT. STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 135
--- --- --- --- --- ---

New_ManonHendriks_Story_Page2_Background_111223.jpg

Making the move

I started my career as a certified public

accountant (CPA) in a 'big four' accountancy

firm, focusing on auditing. I loved the job and

the interaction with people – I learned a lot

about building relationships outside my own

organization. But after six years and a move

into management, I felt I was losing that day-

to-day interaction and wanted a new way to

add more value.

So I decided to ‘switch sides’, and someone

suggested ASML. An ex-colleague already

worked here and told me it was an energetic

company where you get more out of your

job, with opportunities to grow and change

your role. I decided to go for it and have

never regretted that decision.

Steering your own career path

That description of ASML turned out to be

true. I’ve always felt that, if you show the

capability and desire, the opportunities are

there. And in 16 years at ASML, I have had a

variety of roles – in finance and beyond.

Once, I asked about moving into business

control. My manager said she had a role for

me in business, but it wasn’t in business

control. Instead, she suggested I manage a

program that was setting up a new

enterprise structure. This was a long way

outside my comfort zone: I knew all about

the processes, transactions and accounting

flows involved, but had no experience in

change management. However, if you have a

good team around you and can find the right

people with the right skills, you will be

successful.

II learned so much in that role. And I took it

with me when, after three years, I moved

back into finance – this time in business

control, first in manufacturing and then in

sourcing and procurement. In this latest role,

I found my energy came mostly from

connecting people – between sectors within

ASML, but also with our suppliers. So the

question was: how could I bring more of that

to my work?

A role in procurement was the answer. This

was an even bigger step outside my comfort

zone than program management. But I knew

I had the trust of my management and the

network within ASML to ensure I had the

right team supporting me.

A new direction

As of this year, I am responsible for ASML’s

relationship with one of our largest suppliers:

VDL. ASML doesn’t really have a traditional

supply chain – we have a supply network.

About 80% of our cost base comes from our

suppliers, as our main role is as system

integrator. This means suppliers could be

supplying us directly while also supplying

each other, and even receiving components

from us to integrate into their modules before

shipping them back to us.

Technology is at the heart of this network:

we need our suppliers to innovate with us so

that, together, we can make the impossible

possible. My role is less about commercial

negotiations and more about building

relationships to drive joint improvements.

Suppliers such as VDL interact with many

people at many levels of ASML – on

everything from day-to-day engineering

issues to strategic roadmaps. There can be

20 or more ASML people working with VDL

on a specific solution. The challenge for us –

and particularly me – is to ensure we speak

with one voice.

I think my background gives me a different

perspective, one that complements the skills

of my colleagues. Finance is about connecting

facts and figures, but also building bridges

between sectors and thinking issues through

from all angles. We work with our key suppliers

at many levels in true partnerships. How you

set up and govern those relationships is vital.

But you can’t be bureaucratic or dogmatic.

We work with suppliers like VDL because

they are world leaders in their manufacturing

technology, but they are different to us. Now

we want to build a partnership that gets the

best out of both of us, because we are more

successful together.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SMALL PATTERNS. BIG IMPACT. CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 136
IN THIS SECTION:
--- ---
138 Our overall performance in 2023
139 Partnerships for research and development
142 Supporting startups and scaleups €4.0bn 102% €16.4m €1.2m
--- --- --- ---
R&D investments R&D spend as %<br><br>growth from 2019<br><br>base year Contribution to EU<br><br>research projects Value startups<br><br>and scaleups<br><br>in-kind support
(2025 target: >4bn euro) (2025 target: >100%) Why it matters
---

Our experts at ASML are architects and integrators who

work together and in collaboration with external partners

across the innovation ecosystem to push the boundaries

of what we can achieve. We aim to develop long-term

innovation partnerships and collaborations based on

trust and knowledge-sharing across this ecosystem.

Pooling our expertise and resources enables us to build a

stronger knowledge network and create new

technological solutions that benefit the whole of society.

This approach also allows the sharing of risks and

rewards to accelerate innovation.

How we’re managing<br><br>our impact

Our innovation approach drives the development of

technology solutions that society can tap into, while

educating and inspiring the next generation of engineers.

We fuel the innovation pipeline by collaborating closely

with academia and leading research institutes. We also

foster collaboration with R&D partners through European

public–private partnerships.

We also contribute to the development of a sustainable

innovation ecosystem by supporting regional deep-tech

scaleups and startups selected for their ambition to

contribute to a better, more sustainable world. Sharing

our knowledge and expertise strengthens our regional

high-tech ecosystem, particularly around our

headquarters in Veldhoven, the Netherlands. The

Brainport Eindhoven region has a competitive edge

globally, and we aim to maintain this leadership position.

Building a strong regional foundation benefits ASML and

its partners along with other companies and

organizations. It also helps to attract a broad base of

talent to the region.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SOCIAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 137
Innovation ecosystem
We never innovate in isolation because developing technology in collaboration with partners across<br><br>the innovation ecosystem maximizes our collective impact.

Our overall performance in 2023

Progress tracking
Topic Target 2025 Performance indicator 2021 2022 2023 Status
Innovation<br><br>ecosystem >4bn euro R&D investments €2.5bn €3.3bn €4.0bn
>100% R&D spend as % growth from 2019 base year 25% 63% 102%
Innovation_Ecosystem_Logo.jpg >20% Startups reached Star level from total startups (in %) 15% 12% 12% n
14 Number of scaleup companies supported (cumulative in numbers) 7 10 13
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SOCIAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 138
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Innovation ecosystem (continued)
On track •<br><br>Ongoing focus area n
How we’re managing<br><br>our impact
---

To enable the semiconductor industry to move toward

next-generation technology, we collaborate with

universities, research and technology institutes and other

high-tech companies with a total of 70 different partners

spanning 12 European countries.

Public–private partnerships

We work closely with private partners to develop and

deliver research and innovation projects that are

subsidized by the EU and its member states.

Collaborative subsidy projects are aimed at advancing

integrated circuit (IC) technology for the semiconductor

industry while following Moore's Law, with a continuous

drive to improve performance and energy efficiency. The

Horizon Europe program and recently adopted European

Chips Act facilitate collaboration and strengthen the

impact of research and innovation in the EU.

ASML and its partners play an important role in giving

Europe a degree of sovereignty by driving and

accelerating fundamental research and ground-breaking

innovation within Europe, the Middle East and Africa

(EMEA). This collaboration generates significant business

value, fuels job creation and creates a strong knowledge

base. Its success is demonstrated by the increasing

number of patent requests each year from ASML and our

partners.

Partnerships with academia and research institutes

We co-develop technical expertise with a wide network of

technology partners including universities and research

institutions. Key partners include imec in Belgium, the

technical universities in Twente, Delft and Eindhoven in

the Netherlands, and research organization TNO and the

Advanced Research Center for Nanolithography

(ARCNL), also in the Netherlands.

Our targets and performance<br><br>in 2023

Our R&D partnerships are underpinned by targets to drive

investments and outcomes:

1 Reach more than €4 billion R&D investments by<br><br>2025
2 Grow R&D spend over 100% from 2019 base year

Our R&D investments in 2023 amounted to €4.0 billion,

equivalent to a 102% increase on the 2019 investment

level and up from €3.3 billion in 2022.

Our contribution in R&D across the four active public–

private partnerships in 2023 was €16.4 million. The total

value of our investment for the full three-year duration of

these projects is €66.5 million, with a total project size of

€402.1 million.

Pushing the boundaries of physics and chemistry
We continue to strengthen our collaboration with<br><br>ARCNL, which conducts fundamental research focused<br><br>on the physics and chemistry that are important in<br><br>current and future technologies within nanolithography,<br><br>and its application within the semiconductor industry. In<br><br>recent years, we have established a unique<br><br>collaboration model in which scientists from ARCNL can<br><br>explore the research questions they would like to focus<br><br>on and, at the same time, create value for ASML.<br><br>Our joint interest in the areas of EUV source, metrology<br><br>and materials is well established and our work is yielding<br><br>results. Examples include new insights into optimal drive<br><br>laser wavelengths for EUV plasma generation,<br><br>interferometric metrology techniques for improved wafer<br><br>analysis and detailed understanding of tribology for<br><br>wear-resistant coatings on wafer tables. Experimental<br><br>data with higher resolution provided by ARCNL in non-<br><br>product-like configurations with higher optical NA yields<br><br>new insights and influences design and model<br><br>development of the next generation of scanners.<br><br>In 2023, the fundamental understanding of the future<br><br>challenges connected to the relentless enabling of<br><br>Moore’s Law led to new joint projects in the areas of<br><br>new light sources for lithography and metrology, and<br><br>growth and patterning of 2D materials for<br><br>semiconductor applications. In particular, it led to a<br><br>better understanding of the interaction of plasma with<br><br>surfaces, and of corrosion effects, giving new insights in<br><br>coating designs of wafer tables.
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SOCIAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 139
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Innovation ecosystem (continued)
Partnerships for research and development
Developing the next generation of lithography technology
--- ---
Our longstanding and extensive technical collaboration with imec<br><br>aims to identify and mitigate challenges in introducing High NA<br><br>EUV for our customers. These include choices of resist and their<br><br>stochastic (randomly variable) effects, reticle absorber materials<br><br>and the necessary metrology and inspection tools to examine the<br><br>quality of the printed features on a chip.<br><br>As an indication of the impact of our collaboration, more than<br><br>30% of the oral paper presentations we submitted to the 2023<br><br>international society for optics and photonics (SPIE) Advanced<br><br>Lithography and Patterning conference (SPIE ALP 2023) were<br><br>derived from our collaboration with imec.<br><br>Using 0.33 NA EUV systems, imec and ASML have had an<br><br>intense technical collaboration to prepare for the introduction of<br><br>High NA lithography (see Phase 1 in the infographic on the right).<br><br>The collaboration identified the critical device layers on a<br><br>customer's roadmap most in need of the introduction of High NA.<br><br>Studies were undertaken to understand and mitigate High NA<br><br>scanner-related foreseen challenges, for example through studies<br><br>on depth of focus and field stitching. Parallel studies addressed<br><br>the ecosystem challenges, such as choices of resist and their<br><br>stochastic effects, reticle absorber materials, and required<br><br>massive metrology.<br><br>Phase 2 started in 2022 by creating the infrastructure of the joint<br><br>High NA Lab using the first High NA EUV scanner (TWINSCAN<br><br>EXE:5000). Metrology equipment and wafer processing<br><br>equipment were installed and logistical wafer flow was tested. In<br><br>addition, the IT infrastructure to enable imec, ASML and volume-<br><br>manufacturing customers to use the lab while protecting their<br><br>respective IP and data was implemented. The EU has provided<br><br>approval for the state aid requested by ASML for the continuation<br><br>of the High NA collaboration with imec. In June 2023, we strengthened the collaboration by agreeing a<br><br>Memorandum of Understanding with imec. Together, we aim to<br><br>develop (see Phase 3 in the infographic on the right) a state-of-<br><br>the-art High NA EUV lithography pilot line at imec in Leuven<br><br>(TWINSCAN EXE:5200).<br><br>In addition to these activities, collaboration with imec is ongoing<br><br>on edge placement error (EPE) measurements and control,<br><br>supporting the fundamental developments of new metrology<br><br>concepts, 3D advanced packaging, and micro-electromechanical<br><br>systems (MEMS) technology. In general, imec’s input on the<br><br>device roadmap has become an integral part of the ASML<br><br>roadmap process.<br><br>Our intensified collaboration is in line with the ambitions and plans<br><br>of the European Commission and its member states (e.g.,<br><br>European Chips Act, Important Projects of Common European<br><br>Interest – IPCEI) in order to strengthen innovation to tackle<br><br>societal challenges. Part of the collaboration between imec and<br><br>ASML is therefore captured in an IPCEI proposal which is<br><br>currently under review by the Dutch government. ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SOCIAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 140
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Innovation ecosystem (continued)
Partnerships for research and development (continued)
Our actions in 2023
---

Public-private partnerships

In 2023, we continued coordinating efforts in four EU

projects – Pilot Integration of 3nm Semiconductor

technology (PIN3S), IC Technology for the 2nm Node

(IT2), Integration of processes and modules for the 2nm

node meeting Power Performance Area and Cost

requirements (ID2PPAC), and 14 Anstrom CMOS IC

technology (14ACMOS) – all with a duration of three

years. We have enabled timely reporting to the

connected public partners and have organized face-to-

face and online consortium meetings to exchange ideas

and knowledge. The PIN3S project was successfully

closed in July 2023, during a face-to-face final project

review meeting. This took place at the premises of NOVA

Israel, one of the beneficiaries of the project, and involved

independent experts from the industry hired by the

European Commission, who evaluated the results of the

project. There also have been observers representing the

German and Belgian national authorities.

During the year we also commenced a new project –

14AMI. This project was submitted at the second call of

Key Digital Technologies Joint Undertaking (KDT JU).

This three-year project focuses on module integration for

the manufacture of 14 angstrom (1.4 nm) CMOS chips. A

consortium has been formed that covers four key areas

needed in IC technology development for manufacture –

lithography, metrology, mask infrastructure and process

technology.

The 14AMI project brings together the R&D capabilities

of 31 leading expert partners to tackle these challenges.

It is valued at more than €108 million in R&D costs and

unlocks at least €47 million in public funding for the

ecosystem. In terms of geography, the project connects

people from Romania, Belgium, France, Germany,

Austria, Israel, Switzerland and the Netherlands.

In addition, ASML participates in the KDT JU project

SC4EU, led by Infineon Technologies AG in Germany.

This project was submitted in response to the special

topic call of KDT JU in 2023 on improving the global

demand supply forecast of the semiconductor supply

chain. The project connects various semiconductor

players across Europe and involves partners from

Germany, Greece, France, Austria and the Netherlands.

Looking ahead

Investing in future talent

Universities, industries and governments must

collaborate more closely in Europe to invest in a

collaborative knowledge network to drive innovation, and

ASML is investing heavily in broad academic

collaboration with major universities in Europe. For

example, our collaboration with Eindhoven University of

Technology (TU/e) is scaling up our already proven,

longstanding relationship by bringing together the best in

science and engineering talent in the Brainport

Eindhoven region.

In April 2023, TU/e and ASML signed a Memorandum of

Understanding to jointly develop a 10-year strategic

research roadmap in the fields of plasma physics, AI,

mechatronics and semiconductor lithography. TU/e and

ASML will invest substantially and equally in the joint

program, which will create up to 40 PhD positions every

year, for which TU/e will recruit internationally renowned

top scientific talents. We will supply our top engineers as

hybrid teachers and will increase the number of

internships we host.

TU/e and ASML are in discussion to create a new ASML

research facility on the TU/e campus, where we intend to

co-locate the many competences of our research team.

The facility will have shared workspaces, meeting rooms,

research labs and a state-of-the-art cleanroom facility.

An open-access research laboratory will make analytical

and production equipment available to TU/e and other

research centers and industrial partners. This

collaborative space will enable growth and synergy

across academic research fields of mutual interest, such

as photonics, quantum computing, nanomaterials and

chip manufacturing.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SOCIAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 141
Innovation ecosystem (continued)
Partnerships for research and development (continued)
How we’re managing<br><br>our impact
---

We support startups and scaleups with the ambition to

contribute to a better, more sustainable world by

addressing the UN’s SDGs, by providing both monetary

and non-monetary contributions. We participate in

startup and scaleup support platforms – such as

HighTechXL and Make Next Platform – to build and

accelerate impactful startups by combining high-tech

entrepreneurial talent and relevant technologies. Via

these platforms, we use our unique knowledge and

expertise to address the business and technical

questions of existing startups and scaleups.

We also match our experienced employees with startups

and scaleups. This increases our impact and benefits the

personal development of employees by enabling them to

work in a multidisciplinary environment with greater

responsibility and exposure to the full value chain.

Finally, we participate in venture capital funds that offer

funding to startups in their early phase – such as

DeepTechXL. It's typically difficult for deep-tech startups

to obtain funding in an early phase because of the

complexity of the technology, longer development times

and typically larger development costs.

Strategic support platforms for startups and scaleups
We invest in three strategic platforms providing startup<br><br>and scaleup companies with access to highly qualified<br><br>resources, technologies, licenses, supply chain partners<br><br>and co-investors.<br><br>Make Next Platform<br><br>ASML founded the Make Next Platform (MNP) in 2016<br><br>together with Huisman, Vanderlande and the non-profit<br><br>Stichting Technology Rating (STR) to support young<br><br>innovative high-tech scaleups. Thales NL joined as a<br><br>co-founder in 2019. MNP supports emerging high-tech<br><br>ventures that have moved beyond the startup phase<br><br>and are ready to expand. Through the exchange of best<br><br>practices, business experience and coaching from<br><br>senior corporate experts, MNP partners support<br><br>scaleup companies to become global players by giving<br><br>them access to their internal and external networks. HighTechXL<br><br>ASML is one of the main shareholders of HighTechXL,<br><br>together with other tech-minded partners such as<br><br>Philips, research institute TNO, Brabantse<br><br>Ontwikkelings Maatschappij (BOM) and High Tech<br><br>Campus Eindhoven. Through HighTechXL, we build<br><br>and accelerate impactful startups by combining high-<br><br>tech entrepreneurial talent and relevant technologies<br><br>from reputable tech partners such as ESA, CERN,<br><br>Fraunhofer, imec and TNO, with the goal of solving<br><br>major global societal challenges. ASML talents join<br><br>selected startups for 30% of their time for a period of<br><br>three months. They define their learning goals and<br><br>benefit from the development of enriched skills and<br><br>mindsets through this unique entrepreneurial<br><br>experience.<br><br>DeepTechXL<br><br>In 2022, we became a strategic investor and co-<br><br>initiator in DeepTechXL Fund I, a new Dutch deep-<br><br>tech fund of €85 million as a follow-up to HighTechXL.<br><br>Together with other strategic investors and co-<br><br>initiators – Philips, Brabantse Ontwikkelings<br><br>Maatschappij (BOM), research institute TNO, PME<br><br>Pension Fund and Invest-NL – the fund provides<br><br>deep-tech startups and scaleups with access to<br><br>knowledge, network, technology, licenses and<br><br>business development support. Our targets and performance<br><br>in 2023
---

We have two targets to measure the effectiveness of our

approach:

1 More than 20% of startups to reach Star level by<br><br>2025
2 Support (at least) 14 scaleup companies by 2025

In 2023, we continued our commitment to support high-

tech startups and scaleups, providing 4,640 hours of in-

kind support, totaling €1.2 million. In addition to last

year's commitment of over €14 million, we committed an

additional €6 million in financial support in 2023. Of this

€20 million commitment, €2.9 million was paid out during

the year. 12% of startups reached Star level. So far, 13

scaleups have been adopted, including three in 2023.

with focus areas ranging from packaging waste reduction

to 3D display enabling technology, for example for

medical applications.

The target of 20% of startups to achieve Star level by

2025 is not on track to be achieved. This target was first

set when HighTechXL was still a traditional startup

accelerator, but since it was transformed into a venture-

building program, we have seen that it generally takes

longer for these newly established startups to mature.

Additionally, the focus is now on deep tech, which

typically requires a longer time to develop. This year we

have been in discussions to define new targets which

reflect this program change.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SOCIAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 142
Innovation ecosystem (continued)
Supporting startups and scaleups
Our actions in 2023
---

To date, over 20 new deep-tech ventures have

completed our startup and scaleup support program and

some are already receiving global attention. Moreover,

several new ventures are currently still in the accelerator

program, making good progress, and new cohorts are

already planned. An example is VSParticle – read more in

box out on the right.

ASML hosted a Suppliers' Day workshop in 2023, where

scaleups presented their most concerning issues

together with their most relevant supplier. ASML and

other MNP founders provided expertise and insights,

while other scaleups contributed their relevant

experiences, allowing companies to learn not only from

the experts, but also from each other. Such workshops

are highly appreciated by scaleups supported by MNP.

Looking ahead

Next to continuing our current efforts in 2024, our focus

will also be on identifying additional venture capital

partners to further strengthen our regional startup

innovation ecosystem. We will also develop a strategy for

rolling out our efforts to other regions where ASML has a

presence that can be used to provide regional in-kind

support. These additional efforts, which are the result of

our growing ambition to create an impact, will generate a

need to adjust our KPIs accordingly. In 2024, we will

work to define more appropriate KPIs aligned with our

augmented objectives.

VSParticle – Accelerating innovations to market through dry deposition of pure nanomaterials
VSParticle (VSP) was founded in 2014 as a spin-off<br><br>from Delft University of Technology, with the mission to<br><br>unlock an unprecedented amount of new high-tech<br><br>materials. Why? Because today's society is transitioning<br><br>from a fossil fuel base to a mineral-intensive one. All<br><br>sustainable technologies such as solar, wind and<br><br>electrical vehicles, which are needed to keep global<br><br>warming below 1.5 degrees Celsius, are creating a<br><br>demand for new materials that society has never seen<br><br>before. The staggering amount of material innovation<br><br>required in the next 10 years is equal to what the best<br><br>material scientist could normally do in one hundred<br><br>years.<br><br>It would be beneficial if these energy applications could<br><br>make use of solid thin-film materials, because thin-film<br><br>deposition has been widely developed in the<br><br>semiconductor industry. But the problem is that most of<br><br>these energy applications require a unique nano-porous<br><br>material, for which there is no fully developed<br><br>manufacturing process.<br><br>In the past eight years, VSP has developed a unique<br><br>material synthesis and deposition process that is fully<br><br>optimized for making these nano-porous materials. This<br><br>technology is able to take any solid conducting bulk<br><br>material and convert it to very small and pure<br><br>nanoparticles. These nanoparticles are transported by a<br><br>carrier gas to the deposition stage, where a new nano-<br><br>porous material is constructed. To unlock 100 years of material innovation in the next<br><br>10 years, VSP is introducing its technology into<br><br>materials R&D activities at top universities and<br><br>institutes around the world and industrial<br><br>manufacturing. By doing this, VSP is able to reduce<br><br>the overall development time from 15 years to one.<br><br>Today, VSP has already sold close to 50 R&D<br><br>systems globally and is accelerating the development<br><br>of the production tools. To industrialize the core<br><br>technology, VSP is able to leverage the unique supply<br><br>chain of ASML. Following detailed investigation, VSP<br><br>decided to first introduce its technology for the<br><br>manufacturing of next-generation MEMS-based gas<br><br>sensors and catalyst-coated membranes (CCMs) for<br><br>the production of green hydrogen. In addition to these<br><br>first two industrial markets, VSP sees plenty of<br><br>opportunity for further growth. Less than 1% of all<br><br>possible materials have been investigated so far, and<br><br>VSP expects to unlock the other 99% within the next<br><br>two generations.<br><br>VSP had already grown to become a talented team of<br><br>40 by the end of the year. But establishing a new<br><br>business of selling production tools will require more<br><br>aggressive growth in the years to come. This growth,<br><br>will present VSP with a multitude of challenges on<br><br>different domains. To get the best support from<br><br>leading original equipment manufacturer companies<br><br>such as ASML, VSP joined the Virtual Accelerator of<br><br>Make Next Platform in November 2022. On a quarterly basis, the management team of VSP<br><br>meets with Marco Wieland (Fellow at ASML) and<br><br>Remko de Lange (VP strategy at Vanderlande) to<br><br>improve the overarching strategy of the company.<br><br>These meetings include a deep dive on topics such as<br><br>how to apply scrum in hardware development and<br><br>value-based pricing, for which various experts from<br><br>ASML are invited to contribute.<br><br>This support has successfully contributed to the<br><br>growth of VSP. Benefiting from the right insights from<br><br>leading companies such as ASML will be essential to<br><br>the success of VSP in the coming years.
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SOCIAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 143
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Innovation ecosystem (continued)
Supporting startups and scaleups (continued)

New_Story7_IntroPage_180124.jpg

You can see the impact<br><br>of our collaboration in<br><br>the commercial results of<br><br>ASML and our customers.”
George Tao
Director, Customer Support Applications
16 years at ASML Impact through<br><br>collaboration
---
As a director of customer service<br><br>applications, George Tao works with<br><br>one of ASML’s leading customers to<br><br>bring the latest in chip technology to<br><br>market fast. His team works with the<br><br>customer and many other ASML<br><br>teams to ramp up the output of<br><br>wafers processed by our latest<br><br>generations of lithography systems,<br><br>so that our customers can meet their<br><br>commitments to their own customers<br><br>and that consumers can enjoy new<br><br>products, features and performance.
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SMALL PATTERNS. BIG IMPACT. STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 144
--- --- --- --- --- ---

New_Story1_Page2_Background_040124.jpg

Planning that drives progress

When customers plan a new chipmaking

facility, they must think carefully about

capacity. They are making commitments to

their own customers about how many chips

they can deliver, but they also need to

ensure the facility is economically viable.

Lithography systems are the central tool in

the chipmaking process and customers need

to know how many wafers our lithography

systems can process per day to ensure they

make achievable volume commitments.

Early access gives market edge

For leading-edge customers, being at the

forefront of lithography technology, in terms

of resolution and/or productivity, is essential

to their business. They want early access to

new lithography technologies so that they

can start developing new processes faster

and bring new generations of chips to

market earlier.

As a result, they often make capacity decisions

based on the projected output of our latest

systems – systems that we are currently building.

They are willing to take delivery of systems before

the new model is properly mature to get access to

that technology as soon as possible. However,

when you deliver systems before they are fully

mature, they can’t always achieve the agreed

targeted output.

Yet the customer is still under commercial pressure

to bring the new technology to full volume fast. So,

ASML is also under commercial pressure to bring

the new systems up to the agreed targeted output

within the customer’s setup as fast as possible.

Up to speed fast

That’s where my team comes in. Working

with other ASML teams, our job is to close

the gap between initial capability and the

agreed output as quickly as possible – and

then to keep pushing outputs higher by

improving throughput and/or system

availability. To do that, we work extremely

closely with the customer, drawing on our

front-line customer support staff who are

permanently located at the customer’s

facility, and have weekly meetings with

engineers and managers.

Close collaboration is key

We identify the gaps by looking at results

from our own test procedures as well as the

customer’s production data. Once we have

identified where productivity gains can be

made, we develop an action list to make it

happen. Some actions are for the customer,

for example to improve their efficiency, while

others are handled jointly via our weekly

engineering meetings. Finally, there are

ASML actions, such as upgrading a

component or validating a new system

option.

In these cases, my team is the central

contact between the customer and the

different groups within ASML, including the

business, development and engineering and

customer support. That close internal

collaboration is essential to make the

necessary improvements on time.

Having a dedicated productivity team – with

support from ASML internal partners – is

crucial in helping customers bring the

cutting-edge lithography technologies to

volume. Despite the commercial pressures,

the customer appreciates our contribution.

Both sides have a very data-driven culture,

which helps the chemistry between us – they

understand that everything we do comes

from the data. Moreover, they know we

share their determination to improve

performance, to help them meet their

customer commitments and push the

technology forward together.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SMALL PATTERNS. BIG IMPACT. CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 145
IN THIS SECTION:
--- ---
148 Our overall performance in 2023
149 Attractive communities
151 Inclusive communities
153 Investing in STEM education
413 4,800 €2.2m
--- --- ---
Amount invested per employee Time investment in<br><br>volunteers – hrs technology<br><br>promotion Total cost of<br><br>volunteering
(2025 target: 2,500 / employee)

All values are in Euros.

Why it matters

ASML’s success and growth have a significant impact on

local communities, especially in the vicinity of our larger

sites in the Brainport Eindhoven region, Wilton, Silicon

Valley, San Diego and Hsinchu.

Our company and network of suppliers and partners

generate a wealth of jobs and social activity in these

locations. But while our high-tech cluster is a valuable

driver of employment and welfare, local communities can

experience pressure on housing and essential services,

such as schools, as a result of ASML’s growth.

We value the support and contribution of the

communities we are part of and are committed to

respecting and making a positive contribution and being

recognized as a valued member of the community. Our

aim is that both ASML and the community can benefit

from each other’s presence and support each other’s

future development.

We have a large STEM-related direct employment need

in the regions where we operate, as well as indirectly in

other regions due to the employment needs of our

suppliers. This brings both a responsibility and an

opportunity to help inspire young people to consider

STEM career choices and to support the technology

experts of the future.

How we’re managing<br><br>our impact

To make a positive social contribution, we listen to

concerns and take responsibility for addressing our

negative impacts. This applies to our smaller sites, where

ASML is not so significant in relation to the size of the

community, and especially to our larger sites where

ASML has a high profile.

Ultimately, we want to ensure that our impact is net positive

in every community where we operate as we continue to

add positive value while also taking responsibility for the

negative impact of ASML's presence on our communities.

Our employees expect this – they want to know that their

employer is a responsible corporate citizen which

contributes to the community they are part of in a way that

we can all be proud of.

Employee giving is another critical component of ASML’s

community outreach. By donating time, skills and

resources to charitable organizations and causes, our

employees can address local needs and make a

difference in their communities. Through our global

volunteering program, we encourage employees to

become involved in their local communities. Every

employee can use one day a year as a paid volunteering

day in line with our volunteering policy. Some volunteers

spend additional time donating their expertise as a STEM

ambassador or part-time teacher in primary schools.

We support innovative ideas, startups and scaleups with the

potential to solve urgent ESG challenges and help secure

the future of STEM education. We invest in the STEM

technical talent pool to enable society to overcome its

urgent and long-term challenges.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SOCIAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 146
Valued partner in our communities
We play an active role in the communities where we operate,<br><br>recognizing that when the community thrives, we thrive.
ASML’s community outreach
--- ---
Our community outreach is fundamental to our ESG<br><br>sustainability strategy. Just as we have set our ambition<br><br>to reduce our environmental footprint to zero, we also<br><br>aim to promote and improve access to local culture,<br><br>support inclusive economic opportunity, create<br><br>equitable access to education, and build a sustainable<br><br>future through innovation.<br><br>Developed and launched in 2023, our new Community<br><br>Partnership Program identifies four key areas of<br><br>investment and impact:<br><br>•Attractive communities: Mitigate the negative<br><br>impact of ASML’s growth and contribute to<br><br>improvements and positive experiences in the<br><br>community<br><br>•Inclusive communities: Remove obstacles that hold<br><br>back disadvantaged community members from<br><br>reaching their potential and unlock the potential of,<br><br>and create equal opportunities for, students<br><br>•STEM education: Help increase the STEM/technical<br><br>talent pool that society needs to solve some of its key<br><br>challenges<br><br>•ESG sustainability innovation: Support projects<br><br>with great societal returns with our knowledge and<br><br>expertise, and invest in ideation, startups and<br><br>scaleups in our communities to retain a diverse<br><br>innovation ecosystem that is attractive to the world’s<br><br>top technical talent We have a strict selection and prioritization process and<br><br>projects have to primarily benefit ASML's community or<br><br>society and be in line with one of our key focus areas.<br><br>Within these areas, we have identified 17 potential<br><br>programs, including access to affordable housing, access<br><br>to basic needs for the underserved, providing opportunities<br><br>for students from disadvantaged backgrounds and<br><br>supporting community startups.<br><br>In 2023, we started projects in the first three of the four<br><br>areas – our ESG sustainability innovation area is still under<br><br>development.<br><br>Over the next few years, we will grow to reach our<br><br>ambition of investing €2,500 annually per employee<br><br>(amount invested per employee and employee<br><br>contribution matching combined), totaling more than<br><br>€100 million per year globally.<br><br>ASML's commitment to being a valued partner in our<br><br>communities, specifically through education, has also<br><br>been reflected in the mission and work of the ASML<br><br>Foundation for more than 20 years. In 2023, we initiated<br><br>the process for dissolving the ASML Foundation –<br><br>however, the scope of its activities will be adopted by<br><br>the new Community Partnership Program.
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SOCIAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 147
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Valued partner in our communities (continued)

Our overall performance in 2023

Progress tracking
Topic Target 2025 Performance indicator 2021 2022 2023 Status
Valued partner in our<br><br>communities 2,000 €/employee Community partnership program: amount invested per employee n/a n/a 319 n
500 €/employee Employee contribution matching n/a n/a 94 n
2,500 €/employee Community partnership program: total amount invested per employee including contribution matching n/a n/a 413

The total amount of cash commitments and in-kind

support that ASML spent on charities, community

engagement and organizations in 2023 was

approximately €15.4 million which equates to €319 per

employee against a target of €2,000 per employee for

  1. Through employee contribution matching, we

contributed €94 per employee, against our target of

contributing €500 per employee by 2025. The Community

Partnership Program was established in January 2023

and has been ramping up throughout the year.

Our employees contributed a total of 25,650 volunteering

hours (2022: 13,645) to community involvement and

4,800 hours (2022: 4,736) to technology promotion. We

saw an increase from prior years as a result of rapid

scaling of our STEM support for primary schools, which

includes one technology lesson module given by a trained

ASML employee. The total cost of volunteering – part of

employee contribution matching – increased to €2,173k

in 2023 (2022:€1,200k).

Five of our locations (Veldhoven and the Brainport

Eindhoven region, Wilton, Silicon Valley, San Diego and

Hsinchu) benefit from implemented and dedicated

community engagement programs. These locations

represent 83% of our operations, by headcount. We also

operate smaller community engagement initiatives in

other locations, and these will be gradually scaled up to

more formally dedicated programs in the coming years.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SOCIAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 148
Valued partner in our communities (continued)
On track •<br><br>Ongoing focus area n
How we’re managing<br><br>our impact
---

We are committed to doing our share as a socially

conscious business in the communities we are a part of.

By partnering with businesses and organizations in the

regions around the world where ASML is located, we are

building trust and contributing to our communities.

Our ‘Attractive communities’ initiative consists of five

foundational programs which contribute to our ESG

sustainability strategy. These are detailed below.

Affordable housing

There is a significant housing shortage in the Brainport

Eindhoven region in the Netherlands, which puts serious

pressure on affordability. People with low to middle

incomes struggle to find affordable homes, and

ASML's growth adds to their challenge. In 2023, we

therefore launched our Affordable Housing program,

which aims to help increase the number of affordable

homes for everyone in the Brainport Eindhoven region,

primarily by providing support for construction of new

homes. We run this program in collaboration with several

external parties, such as housing corporations,

municipalities, and real estate developers.

Green communities

We contribute to the current and future livability of local

communities by improving the quantity and quality of

nature. The main program focus is on nature and

biodiversity, which concentrates on two outcomes:

getting more green spaces in the community, and

improving the quality of green spaces via collaboration

with external partners.

Sustainable mobility

We contribute to the sustainable mobility transition that is

required for quick, safe, and clean transport in the

Brainport Eindhoven region. The program focuses on

two key elements: the availability of infrastructure and

increased adoption of sustainable transportation.

Sports, arts and music

We aim to contribute to a varied and high-quality offering

of sports, arts and music to meet society’s expectations

and boost the attractiveness of the regions where we

operate for locals and newcomers. We provide additional

funds for ‘landmark’ events and organizations to increase

their scale, variety and quality, and we invest in new

initiatives and innovative ideas that boost the quality and

variety of the cultural and sports offering in our regions.

Positive interactions between cultures

We aim to foster good relationships with ASML's direct

neighbors – both as an ethical imperative and to maintain

support for our activities and growth – and also to

support the integration of international employees of

ASML and other companies in local communities. We

support various local community projects and initiatives

where Veldhoven residents can meet each other and

have fun in their spare time. In this way, together with the

initiators, we aim to contribute to creating an attractive

region.

Our targets and performance<br><br>in 2023

We are in the first year of these programs and we are

continuing to define the individual targets. Our main

targets are the amount invested per employee and

employee contribution matching.

Read more in Our overall performance in 2023

Our actions in 2023

Creating more green spaces (NL)

In 2023, we supported the Arboretum in Eindhoven with

investing in equipment and tools required for the

organization and maintenance of Park Meerland, and IVN

in Heeze-Leende with the creation of a safe route for

amphibians to move around the area.

ASML Marathon Eindhoven (NL)

The 39th edition of the ASML Marathon Eindhoven took

place on Sunday, October 8, 2023, with 29,700 runners

from around the world. A record number of 2,500+

ASML colleagues – up by almost 50% from 1,700 last

year – took part in the various races including the full

marathon, half marathon, relay and quarter marathon.

As title partner, we offered free training programs and

covered the entry costs for all our employee runners, as

well as for 250 Brainport Eindhoven community

members with limited resources, to make this sporting

event accessible to everyone.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SOCIAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 149
Valued partner in our communities (continued)
Attractive communities

GLOW Light Art Festival (NL)

We are moving semiconductor technology forward to

create meaningful innovation for society. As a proud

partner and sponsor of the annual GLOW light art festival

since 2012, ASML believes culture plays a vital role in

connecting a community. GLOW is an annual, free event

in Eindhoven, displaying the works of famous national

and international light artists throughout the city center

over one week in November. In 2023, around 750,000

people visited the festival.

Partnership with PSV (NL)

PSV Eindhoven football club is the region's most

recognized professional sports organization. Community

members appreciate that ASML supports the club

together with other regional businesses while jointly

promoting 'Brainport Eindhoven' on the players' shirts.

In addition, we have developed programs and activities

that focus on the underserved in the community. We

have enabled access to the games for thousands of

underserved community members through our ASML

Community Lounge. We also leverage PSV's brand

recognition to promote important campaigns, such as

one aimed at reducing personal debt, which reached

almost 50% of regional residents and triggered one in

three to take follow-up action.

Partnership with Van Gogh Museum (NL)

ASML has allocated a team of engineers to support the

Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam in its research into the

decay of art paintings over time – known as the Impasto

Project.

Van Gogh Village Museum and Vincent's Lightlab

(NL)

In 2023, we have enabled the renovation and festive re-

opening of the new Van Gogh Village Museum in

Nuenen, close to our headquarters, and established

Vincent’s Lightlab. By combining technology, art and

creativity, we have created a unique experience that

contributes to the innovative image of the region and

inspires the next generation of artists and scientists. The

renewed museum is expected to welcome around

40,000 visitors a year.

Partnership with Muziekgebouw Eindhoven (NL)

We have a long-term partnership with the Muziekgebouw

in Eindhoven, bringing our employees and community

members together through a shared passion for the

stage.

Looking ahead

We look forward to supporting many projects, activities

and events in 2024, with among others:

•ASML’s “Drop of Light” exhibit and experience lab at

Taiwan 2024 Lantern Festival, held in Tainan from

February 24 to March 10, 2024, with around 10

million expected visitors

•The Affordable Housing program, which aims to help

increase the number of affordable homes for

everyone in the Brainport Eindhoven region in the

Netherlands, primarily by providing support for the

construction of new homes

•ASML On Stage 2024, inviting the best musical and

artistic talents from among our own employees to

take to the stage at the Muziekgebouw Eindhoven,

the Netherlands

•ASML's School Football tournament 2024 for

thousands of children in the Brainport Eindhoven

region, many of whom will be able to participate in

organized sport for the first time

•Planting of 100,000s of trees in the metropolitan

region in and around Eindhoven, the Netherlands

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SOCIAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 150
Valued partner in our communities (continued)
Attractive communities (continued)

New_ValuedPartner_AttractiveCommunities_GLOW_Background_150124.jpg

How we’re managing<br><br>our impact

We want to support our community members who may

face challenges with access to basic needs, like food,

and students who need equal access to opportunities in

order to thrive in school and their eventual careers.

Through our inclusive communities program, we aim to

remove obstacles that hold disadvantaged community

members back from reaching their potential while also

unlocking the potential of, and creating equal

opportunities for all students.

In previous years, our activities were mainly limited to

projects focused on one-on-one tutoring. In 2023, we

decided to step up our investment in inclusive

communities to meet local needs. We used community

surveys and stakeholder engagement sessions as input

and hired dedicated staff to support and develop

projects in our communities.

Our topic of ‘Inclusive communities’ consists of six

programs, as detailed below.

Access to basic needs

Not all community members benefit from the economic

activity in ASML regions due to challenges they face in

accessing basic needs – including food, shelter,

healthcare-adjacent issues and clothes. One of the ways

we respond is to invest in local food and clothing banks.

Access to employment

Good-quality employment is not equally accessible for

everyone. Some community members face barriers to

participation in the labor market. This manifests in

different ways, from people who struggle in the search

for a suitable job to those who become discouraged and

pause their search, and those who do not even dare to

try. We aim to support involuntarily unemployed

community members back to work, by collaborating with

organizations to train and coach community members,

helping them to set out their path and guiding them to

reach their goals.

Access to sports, arts and music

This program aims to improve the local accessibility of

sports, arts and music for community members with

scarce financial means and/or physical/mental conditions

or impairments. Together with our sports and cultural

partners, we aim to create a more equitable and

attractive community. Furthermore, we look to work with

larger social organizations in the field that have specific

experience in supporting families with lesser means to

fully participate in sports and culture. We run specific

programs that offer children the chance to come into

contact with sports/culture so they can discover what it

can mean for them, regardless of their socio-economic

circumstances.

Neurodiverse students

Neurodiversity is one of the drivers of increasing diversity

in Brainport classrooms. Schools are not always able to

recognize the needs of neurodiverse students in order to

provide the required support. This leads to greater

demands on special education, underperformance, and

children at home. We have approved and started up a

significant project, which will be up and running in 2024,

to support the educational system in providing adequate

support for neurodiverse students in regular schools. The

aim is to show the increase in demand for special

education, support children to reach their potential and

reduce the number of children who no longer attend

school.

Students with a different native language

Schools in the Brainport Eindhoven region have

challenges absorbing the inflow of international children,

leading to a sharp increase in the number of children with

an international background flowing into special

education. Since 50% of the international students are

children from knowledge migrants, we take our

responsibility by strengthening the Brainport Eindhoven

educational sector region to absorb the growing number

of international students, and thereby reduce the

additional inflow into special education.

Students from disadvantaged backgrounds

Students from disadvantaged backgrounds do not have

the same opportunities in education as their peers. This

results in underperformance in education, which is also

reflected in their subsequent career. This program aims

to provide students from disadvantaged backgrounds

with equal opportunities to allow them to thrive in their

educational environment and subsequent career.

Our targets and performance<br><br>in 2023

We are in the first year of the programs and we are still

continuing to define the individual targets. Our main

targets are the amount invested per employee and

employee contribution matching.

Read more in Our overall performance in 2023

Our actions in 2023

Second Harvest Food Bank (US)

The recipient of our largest US-based investment to date

is Second Harvest of Silicon Valley. This organization,

which was established in 1974, currently provides food

to over 500,000 Santa Clara County residents every

month – including over 120,000 children and 110,000

senior citizens. These are double the totals from pre-

pandemic levels. ASML’s contribution goes toward their

capital campaign to build a new facility in North San

Jose, which will allow them to consolidate warehouses

that were quickly opened during the pandemic, greatly

improving the efficiency of operations and reducing

operating costs. We plan to donate $1 million per year

for five years to be used toward the new facility

campaign. In addition, we will provide $250,000 per year

for the operating budget.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SOCIAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 151
Valued partner in our communities (continued)
Inclusive communities

Partnership with Family Giving Tree (US)

Family Giving Tree is a non-profit-based organization in

the Bay Area, California (US), which runs the largest

holiday gift and backpack donation program in California.

ASML Silicon Valley’s 2023 ‘Backpack Build’ event

benefits children from low-income households in the Bay

Area. We provide financial support and employee

volunteering time to support the initiative.

We provided a $45,000 grant to Family Giving Tree in 2023,

which was used to purchase backpacks and school supplies for

1,000 disadvantaged students. Our employees sorted and filled

the backpacks with necessary back-to-school supplies to

support the students who otherwise could not afford these

items.

In 2023, in the form of a $45k grant/donation

combination, we also supported their Holiday Wish Drive

and purchased 1,000 holiday wishes (in the form of gifts)

for low-income Santa Clara County children.

National Volunteer Week (US)

National Volunteer Week takes place every April and

recognizes the impact of volunteers in tackling society’s

challenges, building stronger communities and being a force

that transforms the world. We recognized National Volunteer

Week across our US sites by providing opportunities for

employees to volunteer and make an impact.

We provided $45,000 in donations to non-profit

organizations across all of our focus areas (many of which

are part of our inclusive communities initiative), as well as

employee volunteering hours. During National Volunteer

Week, 225 ASML volunteers contributed almost 1,000

volunteer hours toward a total of 19 projects for

organizations such as Habitat for Humanity, Boys & Girls

Clubs of Silicon Valley, San Diego Food Bank, Second

Harvest of Silicon Valley, San Diego Children’s Discovery

Museum, Wilton Land Conservation Trust and Riverbrook

Regional YMCA.

Boys & Girls Clubs (US)

In 2023, we were proud to expand our partnership with

the Boys & Girls Clubs of Silicon Valley by supporting

their summer enrichment and college readiness

programs through 2025. The Boys & Girls Clubs’

summer enrichment programs offer lower-income

students the opportunity to participate in sports, arts and

wellness-focused summer camps, while the college

readiness program provides leadership, job-readiness

and financial literacy skills, encouraging students to set

academic and career-oriented goals.

Our partnerships with the Boys & Girls Clubs in our local

US communities will also continue to grow with STEM-

focused programming and support in both Silicon Valley

and Bridgeport, Connecticut.

ASML school football tournament (NL)

In collaboration with Youth organization Dynamo

Jeugdwerk and the FC Eindhoven Foundation, we

organized an ASML school football tournament in 2023

for all primary and secondary schools in Eindhoven and

the Kempen region. To take away the financial barrier to

participating in sports, entry was free for all youngsters.

In total, 150 teams with 1,200 participants from across

the region competed.

'@home in languages' (NL)

The number of international children aged 0-18 newly

enrolling in the Brainport Eindhoven educational system

will increase by 8,000-12,000 students in the next nine

years, from 15,000 today. Schools in the Brainport

region want to adapt to this changing student population.

Children need to feel at home to be able to learn and

grow. Language skills – particularly reading – are among

the most important skills to master. Making use of the

mother tongue is important, and parental involvement

with the learning process is key for a child's

development.

We co-develop and fund the '@home in languages'

initiative which addresses all these factors. It supports

pre- and primary schools in the Brainport Eindhoven

region by supplying permanent and flexible multilingual

book collections, training school workers on multi-lingual

and multicultural teaching and creating an expertise

center for multilingual teaching in Brainport.

Weekend and after-school programs (NL)

Students from disadvantaged backgrounds often face

underperformance in education and career development

as a result of inequality of opportunity. They have a

higher chance of falling behind on schoolwork due to,

among other factors, a lack of self-confidence, role

models and perspective. They also receive limited

support and guidance on their educational path from

their direct environment.

Our partnership with weekend schools focuses on

providing children with support and guidance that offers

perspective and instills confidence. These projects aim to

scale current proven weekend and after-school

programs to improve children's perspective, confidence,

skills and network. Programs take place on Sunday or

after school. Children typically start when they are 10 or

11 years old. We provide financial support to enable

these programs to scale in the region.

Matching Gifts program (global)

2023 was the first full year for our newly introduced

Matching Gifts program. Matching Gifts gives our

employees a voice in the distribution of the company's

philanthropic contributions. For eligible ASML employees

globally, we matched donations to non-profit

organizations up to a cumulative amount of €1,000 per

employee, per calendar year. In 2023, ASML supported

more than 1,100 non-profit organizations through

matching gifts.

Looking ahead

In 2024 and beyond, we will develop, initiate and scale

projects in the different programs for Inclusive

Communities. The projects that started in 2023, such as

Language & Library and Weekend School, will reach

more schools and more students.

In 2024, we also hope to expand the Matching Gifts

program in more countries where ASML operates. In

2024, ASML’s annual match limit per employee will also

increase to €10,000.

ASML’s 40th anniversary in 2024 will give us an

opportunity to celebrate via a new employee giving

campaign, focusing on volunteering opportunities for

employees near our local sites, as well as a charitable

giving campaign where ASML will match employee

donations and encourage participation through special

program incentives.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SOCIAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 152
Valued partner in our communities (continued)
Inclusive communities (continued)
How we’re managing<br><br>our impact
---

We invest in the STEM technical talent pool to enable

society to overcome its urgent and long-term challenges.

Too often, opportunities to create enthusiasm about

STEM topics among children and youngsters (aged

between 4 and 24 years) are missed. STEM classes in

primary education could be more engaging and events

outside of school could be more optimally leveraged. There

is also a shortage of STEM role models for younger

generations. All of this impacts the interest of students in

STEM subjects and limits the supply of future talent.

We believe that creating awareness and interest in STEM at

a young age translates into increased consideration of a

STEM-related education and career later in life. A well-

functioning (primary) education system is primarily within the

mandate of government. However, ASML can play a role in

supporting STEM-related education and inspiring a new

generation of technology experts. This is why we started

investing in STEM education through SPARK events, guest

lessons at schools and visits to ASML premises in

Veldhoven. We continue to invest in STEM education

through the ASML Junior Academy, which was established

in 2022. The academy provides a dedicated program of

activities within the mainstream education system, focused

on all children in primary school (4-12 years old), regardless

of a pre-existing interest in STEM. The academy provides

primary schools with engaging structural STEM lessons for

all children, six times per school year for at least three school

years, fully funded by ASML.

ASML drives and funds the Academy, through a partnership

with Mad Science, to spark children's awareness, interest

and joy in STEM-related themes and topics. Our initial focus

is on schools within a radius of 35 km around ASML

locations. STEM activities are for children and we include

parents and teachers to increase STEM awareness. Future

teachers (students at Dutch teacher training college PABO)

are also engaged in relation to the ASML Junior Academy.

Our targets and performance<br><br>in 2023

We aim to increase interest in STEM for students in the

4-24 age group. Our target in 2025 is to reach more than

91,000 children in an area of 35 km around Veldhoven, in

Delft in the Netherlands and in Wilton in the US, six times

a year.

297417895402123

The number of children that we reached through STEM education over

the years 2019-2023

We see enormous growth in the number of children that

we can reach through STEM education, particularly

through the implementation and scaling of the ASML

Junior Academy.

Our actions in 2023

Our main STEM-related activities in 2023 centered

around partnerships and events in the Netherlands,

Taiwan and the US.

The ASML Junior Academy scaled up in 2023 and

reached over 76.000 children in the Netherlands alone.

The ASML Junior Academy was launched in November

2023 in Wilton, US.

Together with Brainport Development, we also held

several events to reach children in the 4-12 and 12-18

age groups in the Brainport Eindhoven region. ASML

supported and participated in local STEM activities such

as a High Tech Discovery Tour, Mission Tech and the

Dutch Technology Festival, Night of the Nerds, and the

Crafted Festival for pre-vocational, secondary and

vocational education (VMBO, HAVO/VWO and MBO).

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SOCIAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 153
Valued partner in our communities (continued)
Investing in STEM education

In Taiwan, we teamed up with the Junyi Academy and

Teach for Taiwan to launch a multi-year project to ‘train

the STEM trainers’. The project will help to address the

STEM talent shortage in Taiwan by training primary

school teachers and university students to become

STEM promoters. ASML's financial support goes toward

teacher training, materials and curriculum development

and enabled more than 50 ASML volunteers to undergo

the training and act as STEM ambassadors. 2023 saw

the project launch, fine-tuning of the curriculum and

delivery of the first employee and teacher workshops. We

trained 400 STEM promoters and reached 3,500

students in 2023 with a goal to reach 6,200 per year

going forwards.

In the US, ASML sponsored the EXPO Day flagship event

of the San Diego Festival of Science & Engineering,

which aims to inspire tomorrow’s innovators in STEM. 28

employees volunteered at the ASML exhibit, teaching

kids how to bring robots to life using coding and

programming. We also sponsored Silvermine Elementary

School’s two-day science fair, which was visited by more

than 600 students. A large percentage of Silvermine

students come from underserved areas in and around

Norwalk, Connecticut, and this initiative impacts our

STEM education goals and supports disadvantaged

students. We brought in our partner, Mad Science, as a

pilot for ASML Junior Academy, and provided volunteers

in order to help inspire a love of STEM among elementary

(age group 5-12) students. Almost 30 ASML volunteers

helped lead STEM experiments and activities.

In October 2023, ASML officially expanded the ASML

Junior Academy to Connecticut. ASML is investing $2.2

million over three years to, with our partner Mad Science,

provide free interactive technology education lessons to

children aged 4 to 12 in Wilton and surrounding

communities. Over three years, more than 13,000

children in the US are slated to receive six experiential

technology lessons on STEM-related topics.

Looking ahead

We will continue to scale the ASML Junior Academy and

we will support the educational partner Mad Science in

finding solutions for resourcing challenges that result

from the steep scaling from 2023 onwards. We will add

more locations where we operate – including Taiwan – as

well as cities in the US.

In 2024 an additional STEM program will be launched for

students in 1st and 2nd year of secondary school in the

Veldhoven region: STEMup. Working with a STEM

coach, schools can choose one of four STEM classes

developed by ASML. The goal of the program is to

engage students in STEM activity from a societal

perspective, and increase the interest in and the

perceived relevance of STEM.

ValuedPartner_InvestingSTEM_Image.jpg

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SOCIAL CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 154
Valued partner in our communities (continued)
Investing in STEM education (continued)

New_GovAtAGlance_IntroPage_Background_111223.jpg

GOVERNANCE
156 ESG integrated governance
157 ESG sustainability governance
158 Business ethics and Code of Conduct
161 Legal & Compliance
163 Respecting human rights
165 Information security
171 Product safety
174 Transparent reporting
174 Reporting in a balanced way
175 Our approach to tax ESG integrated governance
---
ESG sustainability is important for our<br><br>business and stakeholders, and we integrate<br><br>ESG into our everyday decision-making,<br><br>underpinned by responsible business conduct<br><br>and risk management. Transparent reporting
---
We are open and transparent, driving<br><br>progress while building trust with our<br><br>stakeholders. Our commitment to integrated<br><br>reporting reflects our view that our ESG-<br><br>related information is as important as our<br><br>financial information. Engaged stakeholders
---
We depend on strong, sustainable<br><br>relationships with stakeholders across the<br><br>value chain. We aim to create sustainable<br><br>value for all our stakeholders and benefit from<br><br>their input.
Read more in Engaging with our stakeholders
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 GOVERNANCE STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 155
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Governance at a glance
Strong corporate governance enables us to do business responsibly and meet the highest standards of integrity.<br><br>This is essential to create value for our stakeholders and to secure the long-term success of our company.
IN THIS SECTION
--- ---
157 ESG sustainability governance
158 Business ethics and Code of Conduct
161 Legal & Compliance
• Anti-bribery and anti-corruption
•Competition Law Compliance Policy
163 Respecting human rights
165 Information security
•Privacy protection
•Export control and sanctions
•Intellectual property protection
171 Product safety Why it matters
---

ESG sustainability is important for our business and

stakeholders, and we integrate ESG into our everyday

decision-making, underpinned by responsible business

conduct and risk management.

We want to feel proud about the business decisions we

make and to ensure our stakeholders recognize that

integrity and honesty sit at the heart of everything we do.

We rely heavily on the skills, commitment and behavior of

our employees in line with our values to build trust and

respect – underpinning our continued success, our license

to operate and our positive contribution to society.

Our customers and partners must be able to rely on the

security, safety and quality of our products and services.

Due to our market leader position and the growing

geopolitical tensions in the semiconductor industry, we

are increasingly targeted by threat actors.

It is our duty to provide a safe work environment, and we

must ensure that our products and tools comply with the

most stringent product safety regulations. As we have

grown, so has the complexity of our products and supply

chain and the geographical locations in which we

operate. This brings additional challenges around safety

compliance.

How we’re managing<br><br>our impact

We commit to acting on our responsibilities and

anchoring ESG sustainability across our entire business.

We focus on identifying and assessing the impact of ESG

sustainability risks and managing them appropriately,

ensuring that we take a holistic approach to risk

management. This enables us to create enterprise value

and drive an effective risk response.

We expect all our employees to live up to the company’s

values and standards by acting with integrity and respect

at all times. Our corporate policies and procedures detail

the principles and compliance standards that guide us in

making decisions and living up to our values. We

promote an open culture of trust and honest

communication and do not tolerate violations of our

standards. Our transparent approach is underpinned by

our commitment to ensuring compliance with applicable

laws and regulations wherever we operate and by

fostering ethical behavior and a culture of speaking up.

We are investing in a best-in-class security function with

security competences, governance and capabilities

deployed across our most important assets to manage

security threats and risks.

We have clear systems and processes in place to

support our approach to product safety. Prevention is

key, and we focus on safety by design in hardware

followed by safety by procedure. To ensure product

safety does not end at our own facilities – we also

promote product safety in the value chain.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 GOVERNANCE CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 156
ESG integrated governance
Integrated governance ensures a responsible ESG sustainability approach that considers the needs of<br><br>our stakeholders.

New_ESG_GovernanceModel_Diagram_260124.jpg

ESG sustainability governance

Our integrated ESG sustainability governance drives

accountability and execution across the company.

Our ESG sustainability governance model includes the

SB, BoM, ESG Sustainability team and experts from the

business.

The SB monitors and advises the BoM on ESG

sustainability aspects that are relevant to the company.

This includes addressing the principal risks and

opportunities related to the strategy.

Read more on the Rules of Procedure as published in the

Governance section at asml.com

In 2023, the SB established the ESG Committee, which

advises the SB in carrying out its governance and

oversight responsibilities with regard to sustainability,

environmental, social and governance matters. We

organized ESG training for the SB ESG Committee

members with follow-up sessions planned in 2024.

Read more in Corporate Governance - Supervisory Board

The BoM sets and oversees the execution of ESG

sustainability aspects in our integrated business strategy,

including nine ESG sustainability strategic themes and

associated KPIs. It receives quarterly updates on ESG

sustainability and provides guidance on relevant issues.

The ESG Sustainability team supports the BoM in relation

to ESG sustainability. It makes recommendations

regarding focus areas, targets, external commitments

and disclosures.

The ESG Sustainability team monitors risks and

opportunities including climate-change-related matters,

global trends, stakeholder expectations and best

practices that could impact ASML’s short-, medium- and

long-term ESG sustainability objectives. Identifying and

assessing the impact of ESG sustainability-related risks

and opportunities are an integral part of our ERM

process. Our strong focus on identifying and managing

ESG sustainability risks ensures that we take a holistic

approach to risk management.

As with any other risk factor, ESG sustainability risks are

assigned to a risk owner. The CBO (a member of the

BoM) is the risk owner, for instance, for climate-related

risks.

Read more in Risk - How we manage risk

Key developments are identified and integrated through a

thorough materiality assessment

Read more in ESG - Our material ESG sustainability topics

The ESG sustainability strategic themes are developed

through regular cross-functional table meetings to ensure

alignment on ESG-related topics across various parts of

the company. Responsibility for executing the strategy

lies with the business. Progress is monitored quarterly by

the BoM.

Read more in Corporate Governance

Executive remuneration
Performance against key sustainability topics forms part of<br><br>the long-term incentive plans of the Board of Management<br><br>and senior management.
Read more in Remuneration Report Our ESG sustainability governance model
---
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 GOVERNANCE CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 157
--- --- --- --- --- ---
ESG integrated governance (continued)
ESG sustainability governance
Business ethics and Code of<br><br>Conduct
---

We seek to continually improve and professionalize our

ethics and compliance organization to maintain the

highest standards. This means promoting and upholding

ethical behavior and fostering a culture where speaking

up is encouraged.

In 2023, we continued to expand the Ethics & Business

Integrity team globally, as well as our network of Ethics

Liaisons teams. We supported our Ethics Liaisons with

tailored training sessions including dedicated sessions in

which the teams gained exposure to multiple scenarios.

We also continued to deliver training programs and

focused on raising understanding of the importance of

upholding our Code of Conduct, speaking up and our

commitment to acting with integrity across our entire

organization. This included mandatory online ethics

training for all people managers and our first publicly

available Code of Conduct refresher video, launched in

August 2023, hosted on ASML's YouTube channel.

Our Code of Conduct

Our values guide our dealings with customers,

employees, suppliers, shareholders and the society we

serve. These values are reflected in our Code of Conduct

(Code) which sets out the baseline of ethical behavior we

expect, enabling our employees to make the right

decisions and live up to our values.

Our Code sets clear expectations and guiding principles

for the way we conduct business. It serves to foster a

culture of integrity, ethics and respect. We ask all our

employees, suppliers, contractors, consultants and

business partners to abide by the standards set out in

the Code. Our employees must complete mandatory

online training which requires a digital confirmation that

they understand what is expected from them and that

they agree to adhere to the Code.

To reinforce our commitment across the supply chain,

we expect suppliers and their suppliers to acknowledge

and comply with the RBA Code of Conduct and to

develop their own strategies, policies and processes to

uphold it. This requirement is included in our long-term

product-related suppliers’ contracts. Some major

suppliers might need to undergo an RBA audit to assess

their compliance, while other suppliers may take part in

an annual self-assessment. We also encourage our

suppliers to develop their own sustainability strategies,

policies and processes in line with our Code.

RBA Code of Conduct
As a member of the RBA, the world’s largest industry<br><br>coalition dedicated to corporate social responsibility, we<br><br>have adopted the RBA Code of Conduct. This<br><br>international standard is intended to ensure that working<br><br>conditions in the electronics industry and its supply<br><br>chains are safe, that workers are treated with respect and<br><br>dignity, and that business operations are environmentally<br><br>responsible and conducted ethically.
Read more in Social - Responsible supply chain

Our Code of Conduct principles

Our principles Our commitment
We respect people ASML is committed to maintaining a safe and healthy working environment,<br><br>respecting human rights in line with international laws and regulations and industry<br><br>standards such as the RBA Code of Conduct. Diversity of cultures, education and<br><br>talent makes us a stronger, more creative and innovative company. By working<br><br>together and using these values to guide us, we create an environment based on<br><br>mutual respect – one that leads to better results than any of us can achieve alone.
We operate with<br><br>integrity A strong culture of integrity and compliance underpins ASML’s business success.<br><br>We define ‘integrity’ as acting with honesty, sincerity, care and reliability. Compliance<br><br>not only means complying with laws and regulations, but also with our high ethical<br><br>standards. Our reputation for integrity is a valuable asset. It is essential for us to<br><br>demonstrate personal and business integrity at all times.
We commit to safety<br><br>and social<br><br>responsibility Technology reaches all parts of society. By helping to make chips more affordable,<br><br>powerful and energy-efficient, ASML has an important role to play – not only by<br><br>reputation and results, but also in relation to the environment. This is why ASML is<br><br>committed to conducting business responsibly, enabling sustainable growth while<br><br>fulfilling legal and moral obligations. We aim to achieve our business objectives in a<br><br>caring and responsible manner, as outlined in the key principles.
We protect our assets ASML’s most valuable assets are its people and knowledge, both of which are highly<br><br>valued and protected. Our assets include intellectual property, trade secrets or other<br><br>proprietary information, which refers to intangible assets such as technical know-<br><br>how, products data, business data and personal data, as well as physical assets<br><br>such as products, tooling, funds and computers for conducting ASML business. Our<br><br>company expects anyone entrusted with ASML assets to keep them safe from loss,<br><br>damage, misuse or theft.
We encourage you to<br><br>communicate and<br><br>speak up To fulfill our commitment to upholding the high standards of integrity described in this<br><br>Code, communication is key. We strive for a working environment that encourages open<br><br>dialogue among employees, as well as between employees and third parties, where<br><br>employees feel comfortable and respected, and that they can trust each other to do the<br><br>right thing. If you observe or suspect a violation, we encourage you to speak up.
Read more on our Code, which is available for all our stakeholders, at asml.com, our intranet and in our Employee app
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 GOVERNANCE CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 158
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ESG integrated governance (continued)
Business ethics and Code of Conduct

Code of Conduct training for employees

Online training about the Code was made mandatory for

all employees in 2020. By the end of 2023, 87% of

employees had completed the training.

A follow-up series of training sessions is promoted at

three-monthly intervals, covering a broad range of related

topics such as Speak Up, Anti-Bribery and Anti-

Corruption, Insider Trading and ‘We respect people’, all

of which connect to our Code of Conduct.

In 2023, we also launched online ethics and compliance

training for all of ASML’s people managers and a

refresher training series for all employees.

87%
of employees have completed Code of Conduct<br><br>training Business ethics governance
--- ---
Our ethics governance model comprises the following<br><br>roles and responsibilities:<br><br>1.The Ethics Board is chaired by our CEO and<br><br>reports to the Audit Committee and Board of<br><br>Management. It is responsible for policymaking and<br><br>supervision of ASML’s compliance with legal and<br><br>ethical requirements. The Ethics Board meets at<br><br>least quarterly to give guidance on relevant issues<br><br>and approve the relevant policies. 2.The Ethics Committee investigates significant<br><br>notifications of potential breaches of ASML’s Code<br><br>of Conduct worldwide.<br><br>3.The Ethics Office oversees and implements our<br><br>Ethics program. All reports of a possible breach of<br><br>ASML’s Code of Conduct are screened by one of<br><br>the Ethics Officers and significant reports are<br><br>discussed with the Ethics Committee.<br><br>4.The Ethics organization includes employees who<br><br>act as Ethics Liaisons in the countries in which we<br><br>operate. They serve as trusted representatives and<br><br>are the first local point of contact for employees<br><br>who have questions or concerns related to ethics.

In 2023, we increased the size of the Ethics Office team

to support the growth of the company. These additional

resources will ensure ethics officers can focus on the

Speak Up reports and caseload. We also increased our

pool of trained investigators and hired local Ethics and

Compliance Officers in South Korea and Taiwan to

handle cases locally, where appropriate.

Promoting ethical behavior

Our Ethics program provides support, advice, training

and communication to enable employees and others to

understand and follow our Code of Conduct. In

combination with the compliance program, it uses

various communication channels to promote a culture of

high integrity, openness and honesty that fosters

compliance with the law and our policies across ASML.

The training curriculum supports management and

employees in their everyday decision-making by

promoting the Code and other compliance-related topics

and raising awareness of the importance of ethical

behavior and our Speak Up & Non-Retaliation Policy. It

also provides guidance on dealing with topics such as

conflicts of interest, including personal relationships at

work, and cultural differences and ethical aspects around

any paid or unpaid activities outside their job at ASML.

All new employees are invited to complete the first

module of the curriculum within the first three months of

starting at ASML. In addition to generic modules for all

employees, the curriculum includes modules which

target a specific audience depending on potential

exposure, such as anti-bribery and anti-corruption, gifts

and entertainment, and respect for people (one of the

principles of the Code).

In 2023, we continued to extend the ethics training

curriculum. To create ethics awareness moments during

the year, we introduced monthly themes such as

managing paid consultancy requests, Speak Up, and

anti-fraud and anti-bribery and anti-corruption.

We sent a pulse survey to a random selection of

employees covering around 25% of the total employee

population to measure a number of parameters relating

to business ethics.

From the around 3,600 employees that responded, over

80% strongly agreed or agreed with the following

statements:

•ASML shows a commitment to ethical business

decisions and conduct

•In my immediate working environment, a mutual

relationship of trust prevails

•My direct manager sets the tone at the top – i.e., a

good example in terms of ethical behavior

We are very pleased to see the positive effects of the

Code of Conduct in our ethics survey results this year –

92% of respondents agreed or strongly agreed with the

statement that ASML makes it sufficiently clear what the

principles of the Code of Conduct are and how to

comply with them.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 GOVERNANCE CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 159
ESG integrated governance (continued)
Business ethics and Code of Conduct (continued)

Encouraging people to speak up

Through our Speak Up program, we encourage everyone

– including our own employees and external business

partners, suppliers, contractors and others – to express

concerns regarding possible violations of our Code,

company policies, values or the law.

We have several channels available within the Speak Up

program to report concerns. The dedicated Speak Up

service is an online reporting tool hosted by an

independent, external service company. Toll-free phone

numbers are available for each country in which we

operate along with a dedicated email address and our

Ethics Liaisons. The Speak Up service is available to

report breaches anonymously where preferred.

We assess each Speak Up report and act to ensure any

necessary remedial actions are taken by the appropriate

body. We may engage with the reporting party and/or

counterparty to understand the nature of the Speak Up

message and conduct more detailed analysis and/or

investigation. When required, we implement remedial

actions to prevent recurrence.

We strongly believe that employees should feel safe to

express their concerns with the company without

apprehension due to the fear of retaliation. We will not

tolerate any form of retaliation or any other form of

adverse consequences against employees or third

parties who raise a concern in good faith or participate in

an investigation about suspected violations of the Code,

even if ASML could lose business as a result.

Following an update in 2022 to our Speak Up & Non-

Retaliation Policy, which addressed the requirements of

the EU Whistleblowing Directive, we continue to focus on

the concept of non-retaliation in 2023, to reassure

employees that they can report a breach without fear of

repercussions.

As well as the investigations procedure as documented

in the Speak Up & Non-Retaliation Policy, we also

finalized internal investigation guidelines outlining the

investigation phases of an ethics complaint, from first

report to remedial action and final closure. In addition to

training, we published guidance notes for investigators,

coordinators, reporting parties and others that might be

involved in ethics complaint investigations.

During 2023, we received 631 reports compared to 414

in 2022. Given the growth in our workforce and our

efforts to encourage people to report any concerns, this

increase is a positive result which signals a healthy

speak-up culture within ASML. The number of reports

per 100 employees increased to 1.5 (from 1.1 in 2022).

We look into and assess every report we receive. Of the

631 reports, we conducted 32 formal ethics complaint

investigations.

Read more in our Speak Up and Non-Retaliation Policy, which is

publicly available at asml.com

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 GOVERNANCE CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 160
ESG integrated governance (continued)
Business ethics and Code of Conduct (continued)
Legal & Compliance
---

We are committed to the principles of fair competition

and fairness in all of our dealings with stakeholders. This

means conducting our business in compliance with

relevant laws and regulations, professional standards,

business practices and our own internal standards.

The Legal & Compliance function oversees adherence to

regulatory compliance-related areas and advises

management on the regulatory framework, including

changes in legislation and regulations. Examples of

regulatory compliance areas include securities and

insider trading, competition law (antitrust), export control

and sanctions, anti-bribery and anti-corruption. When

needed, the Legal & Compliance department may take

charge of regulatory investigations.

Read more on export control and sanctions in Governance -

ESG integrated governance - Information security

Anti-bribery and anti-corruption

We are committed to the highest standards of personal

and business integrity and to doing business in a

professional, ethical and transparent manner,

as described in our Code of Conduct.

ASML does not tolerate bribery or corruption or any form

of improper influence on colleagues or others. We

updated both our Anti-Fraud and Anti-Bribery & Anti-

Corruption Policy in September 2022. The policies detail

our commitment to strong ethics and integrity and the

measures we take to prevent bribery and corruption.

The Anti-Bribery & Anti-Corruption Policy also requires

compliance with applicable anti-bribery and anti-

corruption laws as well as the ASML Code of Conduct.

We do not allow employees to accept or provide

facilitation payments or to make political contributions on

behalf of the company.

Read more in Anti-bribery and Anti-corruption Policy, which is

publicly available at asml.com

Giving and accepting gifts and entertainment should

never influence, or appear to influence, the integrity of

our business decisions and transactions, or the loyalty of

the parties involved. Our Gifts & Entertainment Policy

details the behavior expected of ASML employees in

relation to giving and accepting gifts or entertainment to

and from third parties (including business meals). The

policy is also a key element in our compliance and Anti-

bribery & Anti-corruption program. An important element

of the policy is the request for prior approval for certain

categories of third-party gifts and entertainment. This

enables us to capture registration of given and accepted

gifts and entertainment in these categories, which

supports compliance with the policy and with applicable

laws and regulations.

The guidance on when a conflict of interest may exist or

arise requires employees to disclose any actual, potential

or perceived conflict of interest and to avoid taking action

in relation to the potential conflict while the situation is

assessed. We plan to finalize the implementation of a

Conflicts of Interest Policy and associated tooling as part

of our compliance and Anti-bribery & Anti-corruption

program in 2024.

In 2022, we refreshed our training curriculum covering

fraud, anti-bribery and anti-corruption topics by

launching an all-employee mandatory e-learning course.

The course is part of the ethics training curriculum and is

supported by additional classroom training for specific

stakeholder groups such as people managers. In 2023,

we continued to strengthen our global third-party due

diligence program by updating the assessment of the

partner landscape, evolving the risk scoping and risk

mapping methodologies. We have built knowledge and

capacity within relevant functions and departments,

rolled out new due diligence training to target audiences,

developed comprehensive reporting and standardized

aspects of the process, all of which enables

improvements in automation. Overall, this is enabling a

more robust and efficient monitoring process. We are

continuously improving the quality of due diligence

research and effectiveness of risk treatment.

Employees who seek further guidance or want to

express concerns regarding anti-bribery and anti-

corruption, including gifts and entertainment or conflicts

of interests, can do so via their manager, HR

representative, an Ethics Liaison, ASML’s Ethics Office or

through the Speak Up service.

There were no regulatory fines or actions taken against

ASML in the area of bribery and corruption in the

reporting year 2023.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 GOVERNANCE CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 161
ESG integrated governance (continued)
Legal & Compliance

Competition Law Compliance Policy

Compliance with competition law (also known as

‘antitrust law’) is essential to protect effective competition

and ensure the optimal functioning of the market.

Competition law impacts many areas of ASML’s day-to-

day business and our dealings and interactions with

customers, suppliers, co-developers and other business

partners.

We are committed to the principles of fair competition

and fairness in dealing with our business partners and

other stakeholders. ASML does not condone any form of

conduct that is considered illegal under applicable

competition laws or is contrary to our Code of Conduct.

We will not engage in business or cooperate with

business partners who resort to anticompetitive behavior

or suggest entering into illegal conduct.

Competition Law: Control measures in place
We have general and specific control measures in<br><br>place to prevent, detect and disclose potential<br><br>competition law issues, including:<br><br>•Competition law compliance risk assessment:<br><br>We regularly perform risk assessments of relevant<br><br>competition law focus areas. This assessment<br><br>identifies and considers risks that may be present<br><br>from a competition law perspective, the controls that<br><br>have been put in place, the remaining risks and<br><br>measures to be taken to mitigate them. Assessments<br><br>cover new legal developments such as the recent<br><br>European Foreign Subsidies Regulation.<br><br>•Policy review: Our Competition Law Compliance<br><br>Policy demonstrates our commitment to ensuring<br><br>compliance with applicable competition laws and our<br><br>Code of Conduct. Any act of an employee or<br><br>business partner contrary to this policy will be<br><br>considered a significant breach of ASML’s Code of<br><br>Conduct and may lead to disciplinary measures,<br><br>including dismissal. We published a public version of<br><br>the policy in 2020. ASML reviews this policy<br><br>periodically and released an updated version of the<br><br>internal policy in 2021.<br><br>•Training and awareness: Competition law training<br><br>consists of a combination of methods, including<br><br>computer-based and in-person training sessions.<br><br>The in-person sessions are provided on a regular<br><br>basis by the Center of Excellence (CoE) Competition<br><br>and Regulatory team and are tailored to each<br><br>relevant stakeholder group. Awareness of topics and issues relating to<br><br>competition law is also promoted through different<br><br>communication channels, such as presentations<br><br>and articles on the intranet or email communications.<br><br>The selection of topics is based on their relevance<br><br>to the semiconductor industry and current legal<br><br>developments and trends.<br><br>•Contacts with business partners: We expect our<br><br>business partners (such as customers, suppliers,<br><br>consultants, contractors and intermediaries) to<br><br>demonstrate high standards of ethical behavior<br><br>consistent with our own. We will not engage in<br><br>business or cooperate with business partners that<br><br>resort to anti-competitive behavior or suggest<br><br>entering into illegal conduct. We firmly condemn any<br><br>anti-competitive behavior by our business partners.<br><br>•Reporting and resolving an issue, violation or<br><br>complaint: We support employees and business<br><br>partners who refuse to enter into anti-competitive<br><br>conduct or who report potential violations of our<br><br>policy, as clearly stated in our Speak Up & Non-<br><br>Retaliation Policy. We do not tolerate any form of<br><br>retaliation or other forms of adverse consequences<br><br>against employees who practice strict adherence to<br><br>competition law rules or against those who speak<br><br>up, even if we lose business as a result.<br><br>We did not incur any fines for breaches of competition<br><br>law in 2023.<br><br>Read more in ASML’s public Competition Law Compliance<br><br>Policy
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 GOVERNANCE CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 162
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ESG integrated governance (continued)
Legal & Compliance (continued)
Respecting human rights
---

In line with our core values, responsibility for respecting

human rights rests with ASML as an organization and

also with every individual who works for or with us. We

are committed to respecting universal human rights and

honoring the value of ethics as expressed in our Code of

Conduct. We support the principles laid down in the UN

Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights

(UNGPs).

Our commitments to address salient human rights

impacts are expressed in our Code of Conduct, Human

Rights Policy and the RBA Code of Conduct for

suppliers. In 2023, we initiated a global saliency

assessment across our value chain as well as in our own

operations, to identify potential and actual negative

human rights impacts. This assessment enables us to

understand the human rights risk landscape, identify

vulnerable groups, prioritize action, and develop tailored

and effective human rights due diligence processes. The

steps we are taking to deliver our ESG sustainability

framework, respect for D&I and well-being programs, as

well as our efforts to embed integrity in our culture, all

contribute to advocating for human rights within ASML.

In 2023, we launched a new Human Rights Policy which

complements our Code of Conduct and the RBA Code

of Conduct, to which we adhere. It expresses our

commitment to human rights and responsible labor

practices in our operations and our supply chain. The

Human Rights Policy applies to ASML and its

subsidiaries around the world. It reflects the

precautionary principle.

The provisions of the Human Rights Policy are derived

from key international human rights standards, including

the ILO Declaration on Fundamental Principles and

Rights at Work and the UN Declaration of Human Rights,

the UN Global Compact and the principles specified in

the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises, as

well as other relevant standards such as the UN

Women’s Empowerment Principles, UNICEF’s Children’s

Rights and Business Principles, and the UN International

Convention on the Protection of the Rights of all Migrant

Workers and Members of Their Families.

We received no grievances about breaches of human

rights in 2023.

Read more in our Human Rights Policy at asml.com

Defining salient human rights issues

Salient human rights are those at risk of the most severe

negative impact through a company’s activities and

business relationships. While all human rights risks

should be addressed, identifying salient human rights

issues helps to prioritize actions.

In 2023, we initiated a saliency assessment to identify the

actual and potential negative impacts on the rights of

individuals and affected communities in our own operations,

supply chain and downstream. We are examining the extent

to which negative impacts identified have been, or are being,

caused by ASML and whether ASML has contributed to

these, or whether its activities are linked to identified impacts.

The saliency assessment will support the prioritization of

impacts based on the saliency (i.e. the scope, scale and

irremediability) of the harm, the nature of ASML's causal

contribution and, where ASML has not caused or

contributed to the harm but is directly linked to it, the

extent to which ASML has created, or can create,

leverage to effect change in the wrongful practices of

another party that is causing or contributing to the

negative impact. Where feasible, we will engage with

relevant external stakeholders – such as suppliers, NGOs

and other legitimate representatives – to help us

understand the nature and extent of the impact and the

ways in which we can address it.

This provides guidance to the organization on the steps

we take to address negative impacts, depending on the

kind of impact or risk identified. Our assessment aims to

construct a system of consequences – setting out the

steps to be taken, following a risk-based approach, to

address and mitigate human rights impacts and risks –

that will help us determine how we manage salient

impacts over time.

Read more in Social – Responsible supply chain

Human rights risks within our operations

The results of our previous analysis identified the risk of

human rights vulnerabilities inherent in our own

operations as working hours and overtime, health and

safety, and workplace harassment. The 2023 saliency

assessment preliminary results identified additional

potential impacts to specific rights-holder groups, such

as unequal treatment and discrimination. In addition, it

confirms that on-site contractors and migrant workers

remain vulnerable rights-holder groups. It also identifies

women in particular as a vulnerable group. As part of

finalizing the results, our roadmap will include enhancing

our human rights due diligence processes to monitor and

prevent or mitigate these risks.

Read more in Social – Attractive workplace for all – Providing

the best employee experience

Working hours and overtime

The standard working week in the locations where we operate is

on average 40 hours. Our company standards are based on the

International Labor Standards of the ILO (the Forty-Hour

Week Convention) and the RBA norms. A working week

must not exceed the maximum set by local law and should

not be more than 60 hours including overtime, except in an

emergency or unusual situation. We pay close attention to

protecting employees from working overtime during peak

periods. As overtime remains an important attention point for

management, we continue to monitor the use of overtime

and to take appropriate measures.

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ESG integrated governance (continued)
Respecting human rights

Health and safety

We work hard to make ASML a safe place to work

across all our products and processes. Our obligation is

to provide safe and healthy working conditions for all

employees and others working on our premises, and we

put significant effort into creating awareness and

maintaining a proactive safety culture.

Read more in Social – Attractive workplace for all – Ensuring

employee safety

Workplace harassment

We have operations in more than 60 locations spanning

16 countries and regions. Our culturally diverse

workforce includes 144 nationalities. This leads to a risk

around the issue of workplace harassment. We

continuously work to address this risk by ensuring that

the topic is included in our awareness program and

ASML's position is clearly addressed in our Code of

Conduct and associated training. We have a whole

episode of 'DeCode' dedicated to 'we respect people',

where we also highlight the role of our Ethics Liaisons

who are on hand to help employees tackle this topic.

Read more in Governance - ESG integrated governance -

Business ethics and Code of Conduct

Human rights risks within our supply chain

We are conducting a human rights saliency assessment

to identify salient human rights risks for people within

ASML's own operations, supply chain and downstream,

which once completed will be followed by a periodic

impact assessment. We use the RBA Risk Assessment

Platform to identify inherent risks in labor (including

human rights), ethics, health and safety and

environmental standards across our full supply base. If a

medium- or high-risk issue relating to labor is identified,

we engage with the supplier and conduct a more

detailed analysis.

We expect key suppliers, covering around 80% of our

product-related spend, to complete the annual RBA

SAQ. This covers more than 300 questions related to

labor (including human rights), ethics, environmental and

safety factors, control elements and management

systems. It helps us to determine a supplier’s risk profile

and, when we identify compliance gaps, we engage with

the supplier to determine corrective action plan(s).

During 2023, our drive to enhance our ESG performance

saw us step up our sustainability-related actions,

including the launch of a program to measure the

maturity of a supplier’s ESG policy, vision and ambition

as well as their environmental and social performance.

This program provides us with added confidence around

a supplier’s human rights risks and is in addition to the

RBA SAQ.

The salient human rights issues we have identified as

inherent in our supply chain relate to working conditions

(forced and bonded labor), health and safety, and trade

union rights. The majority of our suppliers operate in

countries with a strong rule of law and are law abiding,

and we view this inherent risk as low.

Read more in Social - Responsible supply chain

Challenges in addressing human rights

ASML works in many different countries where we have

extremely complex supply chains and where laws relating

to the protection of human rights can vary. Our biggest

challenge is to ensure that the beneficiaries of the

changes we make are those people most at risk of

potential violations.

Like many companies, we are faced with the challenge of

understanding how to implement the plethora of

regulations and international instruments – including ESG

legislation – covering the topic of human rights, in a way

that makes efficient use of resources, engages the right

stakeholders and achieves outcomes for workers and

others who could be impacted by our activities.

Against a landscape of interconnected global and

geopolitical challenges and increasing uncertainty due to

the war in Ukraine and, most recently, the conflict in the

Middle East, challenges we face in relation to human

rights will only become more critical and more central to

business decisions. We are facing evolving societal

expectations and want to find ways we can make a real

impact, but ASML cannot do this alone and therefore we

are connecting with peers to understand how best to

tackle any future human rights- related issues that may

present themselves.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 GOVERNANCE CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 164
ESG integrated governance (continued)
Respecting human rights (continued)
Information security
---

Security – like safety and quality – is fundamental to

stakeholders’ trust in ASML. We operate in a dynamic

and complex threat landscape, and security must be

embedded in our people and operation processes and

technologies.

ASML’s competitive edge is based on knowledge and

intellectual property that has been developed over

decades. This knowledge sits in the minds of the

employees and many people we work with within our

ecosystem of suppliers, partners, customers and

knowledge institutions.

On the one hand, the fact that our ecosystem is, to a

large extent, based on exchange of ideas and insights

among many individuals, makes the protection of

knowledge a challenge. On the other, it makes it very

difficult for others to replicate what we do. It is extremely

hard to effectively build machines as complex as ours

without operating software, knowledge about electronics

and the behavior of different components. This also

requires specific knowledge of individuals within ASML

and our partners about the integration of different

elements of our technology, as well as very diverse and

extensive partnerships within our ecosystem.

As we innovate together, our partners need access to

some of our systems. Because the chain is only as

strong as the weakest link, we must ensure this access is

enabled in a secure way.

Given the complexity and growth of the dynamic threat

landscape, we require a best-in-class security function with

security competences, governance and capabilities

deployed across our infrastructure and focused on our

most important assets to manage security threats and risks.

We see an increase in the sophistication of threat actors

and corresponding complexity of the security incident

response leading to an increase in related incident

events. We are taking additional measures going forward

to deal with this effectively.

In the event of a security incident involving the loss of

(information) assets, the materiality of the incident is

jointly assessed by technology leaders and subject

matter experts within the business. Assessors obtain

support from Corporate Intellectual Property and Legal &

Compliance.

In 2023, as far as we are aware, ASML had zero

incidents with a material impact.

Read more in Risk – Risk Factors – Cybersecurity and other

security incidents, or disruptions in our processes or

information technology systems, could materially adversely

affect our business operations

New_ESGIntegrated_InformationSecurity_Image.jpg

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ESG integrated governance (continued)
Information security

New_CyberDefenceCentreServices_Diagram_131223.jpg

Information security resilience framework Cyber defense center services Services overview and value streams; includes (mapping of) ASML Security Strategy
Our vision is that security, including<br><br>cybersecurity, needs to be embedded in the<br><br>DNA of our people, processes and<br><br>technologies. We have accordingly created a<br><br>dedicated security function to ensure that we<br><br>manage security risks.<br><br>The security risk assessment process, which<br><br>includes cybersecurity, is part of ASML's<br><br>ERM process and follows the governance<br><br>structure, with Corporate Risk Committee<br><br>(CRC) as oversight committee mandated by<br><br>the Board of Management.<br><br>The CRC monitors risk prevention,<br><br>detection, mitigation and remediation related<br><br>to cybersecurity on a regular basis. We<br><br>believe each member of the CRC is qualified<br><br>to advise on the oversight of cybersecurity<br><br>risks through their employment experience<br><br>and /or educational background in risk<br><br>management. The CRC regularly reports to<br><br>the Audit Committee of the Supervisory<br><br>Board on prevention, detection, mitigation<br><br>and remediation of cybersecurity threats and<br><br>responses thereto as well as the internal<br><br>processes.
Services
Global security<br><br>incident management Digital forensics Threat intelligence<br><br>and reporting Anomaly detection<br><br>information access Threat hunting Security control<br><br>management<br><br>and engineering Vulnerability<br><br>identification
Capabilities
Incident<br><br>response and<br><br>investigation Threat<br><br>intelligence<br><br>and reporting Data science<br><br>engineering and<br><br>threat hunting
Read more in How we manage risk
Threat detection
Security response
Threat intel and testing
Continuity and recovery management
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 GOVERNANCE CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 166
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ESG integrated governance (continued)
Information security (continued)

ASML has implemented processes to identify and

respond to cybersecurity threats in accordance with

standards set by the International Organization for

Standardization (ISO 27002), International Society of

Automation (ISA/IEC 62443) and the US National Institute

of Standards and Technology (NIST Cybersecurity

Framework). We have a dedicated team that deploy

these procedures to increase our resistance strength and

to minimize exploitable vulnerabilities, e.g. by monitoring

threats, assessing our vulnerability through testwork, and

defining incident responses. For an overview of the

processes and capabilities see overview on page before.

In the event of a threat which materializes an identified

risk, such as a material cybersecurity incident, the

Corporate Crisis Management Team (CCMT) verifies the

materiality assessment, the proposed threat response

and the disclosure requirements. The CCMT is chaired

by the COO, who reports to the BoM on the proposed

response of ASML to such individual crisis situations. The

BoM ultimately takes the decision on the risk response

and reports out to the Supervisory Board.

The Chief Information Security Officer (CISO) coordinates

the response on information security risks, which include

cybersecurity threats, as the second line of responsibility,

with the security teams in the business being the first line of

responsibility.

All three layers of our security governance framework (the

Security Committee, the Security Function Management

team and the Security Expert team) comprise

representatives from the business.

1.Security Committee is responsible for ensuring and

promoting the integration of security risk management

methodologies and related controls in ASML’s

business processes

2.Security Function Management team ensures the

implementation and execution of security risk

management methodologies and related controls in

ASML’s business processes

3.Security Expert team is responsible for determining the

risk and control strategies and for generating input for

tactical plans, by providing content expertise and by

setting requirements

This governance framework enables cross-disciplinary

alignment internally (horizontal and vertical) through

structured, periodic meetings and ensures integration

throughout our broader risk management profile.

Besides evaluation by our Internal Audit department,

ASML has engaged several third parties to evaluate

security capability and maturity, and to provide expertise

as well as temporary resources to assess the processes

describing the identification and the management of

material cybersecurity risks. Some examples of these

engagements are: external validation of security

management system, capability assessments, red

teaming, penetration testing and tabletop exercises.

In order to oversee and identify risks from material

cybersecurity threats associated with ASML's use of

third parties, any such third-party service providers need

to comply with ASML Security Controls, which is part of

the Supplier Security Policy. ASML assesses and

monitors these providers following a risk-based

approach.

New_ASML_securitygovernance_Diagram_141223.jpg

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ESG integrated governance (continued)
Information security (continued)

DevelopmentKeySecurityThreats_Background..jpg

Development of key security threats
Geopolitical tension Increased external collaboration<br><br>and reliance on suppliers
Increased protectionism of local markets<br><br>and stronger compliance requirements<br><br>on IP protection
Increased IP and business continuity risks due<br><br>to less mature attention to security in our<br><br>interconnected and digitized supply chain
Given the growth of the<br><br>company, and the complex<br><br>and dynamic threat<br><br>landscape, ASML requires<br><br>a best-in-class security<br><br>function with security<br><br>competences, governance<br><br>and capabilities in order<br><br>to manage the security<br><br>threats and risks.
Ransomware Stakeholder and<br><br>customer compliance<br><br>requirements
Increased visibility and financial<br><br>footprint makes ASML more attractive<br><br>as a ransomware target for criminals
Increasing demands to protect<br><br>(customer) data and IP due to<br><br>cascaded requirements along the<br><br>supply/value chain
Industrial espionage Reverse engineering of IP
Increased exposure to industrial<br><br>espionage due to the growing<br><br>geopolitical pressures and the position of<br><br>our unique technology in the world Increasing portfolio share from software<br><br>development and commercialization of<br><br>software increases the risk of reverse<br><br>engineering of ASML IP
Insider threats Emerging technologies
Risks of insiders maliciously or<br><br>unintentionally abusing or leaking key<br><br>company data Increased use of emerging technologies such<br><br>as cloud computing, virtual reality and big data<br><br>analytics introduces new risks for ASML
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 GOVERNANCE CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 168
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ESG integrated governance (continued)
Information security (continued)

Privacy protection

We are committed to respecting and protecting the

privacy rights of employees, customers, suppliers, job

applicants and everyone we do business with. We

embed privacy controls in the relevant components of

our company's infrastructure (including systems,

applications and databases) and processes (such as

project management). Personal data is managed in a

professional, legal and ethical way in compliance with our

Code of Conduct and applicable laws and regulations.

Our Privacy Policy sets minimum requirements from the

perspective of ASML as a global organization. The policy

is binding for all ASML employees and applies to the

processing of personal data of our staff, job applicants

and business partners such as customers, suppliers,

visitors and other individuals. Employees are educated

about the Privacy Policy through the Privacy Awareness

program, which includes mandatory computer-based

training and additional ad hoc training and workshops

conducted by the Privacy Office.

A dedicated privacy and personal data protection

program ensures that we adhere to high standards of

personal data protection. Among other elements, the

program covers:

•Governance: At senior management level, the CRC is

responsible for oversight of the topic of privacy, while

the Privacy Office manages the privacy framework and

provides assistance and guidance. Each employee is

responsible for reading and understanding the content

and implications of the Privacy Policy.

•Systems and procedures: The privacy controls

framework consists of privacy activities including data

protection impact assessments and recording of

processing activities. The privacy controls framework is

included in our ERM process.

•Investigative actions: We investigate all incidents,

concerns and reports of potential personal data

breaches that have a potential privacy impact, as

outlined in our personal data breach procedure. We

take appropriate actions to contain data breaches and

assess potential risks to individuals, based on how

substantial they are and how likely they are to happen.

•Audit: Privacy is included in our internal audit program.

The Internal Audit team periodically audits systems and

procedures owned by the Privacy Office.

In 2023, we updated our Global Privacy Notices for

workers, job applicants, business partners and visitors.

The new privacy notices reflect the latest processing of

personal data within ASML and meet the requirements of

the applicable privacy laws and regulations, for example

GDPR (EU) and CCPA (US).

In 2023, we experienced data breaches which have been

assessed, rated in terms of impact, solved and – when

necessary – reported to the relevant data protection

authorities.

Export control and sanctions

We are committed to complying with all applicable export

control and sanctions laws globally. Employees are

required to follow our policies and procedures, which are

designed to promote compliance and prevent

unauthorized transactions. In addition, we have

implemented IT controls and other measures intended to

protect against inadvertent breaches of export control

and sanctions requirements.

We continually focus on strengthening and enhancing the

key pillars of our export control & sanctions compliance

framework:

Governance: At senior management level, the CRC,

supported by the Export Control Council, oversees the

efficiency and effectiveness of the company's export

control and sanctions compliance framework. The global

Export Control & Sanctions team manages the export

control & sanctions compliance framework and provides

assistance and guidance to the business. Each

employee is responsible for reading and understanding

the content and implications of the Export Control &

Sanctions Policy.

Compliance organization: We ensure that our Export

Control & Sanctions compliance organization is

sufficiently staffed and trained to ensure that the

company's growing business, and the increasingly

complex regulatory landscape it is being challenged with,

is supported with adequate export control and sanctions

expertise and experience. During 2023, the team

expanded and hired experienced new staff in the US, the

Netherlands and Asia.

Policies and procedures: We embed export control

and sanctions controls in all relevant business processes.

We regularly assess the effectiveness of our policies,

procedures, systems and controls, updating them as

necessary. In 2023, we updated our policies, procedures

and systems in view of the additional export controls that

have been imposed on semiconductor manufacturing

items by the Japanese, Dutch and US governments.

Training: We focus on increasing awareness of the

importance of export control and sanctions compliance

through continuous briefings and (general awareness and

dedicated) training of all ASML employees. During 2023

we updated the mandatory online training.

Audit: Export control and sanctions compliance is

included in the company's internal audit program. The

Internal Audit team periodically audits key export control

and sanctions risk areas.

Following a security incident experienced by the

company in late 2022, we submitted a voluntary self-

disclosure to the relevant government agencies, as

certain export control regulations may have been

violated.

Read more in Risk – Risk Factors – We are subject to regulatory

and compliance obligations in the various countries where we

operate and as our business grows ensuring compliance

becomes more challenging

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 GOVERNANCE CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 169
ESG integrated governance (continued)
Information security (continued)

Intellectual property protection

Our company is based on people and knowledge. Our

specific knowledge gives us a leading edge and a head

start over competitors. To stay in business, it is key that

we protect our own knowledge as well as the information

entrusted to ASML by our customers and business

partners.

Patents are a way to protect ASML’s R&D investments

from unauthorized use by third parties, including

exploitation by our competitors, customers, suppliers

and co-developers. We innovate and develop our

technology with our ecosystem partners, which comprise

many different companies and institutions, each of which

requires a dedicated way of dealing with intellectual

property matters.

ASML’s general intellectual property (IP) strategy has

three objectives:

•Build and maintain a solid intellectual property portfolio

by protecting ASML’s inventions

•Prevent situations where ASML infringes the IPR of

third parties

•Prevent the unauthorized disclosure of confidential

information, including know-how and trade secrets, to

the outside world

Processes are in place to address these objectives. The

objective of preventing unauthorized disclosure is

addressed by, among others, a dedicated knowledge

protection program, restricted access to engineering top

secrets, an information security program, mandatory

information classification, and a training and awareness

program.

Our Corporate Intellectual Property department is tasked

with strengthening our global IP position. The

department’s mission is to maximize ASML’s intellectual

property value, to execute and support ASML’s overall

objectives and to preserve ASML’s freedom of operation.

To protect our technology leadership and our R&D in

leading-edge technology, the department is involved in

the product generation process and assesses new

products to determine whether they would potentially

infringe any relevant third-party IPR.

We have adopted controls, policies and procedures to

safeguard the protection of our trade secrets, proprietary

customer data, and other information, and in order for us

to comply with export controls, economic sanctions and

similar regulations.

Read more in Governance - ESG integrated governance -

Information security and Risk factors

Patent portfolio trend

4580

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 GOVERNANCE CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 170
ESG integrated governance (continued)
Information security (continued)
Product safety
---

It is our duty to provide a safe work environment, and we

innovate with safety at the front of our minds.

Challenges in managing product safety

As we have grown, so too has the complexity of our

products and the geographical locations in which we

operate. It has become increasingly complex to assess

which safety legislation and regulations apply to our

products and tools, and which rules and procedures we

need to follow to demonstrate compliance. Some of our

technology is so innovative and new that it is not

immediately clear which regulatory regime applies. Our

designs are often at the cutting edge of technology,

which can mean existing safety standards do not always

provide guidance on how to make a safe design (for

example, high-power drive laser and high-pressure

equipment). This means we must define our own safety

protection method or discuss innovative design with

regulatory authorities.

A further challenge is the need to maintain consistency in

making the design safe when many people are working

on the design of a product, or when the design is

outsourced to a supplier. Our fast shipment process also

means that we may skip some of the testing in the

factory and conduct final testing and formal acceptance

at the customer site. We have had to adapt our way of

working regarding testing product safety as a result.

Finally, with fast-changing legislation on chemicals such

as PFAS (per-and polyfluoroalkyl substances) and RoHS

(restriction of hazardous substances), in combination

with the complexity and number of parts of our products

and a worldwide supply chain, it is a challenge to keep

track of information on chemicals used.

How we manage product safety

We have clear systems and processes in place to

support our approach to product safety. To ensure our

products and tools comply with the most stringent

product safety regulations, we focus on safety at every

stage of a product life cycle: research, design,

development, production, transport, installation,

maintenance, upgrades and decommissioning.

Our Global Product Safety and Regulatory organization is

part of Quality and Excellence, which coordinates the

overall product safety approach within ASML. To support

ASML products, each product line has safety engineers

who are responsible for the product and make a first-

level system risk assessment.

To support safe design, we have defined and

implemented 12 key risk areas and associated product

safety competences in line with the ISO 12100 standard

for achieving safety in the design of machinery, with risk

experts supporting individual projects – please see box-

out to the right. We are also extending our global

expertise by hiring country safety regulatory experts.

Our product safety competences
The role of each of our D&E safety competence leads<br><br>is to provide thorough knowledge about background<br><br>legislation and standards applicable in their area, define<br><br>design rules, provide training and act as consultants to<br><br>mitigate specific safety hazards in our products.<br><br>Electrical: Making an electrical design safe and<br><br>protecting people from electrical shock. This involves<br><br>making conductors carrying hazardous voltage<br><br>inaccessible, ensuring that accessible conductors do<br><br>not carry hazardous voltages and that inaccessible<br><br>conductors are sufficiently insulated from accessible<br><br>ones through compliance with corresponding<br><br>regulations and standards.<br><br>Pressure: Interpreting and explaining local legislation<br><br>and standards, advising on testing and documentation<br><br>and maintaining the manufacturing record book which<br><br>is needed for a high-pressure permit in certain<br><br>countries.<br><br>Human factor engineering (including<br><br>ergonomics): Incorporating a human-centered design<br><br>approach to maintain access for maintenance and<br><br>servicing by laying down rules for issues such as<br><br>accessibility, posture, forces and the lifting of parts.<br><br>Mechanical: Keeping track of safety factors and<br><br>seismic requirements for our machines.<br><br>Lifting: Advising on special requirements (such as the<br><br>certification and training of crane operators) in<br><br>countries where we use lifting tools, and when<br><br>certification is needed. For example, in South Korea<br><br>certification is required for weights of 500 kg or more. Working at height: A new area of expertise required<br><br>during the design of our EXE:5000 – our first EUV 0.55<br><br>NA (High NA) system – to guarantee good access to<br><br>the various system areas and components.<br><br>Radiation: Focusing mainly on lasers with intensities<br><br>that go beyond standard, as well as considering the<br><br>impacts of standard and special lamps and LEDs.<br><br>Dangerous goods: Preventing shipments being<br><br>stopped due to requirements for transport and the<br><br>importation of hazardous substances such as<br><br>chemicals, magnets and batteries.<br><br>Safety in procedures: Supporting the creation of<br><br>written safety procedures for complex operations.<br><br>Thermal: The use of tin at high temperatures requires<br><br>special precautions to protect people.<br><br>Dangerous gases: The use of gases requires safety<br><br>systems and procedures to protect machines and<br><br>people. For example, nitrogen is an asphyxiation<br><br>hazard and the use of hydrogen in EUV has additional<br><br>applicable legislations and standards.<br><br>Materials and substances: Monitoring worldwide<br><br>legislation to check the legal status of all materials used<br><br>on our products and ensuring that we do not use or<br><br>introduce hazardous materials.
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 GOVERNANCE CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 171
--- --- --- --- --- ---
ESG integrated governance (continued)
Product safety

Ensuring safety compliance

The products and tools we develop comply with SEMI

S2 – the Environmental, Health, and Safety Guideline for

Semiconductor Manufacturing Equipment. To ensure

product safety is taken into account at all times, these

guidelines are incorporated into the Safety System

Performance Specification (Safety SPS).

We are SEMI S2-compliant for every product type

shipped. In 2023, a report confirming compliance was

available for every product, and we have a CE

('conformité européenne') declaration of conformity for all

ASML products and tools.

New_ProductSafetyInDesign_Diagram_201223.jpg

Product safety in design

Prevention is key, and we focus on safety by design in

hardware followed by safety by procedure.

Safe products start with well-thought-out design and

product safety requirements, which are implemented at

the start of initial design. The first step to a human-safe

design is to eliminate risk and protect people by product

design. Since human factors play an important role in the

safe operation of a product, we try to guard against

these becoming a risk factor. This helps prevent

workplace activities from turning into potential accidents.

If there are no safety precautions available to address

potential hazards, we develop our own.

When we start designing our systems, our engineers

conduct an initial safety risk assessment (SRA). Our

product designers are trained to identify safety issues

early on in the design process. The SRA is evaluated

throughout the entire product development process. We

evaluate product safety at each stage of the product life

cycle and track reported product-related incidents

through our incident-reporting system.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 GOVERNANCE CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 172
ESG integrated governance (continued)
Product safety (continued)
Making progress with EUV 0.55 NA (High<br><br>NA) safety
---
Our latest product, EUV 0.55 NA (High NA), is the<br><br>next generation of EUV machines. The development<br><br>of the system presented new challenges for product<br><br>safety due to its larger overall size, height and weight<br><br>of modules and more complex accessibility.<br><br>To support the design, we placed extra focus on<br><br>ergonomics and working at height. Our ergonomic<br><br>experts use 3D simulations to enable people to<br><br>practice in various situations, such as working in an<br><br>awkward position for a longer period of time. The new<br><br>system features built-in service platforms, which led to<br><br>the new ‘working at height’ safety competence.<br><br>Due to the complexity of the system, we split the EU<br><br>Safety Directives and SEMI S2 review into an initial<br><br>design review followed by a second inspection of the<br><br>hardware. Having started the third-party safety design<br><br>review in 2022, we continued with hardware reviews<br><br>in 2023, leading up to a full review report by 2024.

Embedding product safety

in the organization

Our Safety and Regulatory Office is tasked with tracking

new product safety legislation and standards and

ensuring that our products are compliant. The Regulatory

Board is responsible for decision-making on ASML

product safety compliance, the strategy to eliminate non-

compliance, monitoring compliance status and risk

mitigation. The Regulatory Board discusses possible

non-compliance cases and takes decisions based on the

mitigation plan presented.

Increasing product safety

in the supply chain

We ensure that product safety does not end at our own

facilities by promoting product safety in the supply chain.

Safety is a key priority for ASML, and we want to be sure

that all the products that we ship comply with the most

stringent legislation, including the designs that are made

and supplied by our suppliers in the value chain. A

significant proportion of our innovation and development

takes place at our suppliers’ sites. Our goal is to ensure

suppliers have the capability to deliver a safe and

compliant product, so that we can avoid safety accidents

or incidents, safety-related non-compliance issues and

delayed shipments. We have defined an end-to-end

process in close cooperation with our suppliers, ensuring

that deliveries meet our safety requirements.

Dangerous goods management

Following the successful completion of our Dangerous

Goods program, dangerous goods management is now

structurally embedded across our organization. Policies,

processes, guidelines and IT infrastructure are in place to

enable dedicated specialists to manage dangerous

goods as part of our competence groups. Hazardous

properties are identified at an early stage in the design

process to ensure measures are taken for the safe

handling, transport and storage of our products on time

and with greater efficiency. Activities are overseen by the

safety and compliance organization to safeguard the

active control of regulations and legislation impacting

ASML products.

Materials and substance compliance

We follow the most stringent or leading regulations in the

markets where we operate, currently but not limited to

RoHS, REACH (Registration, Evaluation, Authorization

and Restriction of Chemicals) and Batteries Directive in

the EU, K-REACH (Act on the Registration and

Evaluation of Chemicals) in South Korea or TSCA (Toxic

Substances Control Act) in the US.

We have implemented multiple initiatives to overcome

compliance challenges. These help to address the

increasing number of changes in the regulatory

landscape, the number of unique parts used in our

products (>50,000), the number of regulated substances

we use (>100) and the extensive reach of our global

supply chain.

Activities in 2023 included:

•A multidisciplinary program embedding processes

throughout our organization – improving our IT

solutions, enabling automated supply chain

communication and delivering flexible reporting

capabilities

•A global safety focus to strengthen our

communications with new local safety expert teams

and establish a regulatory intelligence team

•A proactive approach toward upcoming regulations

such as PFAS, TSCA and the REACH directive by

taking part in the semiconductor industry working

groups, through our membership of the PFAS

Consortium, by working with our business partners and

the supply chain, and by establishing a working

relationship with a well-respected firm of consultants

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 GOVERNANCE CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 173
ESG integrated governance (continued)
Product safety (continued)
IN THIS SECTION
--- ---
174 Reporting in a balanced way
175 Our approach to tax Why it matters
---

With the upcoming regulations – in particular the EU

CSRD, which comes into force for us over the

financial year 2024 – companies are now required to

be more transparent with stakeholders and to

provide more standardized and comparable

information.

Being transparent about our progress and

performance allows stakeholders to make a fair

assessment of how we are performing on our

strategy execution and how we compare with other

companies.

Reporting in a balanced way

Reporting in a balanced way improves the credibility

of our disclosures and also helps to drive our

progress by identifying areas of best practice and

areas for improvement. It also helps us to improve

our internal reporting and make informed decisions.

While we already report extensively on our progress,

there are many gaps we must fill to meet CSRD

requirements. We aim to be ready for CSRD for the

2024 reporting year. This will involve many parties

inside and outside ASML in order to expand the

scope of our reporting and improve the quality of the

data.

ASML is committed to building a fairer, more

sustainable society through social and economic

cohesion, sustainable growth and long-term

prosperity. Taxation is a means to that end, as it

supports the development of the countries in which

we operate. For this reason, openness and

transparency about our approach to tax is an

important aspect of our reporting.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 GOVERNANCE CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 174
Transparent reporting
To build vital relationships of trust with our stakeholders, we show our commitment to act on our<br><br>responsibilities and progress toward achieving our goals in sustainable development via transparent<br><br>reporting.
Why it matters
---

Collecting taxes and fees is a fundamental way for countries

to finance investments in human capital, infrastructure and

the provision of services for citizens and businesses. The

taxes we pay make a valuable contribution to the

communities in which we operate and are an integral part of

our responsibility for social value creation.

We are committed to compliance with tax laws and

regulations, including the timely payment of all the taxes

that we are due as a company.

New_FC_020224.jpg

Read more in our Approach to tax report at asml.com

€2.6bn 15.8%
Income tax paid 2023 Effective tax rate 2023
(€1.7bn in 2022) (15.0% in 2022) How we’re managing<br><br>our impact
---

Our dedicated report on ASML’s ‘Approach to tax’

provides information on our operating model, tax

principles and tax strategy, including how we interact

with our stakeholders. It also includes financial

information from a country-by-country reporting (CBCR)

perspective and our tax contribution to society.

Last year, we signed up to the Tax Governance Code of

the Confederation of Netherlands Industry and

Employers (known as VNO-NCW) in support of the call

for companies to respond to shifting expectations from

policymakers, NGOs and the general public. The Tax

Governance Code should contribute to transparency on

the tax position of Dutch listed companies.

Our leading principle is that our tax position reflects our

business operations, being the sale of lithography

systems and related products and services, supported

by our manufacturing and R&D activities.

ASML has a straightforward operating model with our

campus in Veldhoven, the Netherlands, at the heart of

our global operations.

The Board of Management is accountable for ASML’s

tax strategy, tax principles and the overall tax risk

management, which are subsequently reviewed by the

Audit Committee.

The ASML Tax & Customs department is responsible for

the execution of the ASML tax strategy set by the Board

of Management.

Income tax paid in our five most significant<br><br>countries of operation

290820825555671

1. Netherlands €1,826m
2. United States €513m
3. Taiwan €88m
4. South Korea €44m
5. China €46m
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 GOVERNANCE CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 175
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Our approach to tax
Openness and transparency about our approach to tax is important and is supported<br><br>by our overall business and ESG sustainability strategy.
Our tax principles
---
The following principles guide us in how we report<br><br>and pay tax in the countries where we operate.
Compliance
•We respect the tax laws applicable in each country.<br><br>We are committed to act in accordance with the<br><br>letter, intent and spirit of tax laws and regulations<br><br>•We make tax disclosures in accordance with<br><br>reporting requirements, US GAAP and IFRS<br><br>•ASML’s profit allocation methods are based on<br><br>internationally accepted standards as published by<br><br>the OECD. We apply these consistently across our<br><br>business, contingent on the relevant rules and<br><br>regulations in the local jurisdictions we operate in
Support tax systems
•We report taxable income in a jurisdiction<br><br>commensurate with the added value of the business<br><br>activities in that jurisdiction<br><br>•We do not use so-called tax havens (as defined by<br><br>the European Commission’s ‘blacklist’) for tax<br><br>avoidance
Relationships with authorities
•We pursue an open and constructive dialogue with<br><br>the tax authorities, and other relevant authorities, in<br><br>the jurisdictions we operate in, based on mutual<br><br>respect, transparency and trust, disclosing all<br><br>relevant facts and circumstances. We do not use<br><br>tax structures intended for tax avoidance, nor will<br><br>we engage in the artificial transfer of profits to low-<br><br>tax jurisdictions Our tax strategy
--- --- --- --- ---
ASML’s tax strategy is based on our tax<br><br>principles and is closely aligned to our business<br><br>strategy and our sustainability goals. The tax<br><br>strategy is approved by the Board of<br><br>Management. The tax strategy, tax principles and<br><br>overall tax risk management apply to all group<br><br>entities. 1 2
Stakeholder management The future of taxation
Externally, we communicate on a regular basis with tax<br><br>authorities, regulators and investors, among others.<br><br>Internally, we support our business in managing risks,<br><br>staying in control and at the same time remaining<br><br>efficient in its administrative procedures and way of<br><br>working. We work in an integrated way with other<br><br>experts within ASML. We closely monitor the developments in ESG (including<br><br>tax transparency) and tax technology in the world and<br><br>continuously translate these into potential requirements<br><br>or implications for ASML.
3 4 5
Compliance and control Tax and customs organization Projects
We develop, implement and continuously monitor<br><br>processes and controls for appropriate tax risk<br><br>management and reporting purposes. Furthermore, we<br><br>ensure timely and accurate fulfillment of tax compliance<br><br>obligations in line with applicable tax laws and<br><br>regulations, including the timely payment of taxes due. In a fast-changing world, it is important to have a<br><br>diverse team which can handle change and consists of<br><br>more than just competent tax and customs experts.<br><br>Communication, digital and project management skills<br><br>have become increasingly important. We strive to work<br><br>together and develop each other in line with ASML’s<br><br>values – challenge, collaborate and care. Our business and the regulatory environment in which<br><br>we operate change constantly. We work on projects<br><br>that deal with these changes to ensure the solutions<br><br>implemented are compliant and efficient. Likewise, we<br><br>continuously strive for simplification and review of<br><br>existing business models to ensure we remain tax and<br><br>customs compliant.
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 GOVERNANCE CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 176
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Our approach to tax (continued)

CorpGov_AtAGlance_Background.jpg

Overview Corporate Governance Supervisory<br><br>Board Report Remuneration<br><br>Report
These pages provide<br><br>an overview of and a<br><br>brief introduction to<br><br>the Corporate<br><br>Governance section<br><br>of our Annual<br><br>Report.
Read more on page 179 > Read more on page 196 > Read more on page 217 >
In our Corporate Governance section we<br><br>report on ASML's corporate governance<br><br>structure and the way ASML applies the<br><br>principles and best practices of the Dutch<br><br>Corporate Governance Code. –Governance structure<br><br>–Board of Management<br><br>–Supervisory Board<br><br>–Board-related matters<br><br>–AGM and share capital<br><br>–Financial reporting and audit<br><br>–Compliance with governance<br><br>requirements This report outlines the activities of the<br><br>Supervisory Board and its committees, as<br><br>well as the key focus areas for 2023. Here we explain the progress made during<br><br>the year regarding our commitment to fair<br><br>and balanced remuneration, including our<br><br>work to increase the level of transparency<br><br>around how we reward management<br><br>in order to attract the right talent.
–Message from the Chair<br><br>–Supervisory Board<br><br>–Board focus in 2023<br><br>–Meetings and attendance<br><br>–Composition, training and evaluation<br><br>–Supervisory Board Committees<br><br>–Audit committee<br><br>–Technology committee<br><br>–Selection and Nomination Committee –Message from the Chair<br><br>–Remuneration committee<br><br>–Board of Management remuneration<br><br>–Supervisory Board remuneration
Our strategy
Read more on page 30 >
1 Grow our holistic<br><br>lithography business
2 Secure unique supply<br><br>chain capabilities<br><br>to ensure business<br><br>continuity 3 Move toward<br><br>adjacent<br><br>business<br><br>opportunities 4 Deliver on our ESG<br><br>sustainability<br><br>commitments
Message from the Chair<br><br>of our Supervisory Board Message from the Chair<br><br>of Remuneration
Read more on page 196 > Read more on page 217 >
Our business model Stakeholder engagement CorpGov_AtAGlance_Image3.jpg CorpGov_AtAGlance_Image5.jpg
Read more on page 33 > Read more on page 37 >
Customers<br><br>Employees<br><br>Suppliers<br><br>Shareholders<br><br>Society
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 CORPORATE GOVERNANCE STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 177
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Corporate Governance at a glance
We champion integrated corporate governance to build a relationship of trust,<br><br>respect and mutual benefit with our stakeholders.
Sustainable long-term value creation
--- --- --- ---
Principles and best practice provisions Reference
•In creating sustainable long-term value, the Board of Management takes into account the<br><br>effects of the company’s operations on people and the environment, and has concrete<br><br>sustainability targets. Page 30 and 71
•Pays a fair share of tax to the countries in which it operates. Page 175
•The annual report explains the effects of its products, services and activities on<br><br>people and the environment. How stakeholder interests have been taken into account,<br><br>and whether targets set have been achieved. Page 75 and 107
•The Supervisory Board oversees the above. Page 196 Diversity & Inclusion
--- --- --- ---
Principles and best practice provisions Reference
•ASML has adopted a D&I policy for the Board of Management, a D&I policy for the<br><br>Supervisory Board, and a separate group D&I policy, applying to its workforce including<br><br>senior management. As part thereof, ASML has set concrete, appropriate and ambitious<br><br>goals on gender diversity and other relevant D&I aspects for the company with regard to the<br><br>composition of Board of Management, Supervisory Board and senior management. Page 185
•The annual report explains the company’s D&I policy and application including results<br><br>achieved in the reporting year, and includes insights about inflow, promotion and retention of<br><br>employees to the extent relevant and possible. Page 185 Dialogue with stakeholders and ASML's stewardship
--- --- --- ---
Principles  and best practice provisions Reference
•The company adopts a policy for effective dialogue with relevant<br><br>stakeholders to ensure the sustainability aspects of the strategy are taking their<br><br>interests into consideration. Page 37, 71 and<br><br>198
•The company adopts an outline policy for bilateral contacts with stakeholders. Page 39 and 213
•Both policies are put on the website. Page 37 and 39
•The company is to facilitate the dialogue, but only where appropriate. Page 37 Other
--- --- --- ---
Principles and best practice provisions Reference
•Supervisory Board report to set out the findings of the Board of Management and Supervisory<br><br>Board evaluations. Page 196
•These evaluations are periodically required to take place under the guidance<br><br>of an external expert. Page 204
•While the Code does not require a designated digital or sustainability director, every<br><br>Board of Management and Supervisory Board member has close involvement with these<br><br>topics, and it be a consideration in terms of composition and training. Page 157 and<br><br>203
•New additions to the code emphasizing the role of the internal audit. Page 194
•The remuneration report should explain how the policy contributes to sustainability<br><br>and sets out how the scenario analysis have been taken into consideration. Page 219
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 CORPORATE GOVERNANCE CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 178
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Applying the 2022 Dutch Corporate Governance Code
We have outlined the main changes of the new code in the table below and provided references to<br><br>where in the annual report we are addressing the principles and best practices provisions.

We endorse the importance of good

corporate governance, of which

independence, accountability and

transparency are the most significant

elements. These are also the elements on

which a relationship of trust between us

and our stakeholders can be built.

ASML Holding NV is a public limited liability company

operating under Dutch law. ASML’s shares are listed on

Euronext Amsterdam and Nasdaq.

We have a two-tier board structure, consisting of a

Board of Management responsible for managing the

company, and an independent Supervisory Board which

supervises and advises the Board of Management. For

the fulfillment of their duties, the two Boards are

accountable to the General Meeting, the corporate body

representing our shareholders.

Our governance structure is based on ASML’s Articles of

Association, Dutch corporate and securities laws and the

Dutch Corporate Governance Code. Because we are

listed on Nasdaq, we are also required to comply with

applicable provisions of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, the

Nasdaq Listing Rules and the rules and regulations

promulgated by the US Securities and Exchange

Commission.

We are subject to the relevant provisions of Dutch law

applicable to large corporations (structuurregime). These

provisions have the effect of concentrating control over

certain corporate decisions and transactions in the hands

of the Supervisory Board. Procedures for the

appointment and dismissal of Board of Management and

Supervisory Board members are based on the

structuurregime.

This section of the Annual Report addresses our

corporate governance structure and the way ASML

applies the principles and best practices of the Dutch

Corporate Governance Code. It also provides information

required by the Decree adopting further rules related to

the content of the management report and the Decree

implementing Article 10 of the Takeover Directive.

We signed up to the VNO-NCW Tax Governance Code

and report on the application of its principles in the

section Our Approach to Tax and in our more

comprehensive Approach to Tax Report on our website.

In accordance with the Dutch Corporate Governance

Code (https://www.mccg.nl/english), other parts of this

Annual Report address our strategy and culture aimed at

sustainable long-term value creation, our values and

Code of Conduct, as well as the main features of our

internal control and risk management systems.

On December 20, 2022, the new Dutch Corporate

Governance Code was published, which applies to the

financial years starting on and after January 1, 2023. As

part of the continued effort of our Supervisory Board and

Board of Management to ensure that our practices and

procedures comply with the relevant principles and best

practice provisions of the Dutch Corporate Governance

Code, we have assessed the implications and, where

necessary, amended our practices and procedures in

order to ensure that we comply with the new Code.

Read more in

At a glance,

Our business and ESG strategy,

Our business model and

Risk - How we manage risk

ASML corporate governance structure
Shareholders
Supervisory Board
Audit<br><br>committee ESG<br><br>committee Remuneration<br><br>committee Selection and<br><br>nomination<br><br>committee Technology<br><br>committee
Board of Management
Business<br><br>sectors Business<br><br>functions Corporate<br><br>functions Employee<br><br>support
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 CORPORATE GOVERNANCE CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 179
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Corporate Governance

New_BoardManagement_IntroPage_151223.jpg

Our Board of Management is responsible

for managing ASML. Its responsibilities

include establishing a position on the

relevance of sustainable long-term value

creation for ASML and its business,

defining and deploying ASML’s strategy,

establishing and maintaining effective risk

management and control systems,

managing the realization of ASML’s

operational and financial objectives and

the ESG aspects relevant to ASML. In

fulfilling its management tasks and

responsibilities, the Board of Management

is guided by the interests of ASML and its

business and takes into consideration the

interests of its stakeholders.

Our core strategy is to
1 Grow our holistic<br><br>lithography business
2 Secure unique supply<br><br>chain capabilities to ensure<br><br>business continuity
3 Move toward adjacent<br><br>business opportunities
4 Deliver on our ESG sustainability<br><br>commitments

The current Board of Management comprises six

members. On November 30, 2023, ASML announced

that per the 2024 AGM the President & CEO and the

President & CTO will retire, that the current Chief

Business Officer will be appointed President & CEO, and

that the Supervisory Board intends to add the role of

Chief Customer Officer to the Board of Management,

underscoring our ambition to continuously increase our

responsiveness to customer needs and to consistently

deliver high-performance products and services. As a

result of these changes, the Board of Management will

continue to consist of six members effective per the

2024 AGM..

The Board of Management currently has a dual

leadership structure, under the chairmanship of the

President and Chief Executive Officer, and the vice

chairmanship of the President and Chief Technology

Officer. The Board of Management divides tasks among

its members, charging individual members with specific

managerial tasks. However, the Board of Management

remains collectively responsible for the management of

ASML.

The Board of Management is supervised and advised by

the Supervisory Board. The Board of Management

provides the Supervisory Board with all the information,

in writing or otherwise, necessary for the Supervisory

Board to properly carry out its duties. In addition to the

information provided in their regular meetings, the Board

of Management provides the Supervisory Board with

regular updates on developments relating to our

business, financials, operations and industry

developments in general. Certain important decisions of

the Board of Management require the approval of the

Supervisory Board. For details, see the Supervisory

Board section of this Corporate Governance Statement.

Further information regarding the general responsibilities

of the Board of Management, its relationships with the

Supervisory Board and various stakeholders, the

decision-making process within the Board of

Management and the logistics surrounding the meetings

can be found in the Board of Management’s Rules of

Procedure. These are published in the Governance

section of our website.

Appointments

Members of the Board of Management are appointed by

the Supervisory Board on the recommendation of the

Selection and Nomination Committee and upon notification

to the General Meeting. Members of the Board of

Management are appointed for a term of four years.

Reappointment for consecutive four-year terms is

possible. For persons aged 65 years or above, a

maximum appointment term of two years applies, with

the possibility of reappointment for consecutive two-year

terms. In line with Dutch law, all members of the Board of

Management are engaged by means of a management

services agreement for the duration of their appointment.

The management services agreements between ASML

and the Board of Management members contain specific

provisions regarding severance payments. If ASML

terminates the agreement for reasons which are not

exclusively or mainly found in acts or omissions of the

New_BoardManagement_Intro_Image.jpg

Board of Management member, a severance payment

not exceeding one year’s base salary will be paid.

Furthermore, current agreements stipulate that a

member of the Board of Management, when giving

notice of termination pursuant to a change of control,

will be entitled to a severance amount. Given that such

a resignation is specifically linked to a change of control,

ASML does not consider this provision a deviation from

the Dutch Corporate Governance Code.

The Supervisory Board may suspend and dismiss

members of the Board of Management, but this can

only take place after consulting the General Meeting.

More information about changes related to the Board of

Management during 2023 can be found in the

Supervisory Board Report included in this Annual Report.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 CORPORATE GOVERNANCE CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 180
Board of Management
New_PeterWennick_Image_BoM.jpg Martin A. van den Brink<br><br>(1957, Dutch) New_BoardManagement_Image1.jpg Christophe D. Fouquet<br><br>(1973, French) Frédéric J.M. Schneider-<br><br>Maunoury (1961, French)
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President, Chief Technology<br><br>Officer and Vice Chair of Board<br><br>of Management<br><br>Term expires 2024 Executive Vice President<br><br>and Chief Business Officer<br><br>Term expires 2026 Executive Vice President<br><br>and Chief Operations Officer<br><br>Term expires 2026
Christophe Fouquet was appointed<br><br>Executive Vice President EUV and member<br><br>of the Board of Management in 2018. In<br><br>2022, Christophe was appointed Executive<br><br>Vice President and Chief Business Officer.<br><br>Since joining ASML in 2008, he has held<br><br>several positions, including Senior Director<br><br>Marketing, Vice President Product<br><br>Management, and Executive Vice President<br><br>Applications, a position he held from 2013<br><br>until 2018. Prior to joining ASML, he worked<br><br>for semiconductor equipment peers KLA-<br><br>Tencor and Applied Materials. Christophe<br><br>holds a master’s degree in Physics from the<br><br>Institut Polytechnique de Grenoble. Frédéric Schneider-Maunoury has been<br><br>Executive Vice President and Chief<br><br>Operations Officer since he joined ASML in<br><br>2009. He was appointed to the Board of<br><br>Management in 2010. Prior to joining ASML,<br><br>Frédéric was Vice President Thermal<br><br>Products Manufacturing at power generation<br><br>and rail transport equipment group Alstom,<br><br>having previously served as General Manager<br><br>of the worldwide Hydro Business of Alstom.<br><br>Before joining Alstom, Frédéric held various<br><br>positions at the French Ministry of Trade and<br><br>Industry. He is a graduate of École<br><br>polytechnique (1985) and École Nationale<br><br>Supérieure des Mines (1988) in Paris.
Martin van den Brink has been President and<br><br>CTO of ASML since 2013. He joined ASML<br><br>at its founding in 1984, and for the next 11<br><br>years held various positions in engineering. In<br><br>1995, he became Vice President Technology,<br><br>and in 1999 was appointed Executive Vice<br><br>President Product & Technology and<br><br>member of the Board of Management. Martin<br><br>holds a degree in Electrical Engineering from<br><br>HTS Arnhem (HAN University), as well as a<br><br>degree in Physics (1984) from the University<br><br>of Twente. In 2012, the University of<br><br>Amsterdam awarded him an honorary<br><br>doctorate in Physics.
Peter T.F.M. Wennink<br><br>(1957, Dutch) Roger J.M. Dassen<br><br>(1965, Dutch)
President, Chief Executive Officer<br><br>and Chair of Board of Management<br><br>Term expires 2024 Executive Vice President<br><br>and Chief Financial Officer<br><br>Term expires 2026
Peter Wennink became President and CEO in<br><br>2013, having served as Executive VP, CFO and<br><br>member of the Board of Management since<br><br>1999. Peter was previously a partner at Deloitte<br><br>Accountants, focusing on the semiconductor<br><br>industry. He has an extensive background in<br><br>finance and is a member of the Dutch Institute<br><br>of Registered Accountants. Peter was a<br><br>member of the Advisory Board of the<br><br>Investment Committee of Stichting<br><br>Pensioenfonds ABP until December 31, 2021.<br><br>He serves as Vice Chair on the Board of the<br><br>FME-CWM. Peter is also a member of the<br><br>Board of Captains of Industry Eindhoven<br><br>Region and is Chair of the Eindhovensche<br><br>Fabrikantenkring and of the Supervisory Board<br><br>of the Eindhoven University of Technology.<br><br>Furthermore, Peter is council member of<br><br>Topconsortium voor ‘Kennis en Innovatie’ TKI<br><br>HTS&M, member of the Advisory Committee of<br><br>the Dutch National Growth Fund and a member<br><br>of the Circle of Influence of Startup Delta. New_BoardManagement_Image3.jpg Roger Dassen joined ASML in June 2018 and<br><br>was appointed Executive Vice President and<br><br>CFO and member of the Board of<br><br>Management at the AGM the same year. He<br><br>previously served as Global Vice Chair and<br><br>member of the Executive Board of Deloitte<br><br>Touche Tohmatsu Limited, having been CEO<br><br>of Deloitte Holding BV. Roger holds a<br><br>master’s in Economics and Business<br><br>Administration, a post-master’s in Auditing<br><br>and a PhD in Business Administration, all from<br><br>the University of Maastricht. He is Professor of<br><br>Auditing at Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, and<br><br>sits on the Supervisory Board of the Dutch<br><br>National Bank. He is also the Chair of the<br><br>Supervisory Board of Maastricht University<br><br>Medical Center+ and serves on the Board of<br><br>the Stichting Brainport. New_BoardManagement_Image4.jpg Wayne R. Allan<br><br>(1967, American)
Executive Vice President and<br><br>Chief Strategic Sourcing &<br><br>Procurement Officer<br><br>Term expires 2027
Wayne Allan was appointed Executive Vice<br><br>President, Chief Strategic Sourcing &<br><br>Procurement Officer and member of the<br><br>Board of Management in 2023. Wayne joined<br><br>ASML in 2018 as Executive Vice President of<br><br>Customer Support. Before he joined ASML,<br><br>Wayne served as Senior Vice President of<br><br>Global Manufacturing Operations and as Vice<br><br>President of Wafer Fabs at Micron<br><br>Technology, Inc, the company where he<br><br>began his career in 1987 as a production<br><br>operator. He continued to move into<br><br>operations roles of increasing leadership in<br><br>engineering, planning and production. ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 CORPORATE GOVERNANCE CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 181
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Board of Management (continued)

New_SupervisoryBoard_IntroPage_Background_151223.jpg

Our Supervisory Board supervises the

Board of Management and the general

course of affairs of ASML and its

subsidiaries. The Supervisory Board

also supports the Board of Management

with advice. In fulfilling its role and

responsibilities, the Supervisory Board

takes into consideration the interests

of ASML and its business, as well as the

relevant interests of its stakeholders.

In our two-tier structure, the Supervisory Board is a

separate and independent body from the Board of

Management and from ASML. No member of the

Supervisory Board personally maintains a business

relationship with ASML, other than as a member of the

Supervisory Board.

The Supervisory Board currently consists of nine

members, with the minimum being three.

In performing its tasks, the Supervisory Board focuses on

matters including, ASML’s corporate strategy aimed at

sustainable long-term value creation and its execution;

the staffing of and succession planning for the Board of

Management; the management of risks inherent to

ASML’s business activities; the financial reporting

process; compliance with applicable legislation and

regulations; ASML’s culture and the activities of the

Board of Management in that regard; the relationship

with shareholders and other stakeholders, and ESG

aspects important for ASML.

Important management decisions, such as setting the

operational and financial objectives, the strategy

designed to achieve these objectives, major investments,

budget and the issue, repurchase and cancellation of

shares, require the Supervisory Board’s approval.

The Supervisory Board is governed by its Rules of

Procedure. Items covered in these rules include the

responsibilities of the Supervisory Board and its

committees, the composition of the Supervisory Board

and its committees, logistics surrounding the meetings,

the meeting attendance of members of the Supervisory

Board, the rotation schedule for these members and the

committee charters. The Supervisory Board’s Rules of

Procedure and the committee charters are regularly

reviewed and, if needed, amended. The Audit Committee

charter is reviewed annually to confirm that the charter

still complies with applicable rules and regulations,

especially those relating to the Sarbanes-Oxley Act.

Read more information on the meetings and activities of the

Supervisory Board in 2023 in:

Supervisory Board Report - Meetings and attendance

Appointments

The members of the Supervisory Board are appointed by

the General Meeting based on binding nominations

proposed by the Supervisory Board. When nominating

persons for (re)appointment, the Supervisory Board

checks whether the candidates fit the Supervisory

Board’s profile. The profile is available in the Governance

section of our website. The General Meeting may reject

binding nominations of the Supervisory Board by way of

a resolution adopted with an absolute majority of the

votes cast, representing at least one-third of ASML’s

outstanding share capital. If the votes cast in favor of

such a resolution do not represent at least one-third of

the total outstanding capital, a new shareholders’

meeting can be convened, at which the nomination can

be overruled by an absolute majority.

The Supervisory Board generally informs the General

Meeting and the Works Council about upcoming

retirements by rotation at the AGM in the year preceding

the actual retirement(s) by rotation. This ensures they

have sufficient opportunity to recommend candidates for

the upcoming vacancies. The Supervisory Board has the

right to reject the proposed recommendations.

Furthermore, the Works Council has an enhanced right

to make recommendations for one-third of the members

of the Supervisory Board. This enhanced

recommendation right implies that the Supervisory Board

may only reject the Works Council’s recommendations in

limited circumstances: (i) if the relevant person is

unsuitable or (ii) if the Supervisory Board would not be

duly composed if the recommended person were

appointed as Supervisory Board member.

Members of the Supervisory Board serve for a maximum

term of four years or a shorter period as per the

Supervisory Board’s rotation schedule. Supervisory

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4 Stage 5
Recommendation<br><br>right GM and<br><br>Works Council Announcement of<br><br>nomination for<br><br>appointment by SB Works Council has the<br><br>right to determine its<br><br>position Formal nomination<br><br>for appointment<br><br>by SB Appointment<br><br>SB member<br><br>by GM

Board members are eligible for reappointment for another

maximum term of four years. After that, members may be

reappointed again for a maximum period of two years. This

appointment may be extended for a final term of no more

than two years. The rotation schedule is available in the

Governance section of our website.

If the General Meeting loses confidence in the Supervisory

Board, it may, by an absolute majority of the votes

representing at least one-third of the total outstanding

capital, withdraw its confidence in the Supervisory Board.

This resolution shall result in the immediate dismissal of the

entire Supervisory Board. In such case, the Enterprise

Chamber of the Amsterdam Court of Appeal shall appoint

one or more members to the Supervisory Board at the

request of the Board of Management.

Further information about changes to the Supervisory Board's

composition in 2022 and 2023 can be found in the

Supervisory Board Report

Supervisory Board committees

The Supervisory Board, while retaining overall responsibility,

has assigned some of its tasks and responsibilities to five

committees: the Audit Committee, the ESG Committee, the

Remuneration Committee, the Selection and Nomination

Committee and the Technology Committee.

Further information on the Supervisory Board committees can

be found in the

Supervisory Board Report and in the charters of the committees

as posted on our website

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 CORPORATE GOVERNANCE CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 182
Supervisory Board
Antoinette (Annet) P. Aris<br><br>(1958, Dutch)
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Member of the Supervisory<br><br>Board since 2015<br><br>(Third term expires in 2024)
Vice Chair of the Supervisory<br><br>Board, Member<br><br>of the Remuneration Committee, the<br><br>Selection and Nomination<br><br>Committee and the Technology<br><br>Committee
Annet Aris has been a member of the<br><br>Supervisory Board since 2015. She is Senior<br><br>Affiliate Professor of Strategy at INSEAD<br><br>business school, France, a position she has<br><br>held since 2003. From 1994 to 2003, she was<br><br>a partner at McKinsey & Company in<br><br>Germany. Annet also sits on the supervisory<br><br>boards of Jungheinrich AG and Randstad<br><br>Holding NV. Alexander F.M. Everke<br><br>(1963, German)
Member of the Supervisory Board<br><br>since 2022<br><br>(First term expires in 2026)
Nils S. Andersen<br><br>(1958, Danish) Nils Andersen joined the Supervisory Board<br><br>in 2023, and has been its Chair since his<br><br>appointment. Nils also serves as non-<br><br>Executive Director of Unilever Plc., a position<br><br>he has held since 2015, having served as<br><br>Unilever's Chair from November 2019 until<br><br>December 1, 2023. Nils is also Chair of the<br><br>Board of Scan Global Logistics A/S. From<br><br>2018 until April 2023, he was the Chair of the<br><br>Supervisory Board of Akzo Nobel NV and,<br><br>between 2007 and 2016, Group Chief<br><br>Executive of A.P. Møller –Mærsk. From 2001<br><br>until 2007, Nils served as President and Chief<br><br>Executive Officer of Carlsberg and Carlsberg<br><br>Breweries. Member of the ESG Committee and<br><br>the Remuneration Committee D. Mark Durcan<br><br>(1961, American) Mark Durcan was appointed as a member<br><br>of the Supervisory Board in 2020. From<br><br>2012 to 2017, he was CEO of Micron<br><br>Technology, Inc., having joined the<br><br>company in 1984 and having held various<br><br>management positions before being<br><br>appointed as CEO. Furthermore, Mark was<br><br>director at Freescale Semiconductor, MWI<br><br>Veterinary Supply and Veoneer, Inc. Mark<br><br>is a Non-Executive Director at Advanced<br><br>Micro Devices, Inc., and Member of the<br><br>Board and Lead Independent Director at<br><br>Cencora. He is also a member of the<br><br>Board of Trustees for Rice University<br><br>(Texas), Director at St Luke’s Health<br><br>System (Idaho) and Director at Natural<br><br>Intelligence Systems CA private AI, Startup<br><br>Company.
Member of the Supervisory<br><br>Board since 2023<br><br>(First term expires in 2027) Alexander Everke joined the Supervisory<br><br>Board in 2022. He is the former CEO of ams-<br><br>OSRAM AG, a position he held from 2016<br><br>until April 2023, after having joined ams AG in<br><br>October 2015. Prior to that, Alexander held a<br><br>range of positions in the semiconductor<br><br>industry including management roles at<br><br>Siemens and Infineon and various leadership<br><br>positions at NXP Semiconductors. Member of the Supervisory<br><br>Board since 2020<br><br>(First term expires in 2024)
Chair of the Supervisory Board,<br><br>Chair of the Selection and<br><br>Nomination Committee Chair of the Technology Committee,<br><br>member of the Selection and<br><br>Nomination Committee ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 CORPORATE GOVERNANCE CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 183
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Supervisory Board (continued)
Terri L. Kelly<br><br>(1961, American) Birgit M. Conix<br><br>(1965, Belgian) Jack P. de Kreij<br><br>(1959, Dutch) Association of Listed Companies (VEUO).<br><br>From 2003 to 2018, Jack was CFO and a<br><br>member of the Executive Board of Royal<br><br>Vopak NV, being the Vice Chair of the<br><br>Executive Board of Royal Vopak NV since<br><br>2010. Prior to that, between 1986 and 2003<br><br>he worked at PricewaterhouseCoopers,<br><br>where he held various management<br><br>positions as (Senior) Partner and was<br><br>amongst others Managing Partner &<br><br>Territory Leader of the M&A focused<br><br>Transaction Services practice in The<br><br>Netherlands. Jack started his career in 1980<br><br>with the Dutch Ministry of Finance, where he<br><br>worked until 1986.
--- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---
Member of the Supervisory<br><br>Board since 2018<br><br>(Second term expires in 2026) Member of the Supervisory<br><br>Board since 2021<br><br>(First term expires in 2025) Member of the Supervisory<br><br>Board since 2023<br><br>(First term expires in 2027)
Chair of the Remuneration Committee,<br><br>member of the Selection and<br><br>Nomination Committee Chair of the ESG Committee and<br><br>member of the Audit Committee Chair of the Audit Committee<br><br>and member of the Remuneration<br><br>Committee
Birgit Conix became a member of the<br><br>Supervisory Board in 2021. She has been<br><br>CFO and a member of the Management<br><br>Board of Sonova Holding AG since June<br><br>2021. From 2018 until January 1, 2021,<br><br>Birgit was a member of the Executive Board<br><br>and CFO of TUI AG. She was previously<br><br>the CFO of the Belgian media, cable and<br><br>telecommunications company Telenet<br><br>Group NV Prior to that, Birgit held various<br><br>management positions in finance at Johnson<br><br>& Johnson, Heineken, Tenneco and<br><br>Reed Elsevier.
Terri Kelly has been a member of the<br><br>Supervisory Board since 2018. Previously,<br><br>she was President and CEO at W.L. Gore &<br><br>Associates from 2005 until 2018, having<br><br>worked at Gore since 1983 in various<br><br>management roles. She also served on<br><br>Gore’s Board of Directors through July<br><br>2018. Terri is a Trustee of the Alfred I.<br><br>Dupont Charitable Trust, which provides<br><br>oversight of the Nemours Foundation. She is<br><br>the Chair of the Board of the University of<br><br>Delaware and she is a member of the Board<br><br>of Directors of United Rentals, Inc. Jack de Kreij joined the Supervisory Board in<br><br>2023. Among other roles, he is currently the<br><br>Vice Chair of the Supervisory Board and<br><br>Chair of the Audit Committee at TomTom NV<br><br>and Wolters Kluwer NV. Jack is also a<br><br>member of the Supervisory Board, Chair of<br><br>the Audit Committee and member of the ESG<br><br>Committee at Royal Boskalis Westminster<br><br>NV. In addition, he is the Chair of the Board<br><br>of the Dutch
An L. Steegen<br><br>(1971, Belgian)
Member of the Supervisory<br><br>Board since 2022<br><br>(First term expires in 2026)
D. Warren A. East<br><br>(1961, British) Member of the ESG Committee<br><br>and the Technology Committee
Terri_L_Kelly.jpg Member of the Supervisory<br><br>Board since 2020<br><br>(First term expires in 2024) An Steegen joined the Supervisory Board in<br><br>2022. She is co-CEO and member of the<br><br>Board of Directors of Barco NV, a position<br><br>she has held since October 2021. Prior to<br><br>that, An was R&D director at IBM<br><br>Semiconductor and Executive Vice President<br><br>at the research institute imec in Belgium.<br><br>Furthermore, An was CTO and Executive<br><br>Vice President Electronic and Electro-Optical<br><br>Materials at Umicore.
Member of the Audit Committee and<br><br>the Technology Committee
Warren East became a member of the<br><br>Supervisory Board in 2020 and is currently<br><br>also a Non-Executive Board member at<br><br>Tokamak Energy plc. Warren was CEO of<br><br>Rolls-Royce Group Plc from 2015 until<br><br>December 2022. He spent his early career at<br><br>Texas Instruments Ltd from 1985 to 1994<br><br>before joining ARM Holdings, Plc, where he<br><br>held various management positions and was<br><br>appointed CEO from 2001 to 2013. ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 CORPORATE GOVERNANCE CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 184
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Supervisory Board (continued)

The section below addresses a number of

topics that apply to both the Board of

Management and the Supervisory Board.

Remuneration and share ownership

The remuneration of the Board of Management is

determined by the Supervisory Board, on

recommendation of the Remuneration Committee, in

accordance with the Remuneration Policy for the Board

of Management as adopted by the General Meeting. The

current Remuneration Policy for the Board of

Management was adopted by the General Meeting in

2022.

The remuneration of the Supervisory Board is based on

the Remuneration Policy for the Supervisory Board. The

current Remuneration Policy for the Supervisory Board

was adopted by the General Meeting in 2023. The

remuneration of the Supervisory Board is not dependent

on our (financial) results. The members of the Supervisory

Board do not receive ASML shares, or rights to acquire

ASML shares, as part of their remuneration.

Board of Management and Supervisory Board members

who acquire or have acquired ASML shares or rights to

acquire ASML shares must intend to keep these for long-

term investment only. In concluding transactions in ASML

shares, members of the Board of Management and the

Supervisory Board must comply with our Insider Trading

Rules. Any transactions in ASML shares performed by

members of the Board of Management and the

Supervisory Board are reported to the Dutch AFM. Nils

Andersen holds 1,060 ASML shares. No other member

of the Supervisory Board currently has any ASML shares

or rights to acquire ASML shares.

We will not and have not granted any personal loans,

guarantees or the like to members of the Board of

Management and the Supervisory Board.

Our Articles of Association provide for the indemnification

of the members of the Board of Management and the

Supervisory Board against claims that are a direct result

of their tasks, provided that such claims are not

attributable to willful misconduct or intentional

recklessness of the respective member. We have also

implemented the indemnification of the members of the

Board of Management and the Supervisory Board by

means of separate indemnification agreements for each

member.

Detailed information on the Board of Management’s and the

Supervisory Board’s remuneration can be found in the:

Remuneration Report

Diversity

Pursuant to the Nasdaq Stock Market’s listing standards

with respect to board diversity (disclosures), ASML, as a

foreign private issuer, is required to have at least two

diverse Supervisory Board members or explain the

reasons for not meeting this objective. Furthermore, a

Board diversity matrix is required to be included in the

Annual Report on Form 20-F, containing certain

demographic and other information regarding members

of the Supervisory Board. ASML currently complies with

the diversity requirement, as we currently have four

female and five male members on our Supervisory

Board. The Board diversity matrix is set out on this page.

Board Diversity Matrix<br><br>(status per December 31, 2023)
Female Male Non-Binary Did not<br><br>Disclose
Part I: Gender Identity
Directors 4<br><br>(2022: 4) 5<br><br>(2022: 5) 0<br><br>(2022: 0) 0<br><br>(2022: 0)
Part II: Demographic Background
Underrepresented Individual in Home<br><br>Country Jurisdiction 0<br><br>(2022: 0) 0<br><br>(2022: 0) 0<br><br>(2022: 0) 0<br><br>(2022: 0)
LGBTQI+ 0<br><br>(2022: 0) 0<br><br>(2022: 0) 0<br><br>(2022: 0) 0<br><br>(2022: 0)
Did Not Disclose Demographic Background 0<br><br>(2022: 0) 0<br><br>(2022: 0) 0<br><br>(2022: 0) 0<br><br>(2022: 0) Country of Principal Executive Offices The Netherlands
--- ---
Foreign Private Issuer Yes
Disclosure Prohibited under Home Country Law No
Total Number of Supervisory Board members 9 (2022: 9) Supervisory Board gender diversity Supervisory Board nationality
--- --- --- --- ---
BoardRelatedMatters_Icon1.jpg 55.6% New_OtherBoardRelatedMatters_DutchFlag_120124.jpg New_OtherBoardRelatedMatters_GermanFlag_120124.jpg New_OtherBoardRelatedMatters_USFlag_120124.jpg
Leadership level men Dutch x2 German x1 American x2
BoardRelatedMatters_Icon2.jpg 44.4% New_OtherBoardRelatedMatters_BritishFlag_120124.jpg New_OtherBoardRelatedMatters_BelgianFlag_120124 .jpg New_OtherBoardRelatedMatters_DanishFlag_120124.jpg
Leadership level women British x1 Belgian x2 Danish x1
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 CORPORATE GOVERNANCE CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 185
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Other Board-related matters

New_OtherBoardRelated_Image_170124.jpg

On January 1, 2022, the Dutch gender diversity bill came

into force, introducing a quota for the supervisory boards

of Dutch listed companies following which the composition

of the supervisory board should comprise at least one-

third men and one-third women. New appointments will

be declared null and void in the event of non-compliance

with this requirement. The bill also introduced a

requirement to set ambitious gender balance targets for

boards of management and senior management of large

listed and non-listed Dutch NVs and BVs and a plan

which outlines the actions needed in order to meet the

gender diversity targets. Based on the gender diversity

bill, companies are required to report on the gender

balance targets, the plan and their progress made in

achieving the gender balance targets to the Dutch Social

and Economic Council within 10 months after the end of

the financial year and in the management report.

The 2022 Dutch Corporate Governance Code contains a

requirement to adopt D&I policies for the Board of

Management, the Supervisory Board as well as a

company-wide D&I policy for the entire workforce

including senior management. As part thereof, ASML has

set has set targets on gender diversity and other D&I

aspects relevant for ASML.

Currently, the Supervisory Board meets the gender quota

of the Dutch gender diversity bill, as both men and

women are represented on the Supervisory Board by at

least three out of nine members. During 2023, the

Supervisory Board adopted the Supervisory Board D&I

Policy, which has been incorporated as an annex to the

Supervisory Board's Rules of Procedure, which can be

found on our website.

Currently, no seats are taken by women on the Board of

Management. During 2022, the Supervisory Board

updated the Board of Management Diversity Policy and

set a gender balance target for the Board of

Management to in 2026 have at least one female and a

at least one male Board of Management member. Taking

into account the composition of the Board of

Management per the 2024 AGM, this would lead to a

female representation of at least 17% based on the size

of the Board of Management per the 2024 AGM, being

six members. When setting the gender balance target for

the Board of Management, the Supervisory Board has

considered the technology environment ASML operates

in, with a thinly populated global STEM (science,

technology, engineering and math) talent pool, making it

challenging to recruit female talent. Our R&D workforce is

17% female. The Supervisory Board has also considered

the female representation of the ASML group overall,

which was 44% (December 31, 2023) and the female

representation in senior leadership (JG 13+), which was

11% (December 31, 2023). Furthermore, during 2022 a

target was set to reach a representation of women at

senior management level of 12% by 2024. To make this

gender target for senior management tangible, we also

set a goal for the total inflow of women and inflow of

female leaders (JG 9+) of  24% in 2025. The Supervisory

Board also included performance metrics aimed at

improving the representation of women in senior

leadership in the Board of Management's long-term

incentive. The Board of Management Diversity Policy is

part of the Board of Management's Rules of Procedure,

which can be found on our website.

The Supervisory Board fully supports ASML’s Diversity &

Inclusion strategy as set out in this Annual Report. We

recognize that human capital is ASML’s most valuable

asset and that our success is driven by our unique and

diverse teams. Diversity promotes the inclusion of different

perspectives and ideas, mitigates against groupthink and

ensures ASML can benefit from all available talent. This

also applies to the Board of Management and our senior

management, where a diverse composition contributes

to robust decision-making and proper functioning.

Diversity complements ASML’s company values –

challenge, collaborate and care.

We are building and implementing company-wide

programs to further promote diversity and inclusion at all

levels of our workforce. This includes specific programs

aimed at attracting, retaining and developing diverse

leaders with the purpose of increasing our talent pool of

diverse talent for senior leadership and Board of

Management positions.

Our Global Diversity & Inclusion Council, founded in

2021, consists of senior leaders who act on behalf of

ASML to provide thought leadership. The Council,

chaired by a member of the Board of Management,

proposes the Diversity & Inclusion strategy to the Board

of Management, sets, promotes and monitors diversity

and inclusion initiatives, and leads company-wide

accountability for our goals. We also have a global

diversity and inclusion team, including a Chief Diversity

Officer, who is responsible for driving initiatives that are

related to diversity and inclusion across ASML.

Our company-wide diversity and inclusion approach is

integrated into our people strategy and focuses on three key

areas within ASML: leadership, culture and talent. The

Attractive workplace for all section contains more information

about our D&I approach, our targets and performance in

2023 as well as a look ahead at our D&I agenda and priority

areas for the period up to and including 2025.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 CORPORATE GOVERNANCE CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 186
Other Board-related matters (continued)
New_WomenLeadership_Icon.jpg 12%
--- ---
Target 2024 representation of<br><br>women at leadership level
The key areas of our D&I approach are as follows:
•Leadership: we are developing inclusive leadership<br><br>programs and starting to build accountability into<br><br>our performance and development processes. We<br><br>engage leaders to foster their commitment to<br><br>creating an inclusive culture and building a diverse<br><br>workforce
•Talent: we aim to increase the representation of<br><br>underrepresented groups by addressing our<br><br>systems and end-to-end people processes,<br><br>including talent acquisition, and by providing career<br><br>advancement programs, that positively impact<br><br>under-represented groups.
•Culture: We strive to create an inclusive culture for<br><br>all in line with ASML's values by increasing the<br><br>capabilities of employees and leaders to act<br><br>inclusively and by empowering our employee<br><br>networks to expand their impact and reach. 25%
---
Inflow of female<br><br>leaders in 2023<br><br>(9+)

Read more information on our diversity and inclusion strategy,

initiatives, women in leadership and performance data in:

Social - Attractive workplace for all - Inspiring a unified culture

and Non-financial statements - Non-financial indicators -

Attractive workplace for all

For the Board of Management specifically, the

Supervisory Board will select candidates for appointment

to the Board of Management with due observance of

ASML's objective to foster a diverse and inclusive

working environment. Accordingly, ASML aims to fill

vacancies by considering candidates that bring the

required expertise and contribute to ASML's diversity.

The Supervisory Board, when assessing the composition

of the Board of Management and identifying suitable

candidates for succession, will consider candidates on

merit against objective criteria and the specific profile for

the job, while having due regard for the relevant aspects

of diversity. This applies in particular to continuously

striving for a more balanced gender representation.

In ASML's internal development efforts for potential

Board of Management members, we strive for

participation of a diverse group of employees, specifically

senior leadership.

Any search firm engaged by the Supervisory Board or its

Selection and Nomination Committee will be specifically

directed to include diverse candidates in general and

multiple female candidates in particular.

Conflicts of interest and related party transactions

Conflict of interest procedures are incorporated in both

the Board of Management’s and the Supervisory Board’s

Rules of Procedure. These procedures reflect Dutch law

and the principles and best practice provisions of the

Code with respect to conflicts of interest.

There have been no transactions in 2023, nor are there

currently any transactions, between ASML or any of

ASML’s subsidiaries, or any significant shareholder and

any member of the Board of Management, officer,

Supervisory Board member or any relative or spouse

thereof, other than ordinary course compensation

arrangements. Furthermore, ASML has not granted any

personal loans, guarantees or the like to members of the

Board of Management or Supervisory Board.

Outside positions

Pursuant to Dutch legislation, a member of the Board of

Management may not be a Supervisory Board member

in more than two other large companies or large

foundations, as defined in Dutch law. A member of the

Board of Management may never be the Chair of a

Supervisory Board of a large company. Board of

Management members require prior approval from the

Supervisory Board before accepting a position of another

large company or foundation. Members of the Board of

Management are also required to notify the Supervisory

Board of all important functions held or to be held by

them. The remuneration received by members of the

Board of Management from outside positions, if any,

shall be reimbursed to ASML, unless otherwise agreed

with the Supervisory Board in accordance with the Rules

of Procedure of the Board of Management.

Dutch law stipulates that a Supervisory Board member

may not hold more than five Supervisory Board positions

in large companies or large foundations as defined in

Dutch law, with chairmanships counting twice.

During the financial year 2023, all members of the Board

of Management and the Supervisory Board complied

with the requirements described above.

ESG sustainability powers<br><br>our innovation mindset<br><br>because it underpins<br><br>inclusivity and diversity.”
Christophe Fouquet
Executive Vice President, Chief Business Officer and<br><br>member of the Board of Management
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 CORPORATE GOVERNANCE CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 187
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Other Board-related matters (continued)

New_AGM_ShareCapital_Background_151223.jpg

A General Meeting (AGM) is held at least once<br><br>a year and generally takes place in Veldhoven,<br><br>the Netherlands. In 2023, shareholders had the<br><br>option to attend the 2023 AGM in person<br><br>in Veldhoven or virtually. The agenda for the<br><br>AGM typically includes the following topics:
In 2023, we engaged<br><br>with investors to<br><br>obtain their<br><br>perspectives and<br><br>understand their<br><br>expectations.”
Item 1<br><br>Discussion of the management report and the adoption<br><br>of the Financial Statements over the past financial year;<br><br>Item 2<br><br>Discussion of the dividend policy and approval of any<br><br>proposed dividends;<br><br>Item 3<br><br>Advisory vote on the Remuneration Report over the past<br><br>financial year;<br><br>Item 4<br><br>The discharge from liability of the members of the Board<br><br>of Management and the Supervisory Board for the<br><br>performance of their responsibilities in the previous<br><br>financial year;<br><br>Item 5<br><br>The limited authorization for the Board of Management<br><br>to issue (rights to) shares in ASML’s capital, and to exclude<br><br>preemptive rights for such issuances, as well as to<br><br>repurchase shares and to cancel shares; and<br><br>Item 6<br><br>Any other topics proposed by the Board of Management,<br><br>the Supervisory Board or shareholders in accordance with<br><br>Dutch law and the Articles of Association.
Nils Andersen
Chair of the Supervisory Board

Proposals placed on the agenda by the Supervisory

Board, the Board of Management or shareholders,

provided that they have submitted the proposals in

accordance with the applicable legal provisions, are

discussed and resolved upon. Shareholders representing

at least 1.0% of ASML’s outstanding share capital or

representing a share value of at least €50 million are

entitled to place items on the agenda of a General

Meeting at least 60 days before the date of the meeting.

Extraordinary general meetings may be held when

considered necessary by the Supervisory Board or Board

of Management. In addition, an extraordinary general

meeting must be held if one or more ordinary or

cumulative preference shareholders, who jointly

represent at least 10% of the issued share capital, make

a written request to that effect to the Supervisory Board

and the Board of Management. The request must specify

in detail the business to be dealt with.

Shareholders’ meetings are convened by public

announcement via the website of ASML no later than

42 days prior to the meeting, as stipulated by Dutch law.

The record date is set at the 28th day prior to the day of

the AGM. Persons who are registered as shareholders

on the record date are entitled to attend the meeting and

to exercise other shareholder rights.

The Board of Management and Supervisory Board

provide shareholders with information relevant to the

topics on the agenda by means of an explanation of the

agenda as well as by documents necessary or helpful for

this purpose. The agenda indicates which agenda items

are voting items, and which items are for discussion only.

All documents related to the General Meeting, including

the agenda with explanations, are posted on our

website.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 CORPORATE GOVERNANCE CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 188
AGM and share capital

ASML shareholders may appoint a proxy who can vote

on their behalf at the AGM. In addition, we use an

internet proxy voting system, facilitating shareholder

participation without having to attend in person. We also

provide the option for shareholders to issue voting

proxies or voting instructions to an independent civil law

notary prior to the AGM. We do not solicit from or

nominate proxies for our shareholders.

Hybrid AGM

Similar to the 2022 AGM, we organized a hybrid AGM in

2023, accommodating attendance in person as well as

virtually by enabling shareholders to follow the

proceedings of the meeting via video webcast and to

vote electronically during the meeting. Shareholders also

had the opportunity to vote in advance via written or

electronic proxy. As we highly value interaction with our

shareholders, we invited shareholders who attended the

AGM in person to ask questions about the agenda items

during the AGM and we provided holders of shares

traded on Euronext Amsterdam who attended the AGM

virtually the opportunity to ask live questions in writing

through the virtual meeting platform. All questions were

answered during the AGM.

Resolutions are adopted by the General Meeting by an

absolute majority of the votes cast (except where a

different proportion of votes are required by the Articles

of Association or Dutch law), and there are generally no

quorum requirements applicable to such meetings.

Voting results from the AGM are made available on our

website within 15 days of the meeting. The draft report of

the AGM is made available on our website or on request

no later than three months after the meeting.

Shareholders have the opportunity to provide comments

in the subsequent three months, after which the report is

adopted by the Chair and the Secretary of the meeting.

The adopted report is also available on our website and

on request.

Powers

In addition to the items submitted annually at the AGM,

the General Meeting also has other powers, with due

observance of the statutory provisions. These include

resolving:

•To amend the articles of association;

•To issue shares if and insofar as the Board of

Management has not been designated by the General

Meeting for this purpose; and

•To adopt the Remuneration Policies for the members

of the Board of Management and the Supervisory

Board.

(Proposed) amendments of the Articles of Association

require the approval of the Supervisory Board. A quorum

requirement applies for the General Meeting at which an

amendment of the Articles of Association is proposed:

more than half of the issued share capital is required to

be represented and, the proposal requires a voting

majority of at least three-fourths of the votes cast. If the

quorum requirement is not met, a subsequent General

Meeting shall be convened, to be held within four weeks

of the first meeting. At this second meeting, the

resolution can be adopted with at least three-fourths of

the votes cast, irrespective of the share capital

represented. If a resolution to amend the Articles of

Association is proposed by the Board of Management,

the resolution will be adopted with an absolute majority

of votes cast irrespective of the represented share capital

at the General Meeting.

Our Articles of Association are included as Exhibit 1.1

hereto, and are incorporated by reference herein.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 CORPORATE GOVERNANCE CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 189
AGM and share capital (continued)
ASML’s authorized share capital amounts to 126.0 million and is divided into:
--- --- --- ---
Number of shares Nominal value Votes per share
700,000,000 €0.09 per share 1
700,000,000 €0.09 per share 1
The issued and fully paid-up ordinary shares with a nominal value of 0.09 each were as follows:
2021 2022 2023
402,601,613 394,589,411 393,421,721
3,873,663 8,548,631 6,162,857
406,475,276 403,138,042 399,584,578

All values are in Euros.

As of December 31, 2023, 86,366,821 ordinary shares

were held by 268 registered holders with a registered

address in the US. Since certain of our ordinary shares

were held by brokers and nominees, the number of

record holders in the US may not be representative of the

number of beneficial holders, or of where the beneficial

holders are resident.

Each ordinary share consists of 900 fractional shares.

Fractional shares entitle the holder thereof to a fractional

dividend, but do not give entitlement to voting rights.

Only those persons who hold shares directly in the share

register in the Netherlands, held by us at our address at

5504 DR Veldhoven, de Run 6501, the Netherlands, or in

the New York share register, held by JP Morgan Chase

Bank, N.A., P.O. Box 64506, St. Paul, MN 55164-0506,

United States, can hold fractional shares. Shareholders

who hold ordinary shares through the deposit system

under the Dutch Securities Bank Giro Transfer Act

maintained by the Dutch central securities depository

Euroclear Nederland or through the Depository Trust

Company cannot hold fractional shares.

No cumulative preference shares have been issued. Each

share carries one vote.

Special voting rights, limitation voting rights and transfers

of shares

There are no special voting rights on the issued shares in

our share capital.

In 2012, we issued shares to three key customers – Intel,

TSMC and Samsung – as part of the customer co-

investment program (CCIP) to accelerate ASML’s

development of EUV. Under this program, the

participating customers funded certain development

programs and invested in ASML’s ordinary shares. The

shares issued in the CCIP were held by foundations

which issued depository receipts to participants in the

CCIP. In 2023, the remaining participating customer

cancelled its depository receipts in accordance with the

terms and conditions of the agreement between ASML

and the relevant customer.

There are currently no limitations, either under Dutch law

or in ASML’s Articles of Association, on the transfer of

ordinary shares in the share capital of ASML. Pursuant to

ASML’s Articles of Association, the Supervisory Board’s

approval shall be required for every transfer of cumulative

preference shares.

Issue and repurchase of (rights to) shares

Our Board of Management has the power to issue

ordinary shares and cumulative preference shares insofar

as it has been authorized to do so by the General

Meeting. The Board of Management requires approval of

the Supervisory Board for such an issue. The

authorization by the General Meeting can only be granted

for a certain period not exceeding five years and may be

extended for no longer than five years on each occasion.

If the General Meeting has not authorized the Board of

Management to issue shares, the General Meeting will be

authorized to issue shares on the Board of

Management’s proposal, provided that the Supervisory

Board has approved such a proposal.

Holders of ASML’s ordinary shares have a preemptive

right, in proportion to the aggregate nominal amount of

the ordinary shares held by them. This preemptive right

may be restricted or excluded. Holders of ordinary

shares do not have preemptive right with respect to any

ordinary shares issued for consideration other than cash

or ordinary shares issued to employees. If authorized for

this purpose by the General Meeting, the Board of

Management has the power, subject to approval of the

Supervisory Board, to restrict or exclude the preemptive

rights of holders of ordinary shares.

2023 authorization to issue shares

At our 2023 AGM, the Board of Management was

authorized from April 26, 2023 through October 26,

2024, subject to the approval of the Supervisory Board,

to issue shares and/or rights thereto representing up to a

maximum of 5% of our issued share capital at April 26,

2023, plus an additional 5% of our issued share capital

at April 26, 2023, that may be issued in connection with

mergers, acquisitions and/or (strategic) alliances. Our

shareholders also authorized the Board of Management

through October 26, 2024, subject to approval of the

Supervisory Board, to restrict or exclude preemptive

rights with respect to holders of ordinary shares up to a

maximum of 5% of our issued share capital in connection

with the general authorization to issue shares and/or

rights to shares, plus an additional 5% in connection with

the authorization to issue shares and/or rights to shares

in connection with mergers, acquisitions and/or

(strategic) alliances.

We may repurchase our issued ordinary shares at any

time, subject to compliance with the requirements of

Dutch law and our Articles of Association. Any such

repurchases are subject to the approval of the

Supervisory Board and the authorization by the General

Meeting, which authorization may not be for more than

18 months.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 CORPORATE GOVERNANCE CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 190
AGM and share capital (continued)

2023 authorization to repurchase shares

At the 2023 AGM, the Board of Management was

authorized, subject to Supervisory Board approval, to

repurchase through October 26, 2024, up to a maximum

of 10% of our issued share capital at April 26, 2023, at a

price between the nominal value of the ordinary shares

purchased and 110% of the market price of these

securities on Euronext Amsterdam or Nasdaq.

Read more details on our share buyback program in:

Consolidated Financial Statements - Notes to the Consolidated

Financial Statements - Note 22 Shareholders’ equity.

ASML Preference Shares Foundation

The ASML Preference Shares Foundation (Stichting

Preferente Aandelen ASML), a foundation organized

under Dutch law, has been granted an option right to

acquire preference shares in the share capital of ASML.

The Foundation may exercise the Preference Share

Option in situations where, in the opinion of the

Foundation’s Board of Directors, ASML’s interests,

ASML’s business or the interests of ASML’s

stakeholders are at stake. This may be the case if:

•A public bid for ASML’s shares is announced or made,

or there is a justified expectation that such a bid will be

made without any agreement having been reached

with ASML in relation to such a bid; or

•In the opinion of the Foundation’s Board of Directors,

the (attempted) exercise of the voting rights by one

shareholder or more shareholders, acting in concert, is

materially in conflict with ASML’s interests, ASML’s

business or ASML’s stakeholders.

Objectives of the Foundation

The Foundation’s objectives are to look after the interests

of ASML and the enterprises maintained by and/or

affiliated in a group with ASML, in such a way that the

interests of ASML, of those enterprises and of all parties

concerned are safeguarded in the best possible way,

and that influences in conflict with these interests, which

might affect the independence or the identity of ASML

and those companies, are deterred to the best of the

Foundation’s ability, and everything related to the above

or possibly conducive thereto. The Foundation aims to

realize its objects by acquiring and holding cumulative

preference shares in the capital of ASML and by

exercising the rights attached to these shares,

particularly the voting rights.

The Preference Share Option

The Preference Share Option gives the Foundation the

right to acquire such number of cumulative preference

shares as the Foundation will require, provided that the

aggregate nominal value of such number of cumulative

preference shares shall not exceed the aggregate

nominal value of the ordinary shares issued at the time of

exercise of the Preference Share Option. The

subscription price will be equal to their nominal value.

Only one-fourth of the subscription price would be

payable at the time of initial issuance of the cumulative

preference shares, with the other three-fourths of the

nominal value only being payable when ASML calls up

this amount. Exercise of the preference Share Option

could effectively dilute the voting-power of the

outstanding ordinary shares by one-half.

Cancellation of cumulative preference shares

Cancellation and repayment of the issued cumulative

preference shares by ASML requires authorization by the

General Meeting, on a proposal to this effect made by

the Board of Management and approved by the

Supervisory Board. If the Preference Share Option is

exercised and as a result cumulative preference shares

are issued, ASML will initiate the repurchase or

cancellation of all cumulative preference shares held by

the Foundation on the Foundation’s request. In that

case, ASML is obliged to effect the repurchase and

respective cancellation as soon as possible. A

cancellation will result in a repayment of the amount paid

and exemption from the obligation to pay up on the

cumulative preference shares. A repurchase of the

cumulative preference shares can only take place when

such shares are fully paid up.

If the Foundation does not request ASML to repurchase

or cancel all cumulative preference shares held by the

Foundation within 20 months of issuance of these

shares, we will be required to convene a General Meeting

for the purpose of deciding on a repurchase or

cancellation of these shares.

Board of Directors

The Foundation is independent of ASML. The Board of

Directors of the Foundation is composed of four

independent members from the Netherlands’ business

and academic communities. The Foundation’s Board of

Directors is composed per December 31, 2023, of the

following members: Mr. A.P.M. van der Poel, Mr. S.

Perrick, Mr. S.S. Vollebregt and Mr. J. Streppel.

Other than the arrangements made with the Foundation

as described above, ASML has not established any other

anti-takeover devices.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 CORPORATE GOVERNANCE CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 191
AGM and share capital (continued)

Major shareholders

The Dutch Act on the supervision of financial markets and US securities laws contain requirements regarding the

disclosure of capital interests and voting rights in listed companies. The following table sets forth the total number of

ordinary shares owned by each shareholder that reported to the Dutch AFM or the US SEC a beneficial ownership of

ordinary shares that is at least 3.0% (5.0%, in the case of the SEC) of our ordinary shares issued and outstanding.

Also included in the table below is the total number of ordinary shares owned by our members of the Board of

Management as of December 31, 2023. The information set out below with respect to shareholders is based on

public filings with the SEC and AFM as of February 7, 2024.

Shares % of Class4
Capital Research and Management Company1 40,615,837 10.32%
BlackRock Inc.2 31,259,169 7.95%
Members of ASML’s current Board of Management and Supervisory Board (7 persons)3 101,220 0.03%

1.As reported to the AFM on February 7, 2022, Capital Research & Management Company (CRMC) reports 365,542,532 voting rights

corresponding to 40,615,837 ordinary shares (based on 9 votes per share), but do not report ownership rights related to those shares.

2.Based solely on the Schedule 13-G/A filed by BlackRock Inc. with the SEC on February 5, 2024; BlackRock reports voting power with respect

to 28,843,069 of these shares. A public filing with the AFM on December 6, 2022 shows an aggregate indirect capital interest of 5.80% and

voting rights of 7.23%, based on the total number of issued shares and voting rights at that time.

3.Does not include unvested shares granted to members of the Board of Management. For further information, see Remuneration Report - Board

of Management Remuneration.

4.As a percentage of the total number of ordinary shares issued and outstanding, 393,421,721 as of December 31, 2023, which excludes

6,162,857 ordinary shares which have been issued but are held in treasury by ASML and 16,542 fractional shares of which 15,792 are owned

by (former) ASML employees and 750 are owned by ASML. The share ownership percentages reported to the AFM are expressed as a

percentage of the total number of ordinary shares issued (including treasury stock), and accordingly, percentages reflected in this table may

differ from percentages reported to the AFM or the SEC.

New_AGMShareCapital_Image.jpg

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 CORPORATE GOVERNANCE CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 192
AGM and share capital (continued)
Annual Reports
---
ASML publishes, among others, the following<br><br>annual reports regarding the financial year 2023:<br><br>•The statutory Annual Report, prepared in accordance<br><br>with the requirements of Dutch law. The Financial<br><br>Statements included therein are prepared in<br><br>accordance with Part 9 of Book 2 of the Dutch Civil<br><br>Code and EU-IFRS; and<br><br>•The Annual Report on Form 20-F, prepared in<br><br>accordance with the requirements of the Exchange<br><br>Act. The Financial Statements included therein are<br><br>prepared in conformity with US GAAP.<br><br>•Both reports have the same qualitative base and<br><br>describe the same risk factors that are specific to the<br><br>semiconductor industry, ASML and ASML’s shares.<br><br>We also provide sensitivity analyses by providing:<br><br>•A narrative explanation of ASML’s Financial<br><br>Statements;<br><br>•The context within which financial information should<br><br>be analyzed; and<br><br>•Information about the quality, and variability, of our<br><br>earnings and cash flow.

ASML annually prepares two sets of annual reports

including Financial Statements as set out on this page.

With respect to the process of creating the Annual

Report, we have extensive guidelines for the content and

layout of our report. These guidelines are primarily based

on the applicable laws and regulations referred to above.

With respect to the preparation process of these and the

other financial reports, we apply internal procedures to

safeguard the completeness and accuracy of such

information as part of its disclosure controls and

procedures. The Disclosure Committee assists the Board

of Management in overseeing ASML’s disclosure

activities and ensures compliance with applicable

disclosure requirements arising under Dutch and US law,

and other regulatory requirements. These internal

procedures are frequently discussed by the Audit

Committee and the Supervisory Board.

For ASML’s internal risk management and control systems read

more in Risk - How we manage risk - Enterprise Risk

Management.

The Supervisory Board has reviewed and approved

ASML’s 2023 Financial Statements as prepared by the

Board of Management. KPMG has duly examined our

Financial Statements, and the Auditor’s Report is

included in the Consolidated Financial Statements.

External Audit

In accordance with Dutch law, our external auditor is

appointed by the General Meeting, based on a

nomination for appointment by the Supervisory Board.

The Supervisory Board bases its nomination on the

advice from the Audit Committee and the Board of

Management, who annually provide a report to the

Supervisory Board on the performance of and

relationship with the external auditor, as well as its

independence. ASML’s current external auditor, KPMG,

was first appointed by the General Meeting in 2015 for

the reporting year 2016, and has been reappointed on a

yearly basis since then. At the 2022 AGM, KPMG was

appointed as the external auditor for the reporting years

2023 and 2024.

On April 26, 2023, the General Meeting adopted the

proposal to appoint PricewaterhouseCoopers

Accountants NV (PwC) as ASML's external auditor for

the reporting year 2025.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 CORPORATE GOVERNANCE CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 193
Financial reporting and audit

The Audit Committee reviews and approves the external

auditor’s audit plan for the audits planned during the

financial year. The audit plan also includes, among

others, the activities of the external auditor with respect

to their limited procedures on the quarterly results other

than the annual accounts. Proposed services may be

pre-approved at the beginning of the year by the Audit

Committee (annual pre-approval) or may be pre-

approved during the year by the Audit Committee in case

of a particular engagement (specific pre-approval). The

annual pre-approval is based on a detailed, itemized list

of allowed services to be provided, which is designed to

ensure there is no management discretion in determining

whether a service has been approved, and to ensure the

Audit Committee is informed of each service it is pre-

approving.

Dutch rules require strict separation of audit and advisory

services for Dutch public-interest entities and US

regulations restrict services that can be provided by an

auditor of a US listed company. Dutch law prohibits the

acceptance by the external auditor of other services

when an audit is performed. The Audit Committee

monitors compliance with Dutch and US rules on

services provided by the external auditor.

The remuneration of the external auditor is approved by

the Audit Committee on behalf of the Supervisory Board,

and after consulting the Board of Management. As the

Audit Committee has the most relevant insight and

experience in this area, the Supervisory Board has

delegated these responsibilities to the Audit Committee.

Read more information on principal accountant fees and

services in Other appendices - Appendix - Principal accountant

fees and services

In principle, the external auditor attends all the Audit

Committee meetings. The external auditor’s findings are

discussed at these meetings. The Audit Committee

reports to the Supervisory Board on the topics discussed

with the external auditor, including the external auditor’s

reports with regard to the audit of the annual reports as

well as the content of the annual reports. Furthermore,

the external auditor may attend the Supervisory Board

meeting in which the annual external audit report is

discussed. The external auditor may also attend

Supervisory Board meetings at which the quarterly

financial results are discussed.

The Audit Committee is informed by the external auditor

without delay if the external auditor discovers

irregularities in the content of the audit of the financial

reports.

The external auditor is present at our AGM to respond to

questions, if any, from the shareholders about the

auditor’s report on the Consolidated Financial

Statements.

Internal Audit

The role of our Internal Audit function is to assess our

systems of internal controls by performing independent

procedures such as risk-based operational audits, IT

audits and compliance audits. The Internal Audit

department reports directly to the Audit Committee and

to a member of the Board of Management, the CFO. The

yearly Internal Audit plan is discussed with and approved

by the Audit Committee, the Board of Management and

the Supervisory Board. The follow-up on the Internal

Audit findings and progress made compared with the

plan are discussed on a quarterly basis with the Audit

Committee. The external auditor and Internal Audit

department have meetings on a regular basis. During

2023 an external assessment of the Internal Audit

function was performed. The results of the assessment

were discussed with the Board of Management at the

end of 2023 and with the Audit Committee in early 2024.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 CORPORATE GOVERNANCE CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 194
Financial reporting and audit (continued)

Corporate information

ASML Holding NV is a holding company that operates

through its subsidiaries. We have operating subsidiaries

in the Netherlands, the United States, Italy, France,

Germany, the United Kingdom, Ireland, Belgium, South

Korea, Taiwan, Singapore, China, Hong Kong, Japan,

Malaysia and Israel.

Read more in Exhibit Index - Exhibit 8.1 - List of main

subsidiaries

US listing requirements

As ASML’s New York Shares are listed on Nasdaq Stock

Market LLC, Nasdaq corporate governance standards in

principle apply to us. However, Nasdaq rules provide that

foreign private issuers may follow home country practice

in lieu of the Nasdaq corporate governance standards

subject to certain exceptions. Our corporate governance

practices are primarily based on Dutch requirements. The

table on this page sets forth the practices followed by ASML

in lieu of Nasdaq rules the exception as described above.

Compliance with the Corporate

Governance Code

We closely follow the developments in the area of

corporate governance and the applicability of the relevant

corporate governance rules for ASML. Any substantial

changes to ASML’s corporate governance structure or

application of the Corporate Governance Code will be

submitted to the General Meeting for discussion.

We are of the opinion that ASML fully complies with the

applicable principles and best-practice provisions of the

Dutch Corporate Governance Code as in effect for the

financial year 2023.

The Board of Management and the Supervisory Board,

Veldhoven, February 14, 2024

Practices followed by ASML in lieu of Nasdaq rules
Quorum ASML does not follow Nasdaq’s quorum requirements applicable to meetings of ordinary shareholders. In accordance with Dutch law and generally accepted<br><br>Dutch business practice, ASML’s Articles of Association provide that there are no quorum requirements generally applicable to general meetings of shareholders.
Solicitation of<br><br>proxies ASML does not follow Nasdaq’s requirements regarding the solicitation of proxies and the provision of proxy statements for general meetings of shareholders.<br><br>ASML does furnish proxy statements and solicit proxies for the General Meeting. Dutch corporate law sets a mandatory (participation and voting) record date for<br><br>Dutch listed companies at the 28th day prior to the date of the General Meeting. Shareholders registered at such a record date are entitled to attend and exercise<br><br>their rights as shareholders at the General Meeting, regardless of sale of shares after the record date.
Distribution of<br><br>Annual Report ASML does not follow Nasdaq’s requirement regarding distribution to shareholders of copies of an annual report containing audited Financial Statements prior to<br><br>our AGM. The distribution of our annual reports to shareholders is not required under Dutch corporate law or Dutch securities laws, or by Euronext Amsterdam.<br><br>Furthermore, it is generally accepted business practice for Dutch companies not to distribute annual reports. In part, this is because the Dutch system of bearer<br><br>shares has made it impractical to keep a current list of holders of the bearer shares in order to distribute the annual reports. Instead, we make our Annual Report<br><br>available at our corporate head office in the Netherlands (and at the offices of our Dutch listing agent as stated in the convening notice for the meeting) no later<br><br>than 42 days prior to convocation of the AGM. In addition, we post a copy of our Annual Reports on our website prior to the AGM.
Equity<br><br>compensation<br><br>arrangements ASML does not follow Nasdaq’s requirement to obtain shareholder approval of stock option or purchase plans or other equity compensation arrangements<br><br>available to officers, directors or employees. It is not required under Dutch law or generally accepted practice for Dutch companies to obtain shareholder approval<br><br>of equity compensation arrangements available to officers, directors or employees. The General Meeting adopts the Remuneration Policy for the Board of<br><br>Management, approves equity compensation arrangements for the Board of Management and approves the remuneration for the Supervisory Board. The<br><br>Remuneration Committee evaluates the achievements of individual members of the Board of Management with respect to the short- and long-term quantitative<br><br>performance and he full Supervisory Board evaluates the quantitative performance criteria. Equity compensation arrangements for employees are adopted by the<br><br>Board of Management within limits approved by the General Meeting.
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 CORPORATE GOVERNANCE CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 195
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Compliance with Corporate Governance requirements

New_MessageChairSB_Background_121223.jpg

Dear Stakeholder,

As I approach the end of my first 12 months as Chair of

the Supervisory Board, I reflect on a year when ASML

continued to grow and posted record figures against a

backdrop of significant challenges that currently

characterize our markets.

Geopolitical uncertainty, inflation and the desire for

regional technological sovereignty all continued to

exacerbate the volatility of our sector while supply chain

constraints have again hampered production capacity.

Yet despite the pressures and uncertainties which have

seen the semiconductor industry move into a cyclical

trough, ASML has delivered a sales increase of 30% over

the previous year, with a gross margin of 51.3% – and

the prospects for the years ahead appear to be positive

and sustained.

On a personal level, it has been both inspirational and a

privilege to lead the Supervisory Board of one of the

world’s most important tech companies. ASML is

strategically significant, not only to the Netherlands, but

also to Europe in a wider context. The company is a real

locomotive in developing and strengthening the

European technology scene, through precision

manufacturing as well as semiconductor research.

Before my career in business, I was drawn to engineering

and have long been fascinated by the potential of

technology to transform lives for the better. In addition,

through my experience at other multinational companies

I’ve developed a keen interest in both macroeconomics

and global politics. My role on the Supervisory Board at

ASML brings together those interests at a time when

technology has assumed even greater importance in

people’s lives and has become a hot topic on the

agendas of political leaders worldwide.

Working with the Board of Management

The Supervisory Board is a diverse group of individuals

with enormous experience – not only in technology and

manufacturing, which are of course extremely relevant to

ASML, but also in broader fields. Besides our formal

meetings, our nine members take part in many additional

ad hoc meetings.

Together, we have the appropriate knowledge and skill

sets to guide management on a wide range of issues

including geopolitical matters. Our role is not to run the

company, but to provide oversight, evaluate performance

and give advice where required or requested. One of the

Chair’s key responsibilities is to create a ‘safe space’

where discussion can take place freely and openly.

Mutual trust and respect are absolutely central here –

management has to be confident that we are a valuable

sounding board, and in turn we have to trust

management to take heed of our advice, focus on the

right things and work towards viable solutions. In the

short period of time that I have been in position, I have

seen that the relationship is working well and that we

share a vision of the challenges and opportunities facing

ASML.

The following pages of this report provide detail on the

areas of focus that we concentrated on during the year,

one of which being ESG, which is an increasingly key

matter for all companies. In recognition of the importance

of ESG, we established ASML’s ESG Committee in

2023, headed by Birgit Conix. This committee has been

working closely with the company’s ESG Sustainability

team and overseeing the ESG sustainability strategy, as

well as its execution and performance.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SUPERVISORY BOARD REPORT STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 196
Message from the Chair of the Supervisory Board
Another record performance, in challenging circumstances I am confident that we<br><br>benefit from a<br><br>management team,<br><br>workforce and<br><br>technological leadership<br><br>that will enable all our<br><br>stakeholders as well as<br><br>wider society to reap<br><br>long-term rewards.”
--- ---
Nils Smedegard Andersen
Chair of the Supervisory Board
The Supervisory Board supervises and advises the Board<br><br>of Management in performing its management tasks and<br><br>setting the direction for ASML, focusing on long-term and<br><br>sustainable value creation. The members of the<br><br>Supervisory Board are fully independent.

Many stakeholders and NGOs have wish lists and

expectations around ESG, and the challenge for us is to

be courageous in defining where we can only have

limited impact and prioritize our work where we can

actually make a real difference to the world. You can

read more about this in the committee report on 206 as

well as the Q&A with the Chief Business Officer on 68.

Engaging with our stakeholders

The advice we provide to management is based on our

own external experiences together with insight gained

through regular meetings with the company’s diverse

group of stakeholders.

As part of my onboarding, I have met several suppliers,

which provided a deeper appreciation of the challenges

that they face in following ASML in its long-term growth

requirements. I also engaged with some of our most

important customers, getting their input on how they see

the future development of ASML, where we should focus

our innovation activities and how we could better meet

their needs. The Supervisory Board also engaged with

investors on many occasions to understand their

concerns and expectations.

Equally important, we met employee representatives to

make them aware of the topics discussed and share how

the Supervisory Board and the Works Council see the

organization moving forward.

A great team

I have known about ASML for many years and admired

the company’s track record of growth from a distance.

However, during my onboarding process and

subsequently through meetings and other interactions,

I’ve been enormously impressed by something that only

an insider can truly appreciate: the passion and talent of

ASML people. This is a dynamic and impressive

company, shaped by its special culture and the burning

desire to ‘do the right thing’ for society at large.

We have skills and technology that everybody recognizes

as world-class. This is thanks to a very engaged team

with fantastic ethics and high morale working in a very

open, sharing environment. They take their

responsibilities enormously seriously – and they fully

embrace the fact that the activities that ASML carries out

in the Netherlands and across the world have a

considerable and increasing impact on how we all live,

work and play.

Changes to our Board of Management

On November 30, 2023, we announced that ASML’s Co-

Presidents Peter Wennink and Martin van den Brink will

retire from ASML upon completion of their current

appointment terms per the 2024 AGM, and that we

intend to appoint Christophe Fouquet, currently ASML’s

Chief Business Officer and member of the Board of

Management, as the company’s next President and

Chief Executive Officer. This appointment is subject to

notification of the AGM on April 24, 2024. The

Supervisory Board, together with the management team,

has gone through a comprehensive succession planning

process. With Christophe, we have identified a very

experienced leader with deep understanding of ASML’s

technology and the semiconductor industry ecosystem –

acquired through different roles at ASML and other

companies – and the right leadership qualities and

culture fit. We are grateful and full of admiration for the

immense contributions that Peter and Martin have made

over decades, helping to shape ASML into the

successful company that it is today. Peter and Martin

have been preparing ASML for the future, and we know

they will be fully engaged in securing a smooth transition

for the company and all of ASML’s stakeholders.

In addition, we intend to appoint Jim Koonmen as Chief

Customer Officer, a new position in ASML’s Board of

Management, subject to notification of the General

Meeting on April 24, 2024.

Jim’s appointment underscores ASML’s ambition to

continuously increase our responsiveness to customer

needs, and to consistently deliver high-performance

products and services.

Outlook and focus for 2024

Geopolitical uncertainties are already with us, and these

will continue to challenge ASML and the broader

semiconductor industry in the months and years ahead.

As for the global economy, although the experts are in

general predicting a soft landing my experience tells me

that this is precisely the time to be extra alert. We need

to be ready to embrace a range of different scenarios

and work with customers and suppliers to meet their

priorities.

The cyclical trough in the semiconductor industry is likely

to begin its upturn during 2024 before accelerating

rapidly towards the end of the year and through 2025.

We need to use this time very constructively, investing in

the future and preparing production-wise for the tools

that our customers will need in the future. At the same

time, we can use a period of steadier growth to organize

ASML in ways that can improve our long-term

competitiveness and make sure we can satisfy a broad

range of stakeholder demands.

ASML is a resilient business operating in a long-term

growth industry. I am confident that we benefit from a

management team, workforce and technological

leadership that will enable all our stakeholders as well as

wider society to reap long-term rewards.

On behalf of the entire Supervisory Board I would like to

thank the whole ASML team for their commitment and

hard work throughout 2023.

Finally, I would also like to thank Gerard Kleisterlee and

Rolf-Dieter Schwalb, who have served on the

Supervisory Board since 2015 and stepped down in April

2023, for their valuable contributions as Chair of the

Supervisory Board and Selection & Nomination

Committee and as Chair of the Audit Committee,

respectively. They have been great source of guidance

and advice for ASML and we wish them all the best for

the future.

Nils Andersen

Chair of the Supervisory Board

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SUPERVISORY BOARD REPORT CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 197
Message from the Chair of the Supervisory Board (continued)
6 44%
--- ---
Supervisory<br><br>Board<br><br>meetings Female<br><br>members
(2022: 7) (2022: 44%)
98% 3.2
Attendance<br><br>rate Years average<br><br>tenure
(2022: 95%) (2022: 4)

The Supervisory Board supervises and advises the Board of

Management in performing its management tasks and

setting the direction for ASML. The Supervisory Board

focuses on long-term and sustainable value creation, with

the goal of ensuring that the Board of Management pursues

a strategy that secures ASML’s leading position as a

supplier of holistic lithography solutions to the

semiconductor industry. The Supervisory Board maintains

an appropriate system of checks and balances, provides

oversight, evaluates performance and gives advice where

required or requested. Through good governance, we help

to ensure that ASML acts in the best interests of the

company and its stakeholders. In this Supervisory Board

Report, we report on our activities in 2023.

We are pleased to see that 2023 was another year of stellar

performance for ASML, despite significant macroeconomic

and geopolitical challenges. Sales and gross margin grew

compared to 2022 and we made progress in technological

development as well as in the area of ESG Sustainability.

Another area where we made progress is in our

organizational development. During 2023, the strategic

sourcing and supply chain organization was transformed

with the aim of optimizing our partnerships with our suppliers

in order to ensure the required flexibility and capability to be

able to meet our customer demand for the short and long-

term. In the area of customer trust, a transformation was

prepared, aimed at ASML's customer facing roles and

responsibilities, to prepare for future growth and enable

further improvements in customer trust.

Supervisory Board focus in 2023

Throughout 2023, the Supervisory Board agenda was

centered around the strategy and its execution, financial and

operational performance, business developments, risk

management, and people and organization. Based on the

strategic priorities for ASML as agreed in the annual strategy

review, several topics were extensively discussed by means

of deep dives, allowing a focused and in-depth review.

Strategy and sustainable long-term value creation

The Supervisory Board devoted a considerable amount

of time in 2023 to discussing strategic topics. We carried

out our recurring annual review of ASML’s corporate

strategy, the long-term financial plan and the long-term

plans of ASML's business and operational sectors.

During the annual strategy review, the Supervisory Board

confirmed its support for the general strategic direction

and discussed what the key strategic challenges, focus

areas for further strategy development, are. The

Supervisory Board provided their perspectives on topics

such as dependency on suppliers, cost and flexibility,

future technology and innovation roadmap, installed base

services, global footprint. The Supervisory Board

concluded that it fully supports ASML’s strategy, which is

centered around the four pillars: 1. Grow our holistic

lithography business; 2. Secure unique supply chain

capabilities to ensure business continuity; 3. Move

toward adjacent business opportunities; and 4. Deliver

on ESG sustainability commitments.

Deep dive: Market and geopolitics
The Supervisory Board discussed with the Board of<br><br>Management the short-, medium- and long-term market<br><br>developments in the semiconductor industry and the<br><br>related growth opportunities for ASML. Aspects discussed<br><br>were the key end market drivers, the future of lithography<br><br>shrink and future affordability of lithography solutions,<br><br>potential opportunities in adjacent technologies and ASML's<br><br>competitive position. In terms of geopolitics, global forces<br><br>limiting ASML's options to do business in China were<br><br>extensively discussed and the Supervisory Board made<br><br>recommendations as to how to best navigate this situation.

As part of the annual strategy review, we held dedicated

workshops focused on our technology & holistic

lithography roadmap, market and geopolitics, global

footprint and cost reduction & flexibility. These sessions

enable an engaged and focused discussion between the

Supervisory Board and Board of Management on key

strategic matters, and we highly value this way of

contributing to the strategic decision-making process.

Other strategic topics discussed throughout the year

included  the transformation programs in the area of

Customer Trust, Robust Supply Chain, and Integrated

Operating Model, ASML's value strategy and service

business model and the mature lithography market.

With global trends expected to continue fuelling

semiconductor growth long-term driving an increasing

demand for wafers and ASML continuing to focus on the

execution of its strategic priorities, the Supervisory Board

has confidence in ASML’s long-term growth opportunities

and the continued delivery of value to its stakeholders.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SUPERVISORY BOARD REPORT CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 198
Supervisory Board focus in 2023
Alongside the annual<br><br>strategy review, the<br><br>Supervisory Board<br><br>addressed strategic topics<br><br>throughout the year via<br><br>deep dives, which enabled<br><br>focused, in-depth review.”
---
Nils Andersen
Chair of the Supervisory Board

Financial and operational performance

We reviewed the annual and interim Financial

Statements, including non-financial information, the

quarterly results and accompanying press releases, as

well as the outcomes of the year-end US GAAP and EU-

IFRS audits.

As part of the financial updates, the Supervisory Board,

assisted by the Audit Committee, reviewed ASML’s

financing and capital return policies. The Supervisory

Board approved the Board of Management’s proposals

for the final and interim dividends paid in 2023.

Furthermore, the Supervisory Board monitored the

execution of the 2022-2024 share buyback program.

Attention was paid to free cash flow, which was relatively

low compared to prior years given the challenging

economic climate as well as because ASML decided to

support customers and suppliers in navigating liquidity

issues.

Another area of Supervisory Board focus during 2023

was cost and flexibility. While our outlook for future

growth remains strong, short-term volatility will occur and

in 2023 we saw an downturn in the semiconductor

industry. The Supervisory Board focused on the

challenges related to addressing the downcycle while at

the same time preparing for the upcycle when it will

occur and stressed the importance of flexibility and cost

efficiency in order to ultimately support our customers

with cost effective solutions.

As a Supervisory Board, we are pleased with ASML's

financial performance during 2023 and we are confident

that ASML is well positioned to continue to deliver long-

term growth and stakeholder value in a sustainable

manner.

Market and business developments

The Supervisory Board closely monitored the market and

business developments and saw management address

the challenges related to macroeconomics,

semiconductor and geopolitics with the highest priority.

As a technology leader in the semiconductor industry,

technological progress is one of ASML’s top priorities.

The Supervisory Board closely followed the execution of

the product and technology roadmap and is pleased to

see ASML making good progress on further

enhancements to our EUV, DUV and metrology and

inspection systems.

Another area of focus during 2023 was export control.

The Supervisory Board closely followed and discussed

with the Board of Management developments in this area

and the implications for ASML.

Deep dive:  Transformation
After a decade of strong growth, ASML anticipates<br><br>continued future growth with its usual cycles. In<br><br>consequence, we have to be able to respond to market<br><br>demand with increased flexibility and agility to maintain<br><br>our customer trust and technology leadership. In order to<br><br>respond to these challenges, the Board of Management<br><br>embarked on a journey to drive 3 strategic<br><br>transformation projects related to Customer Trust,<br><br>Robust Supply Chain, and Integrated Operating Model.<br><br>Ample time was spent by the Supervisory Board<br><br>discussing these programs in open dialogues with the<br><br>Board of Management, during which the Supervisory<br><br>Board challenged and advised the Board of<br><br>Management on how to organize for the future expected<br><br>growth towards 2030. The Supervisory Board is pleased<br><br>with the strengthening of our supply chain resilience as<br><br>well as with the reorganization of ASML's customer-<br><br>facing organization, which will be implemented in 2024.

People and organization

Given the significant growth of ASML in recent years, the

topics of people and organization continued to be key areas

of focus for the Supervisory Board in 2023, as we believe

that these are of critical importance for the future success of

ASML. On several occasions, we were provided with

updates on Human Resources and Organization. Topics

covered included the People Strategy, the progress made

on the ASML leadership program, the results of the annual

employee engagement survey and Diversity & Inclusion.

Specific attention was also paid to ASML's culture and

values the focus of the Supervisory Board was how to

maintain the culture that has made ASML successful while

growing so fast in number of employees. We also extensively

discussed the organizational setup of ASML in the context of

current and future growth and we reviewed the progress of

the transformation programs related to Customer Trust,

Robust Supply Chain and Future Operating Model. As a

result of this discussion, the Supervisory Board decided to

position the role of the Executive Vice President and Chief

Customer Officer in the Board of Management, as

announced by press release on November 30, 2023.

Furthermore, the Supervisory Board, assisted by the

Selection and Nomination Committee, extensively discussed

and provided advice in respect of ASML’s talent

management and people development programs as well as

succession planning for the Board of Management and

senior management. The Supervisory Board is pleased to

see the effort being put into the onboarding of new

employees, enabling them to develop and contribute as

quickly as possible.

Furthermore, as a Supervisory Board, we find it important

that business processes are fit for growth. We therefore

oversaw the Business Performance Improvement (BPI)

initiative, focused on improving our cross-sectoral, non-

product-related business processes. As part of the BPI

initiative, we also monitored the progress on the ONE

Program, which is part of the BPI initiative and which is

ASML’s program dedicated to securing configuration

integrity over the life cycle of our customer offerings while

enhancing the business processes and maintaining flexibility,

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SUPERVISORY BOARD REPORT CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 199
Supervisory Board focus in 2023 (continued)

with the support of its upgraded backbone information

system. We paid special attention to the sub-roadmaps of

the program where there had been less progress than

planned, looking at the challenges and mitigating actions.

We will continue to closely follow the developments.

Deep dive: ESG Sustainability strategy
As a Supervisory Board we consider ESG<br><br>Sustainability an increasingly important topic. While<br><br>the Supervisory Board keeps the overall oversight of<br><br>ESG Sustainability, various ESG Sustainability<br><br>aspects are discussed at committee level, e.g.<br><br>reporting in the Audit Committee, diversity in the<br><br>Selection and Nomination Committee, ESG<br><br>Sustainability as part of the Board of Management's<br><br>incentive scheme in the Remuneration Committee<br><br>and product and technology aspects in the<br><br>Technology Committee. In 2023, we discussed<br><br>ASML’s updated ESG Sustainability strategy and<br><br>execution with the Board of Management. In deep<br><br>dive sessions specific attention was paid to EUV<br><br>energy efficiency, which is a key area of focus also<br><br>given ASML's CO2 reduction ambitions, and the<br><br>Diversity & Inclusion strategy and the implementation<br><br>thereof. To underline the importance of ESG<br><br>Sustainability, the Supervisory Board decided to<br><br>establish an ESG Committee in 2023.

Risk management

As risk management is a key element of the Supervisory

Board’s responsibilities, we received periodic risk

management updates during the year. We focused on

the risk landscape and the developments in that area,

the risk appetite and the measures put in place by the

Board of Management to mitigate the critical risks.

During 2023, we paid particular attention to the

challenges created by the (geo)political risks, given the

global trade situation, and developments in the area of

export controls and the potential impact on ASML's

business. We also performed a deep-dive review on

Security risks, given the increasing risk profile. .

Read more in Risk - How we manage risk

Relationship with stakeholders

The Supervisory Board reviewed the stakeholder

engagement policy as adopted by the Board of

Management at the end of 2023.

The Supervisory Board regularly discussed ASML’s

relationship with its shareholders, and Supervisory Board

members engaged with shareholders throughout the

year on topics such as ASML’s strategy and

performance, governance and ESG. The Remuneration

Committee engaged with a variety of ASML shareholders

and other stakeholders regarding remuneration. More

information can be found in the Remuneration Report.

A Supervisory Board delegation held two formal

meetings with the Works Council in 2023. We exchanged

views on ASML’s strategy and priorities, ASML’s

performance and challenges, in particular related to the

growth and increased complexity of ASML’s business. In

this context, the effectiveness of new processes

supporting growth and institutionalizing of ASML was

addressed. Other topics of discussion were ESG, the

develop and perform program at ASML, leadership

development and the status and future plans related to

working from home / return to work onsite. The

composition of the Supervisory Board and the Board of

Management was discussed, in particular the changes

per the 2023 and 2024 AGM's. The Works Council and

Supervisory Board also extensively discussed the 2023

Remuneration Policy for the Supervisory Board; more

information on the interactions with the Works Council on

the topic of executive remuneration can be found in the

Remuneration Report.

In November 2023, the Supervisory Board paid a visit to

one of our key suppliers, Zeiss in Oberkochen, Germany.

During the visit, the Supervisory Board met with Zeiss AG

and Zeiss SMT management and was provided with a

business update as well as an overview of the current

and future technology roadmap. A visit was also paid to

the Zeiss SMT factory, where the Supervisory Board was

impressed by the great achievements of the teams

working on the EUV optical products. For the

Supervisory Board, such visits are highly valuable

because it increases our understanding of our suppliers

and the challenges they face.

Additional topics

Other topics considered during Supervisory Board

meetings in 2023 included:

•Compliance with rules and regulations: We monitored

compliance with rules and regulations including the

Dutch Corporate Governance Code and were kept

informed on key legal matters, including developments

in the area of export control regulations.

•Supervisory Board composition, profile and

functioning: We extensively discussed our own

composition, profile and functioning, the composition

and functioning of Board committees and the

composition and functioning of the Board of

Management. More information can be found in the

report of the Selection and Nomination Committee.

•Board of Management composition and performance:

We also monitored the performance of the Board of

Management and decided on the Board of

Management’s remuneration targets and target

achievements. More information can be found in the

reports of the Selection & Nomination Committee and

the Remuneration Committee.

An overview of topics discussed during the year can be

found in the table on the next page.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SUPERVISORY BOARD REPORT CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 200
Supervisory Board focus in 2023 (continued)

The table on this page

provides a schematic

overview of the topics

discussed in the meetings

of the Supervisory Board

during 2023.

Recurring topics on each

Supervisory Board meeting

are a CEO report, focusing

on market and customer

developments, share price

development and investor

perceptions, performance

on the business priorities

including ESG, a financial

update and the Supervisory

Board Committee reports.

Strategy & sustainable long-<br><br>term value creation
Q1
•ESG strategy, including deep<br><br>dives on EUV energy efficiency<br><br>and Diversity & Inclusion<br><br>•Expansions beyond current<br><br>scope and M&A strategy<br><br>•Remuneration Board of<br><br>Management and Supervisory
Q2
•Deep dive: Future operating<br><br>model<br><br>•Deep dive: Tool allocation<br><br>policy<br><br>•Deep dive: Scenarios to ramp<br><br>the end-to-end supply chain<br><br>including industrial footprint
Q3
•Deep dive: value strategy and<br><br>service business model<br><br>•Deep dive: BPI
Q4
•Annual strategy review<br><br>•Deep dive: Semi & litho market<br><br>•Deep dive: Geopolitics &<br><br>market access<br><br>•Deep dive: Global footprint<br><br>•Deep dive: Cost & Flexibility Business<br><br>developments
---
Q2
•Market outlook and demand<br><br>drivers<br><br>•Update on business sectors:<br><br>EUV, DUV, Applications
Q4
•Transformation projects related<br><br>to sourcing & supply chain,<br><br>Customer and future operating<br><br>model
Risk<br><br>management
Q1
•Update risk landscape & deep<br><br>dive: security Financial & operational<br><br>performance
---
Q1
•2022 Annual Results and<br><br>Annual Report<br><br>•2022 external audit report<br><br>•Final dividend 2022<br><br>•External auditor rotation<br><br>•Legal matters report
Q3
•2022 statutory interim report<br><br>•Cash return including dividend<br><br>policy and interim dividend<br><br>•Business Performance<br><br>Improvement initiative including<br><br>update on Our New Enterprise<br><br>(ONE) program
Q4
•Update of business plans of the<br><br>business sectors and functions<br><br>•Cash return including interim<br><br>dividend and share buyback<br><br>program People &<br><br>organization
---
Q1
•Composition of Supervisory<br><br>Board<br><br>•Composition of Board<br><br>of Management<br><br>•Remuneration Policy for<br><br>the Board of Management
Q3
•Human Resources &<br><br>Organization (HR&O) update<br><br>•Composition of Supervisory<br><br>Board<br><br>•Composition of Board of<br><br>Management<br><br>•HR&O, including deep dives on<br><br>Diversity & Inclusion and<br><br>Culture
Q4
•Composition of Supervisory<br><br>Board<br><br>•Composition of Board of<br><br>Management<br><br>•People Strategy<br><br>•Results of employee<br><br>engagement survey Governance and stakeholders
---
Q1
•Outcome of Supervisory<br><br>Board evaluation<br><br>•AGM agenda<br><br>•New Dutch Corporate<br><br>Governance Code<br><br>•Amendment to the Rules<br><br>of Procedure Board of<br><br>Management and<br><br>Supervisory Board
Q2
•AGM update
Q3
•ESG oversight by Supervisory<br><br>Board and Committees
R
Q4
•Implementation of the Dutch<br><br>Corporate Governance Code<br><br>•Amendment Rules of<br><br>Procedure Supervisory Board<br><br>and Board of Management<br><br>•D&I Policies<br><br>•Supplier deep dive: Zeiss<br><br>•Supplier visit: Zeiss
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SUPERVISORY BOARD REPORT CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 201
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Supervisory Board focus in 2023 (continued)

Meetings and attendance

The Supervisory Board meets at least four times per year

in accordance with its annual schedule and whenever the

Chair, one or more of its members, or the Board of

Management requests a meeting.

In 2023, the Supervisory Board held six meetings. Of

these meetings, one was held virtually and five were held

in person. Three in-person meetings were held at

ASML's headquarters, one was held offsite in Belgium

and one was held in Germany. In addition to these

meetings, there were several informal meetings and

interactions among Supervisory Board and/or Board of

Management members.

Supervisory Board meetings and Supervisory Board

committee meetings are held over several days, ensuring

there is time for review and discussion. At each meeting,

the Supervisory Board members discuss among

themselves the goals and outcome of the meeting, as

well as topics such as the functioning and composition of

the Supervisory Board and the Board of Management.

Also discussed during each meeting are the reports from

the different committees of the Supervisory Board.

The Supervisory Board meetings and the meetings of the

four Supervisory Board committees were well attended,

as is shown in the table on the right.

In addition to the Supervisory Board members, the

members of the Board of Management are invited to the

Supervisory Board meetings. All Board of Management

members were present at the Supervisory Board

meetings in 2023. Members of senior management are

regularly invited to provide updates on topics within their

area of expertise. This gives the Supervisory Board the

opportunity to become acquainted with a variety of

ASML managers, which the Supervisory Board considers

very useful in connection with its talent management and

succession-planning activities.

Meetings of the Supervisory<br><br>Board
Most Supervisory Board and Committee meetings<br><br>held in 2023 were in-person meeting, but the<br><br>Supervisory Board also met virtually on some<br><br>occasions. In addition to plenary discussions, break-<br><br>out sessions in smaller groups were organized for<br><br>discussing key strategic topics to optimize<br><br>interaction. We also used preview videos for meeting<br><br>preparation in addition to written meeting documents,<br><br>in order to allow as much time as possible for<br><br>discussion. Supervisory Board meeting attendance overview1
--- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---
98%
Attendance<br><br>rate
Name Supervisory<br><br>Board Audit<br><br>Committee Remuneration<br><br>Committee Selection and<br><br>Nomination<br><br>Committee Technology<br><br>Committee ESG<br><br>Committee
Nils Andersen (Chair)2 4/4 3/3 n/a 4/4 n/a n/a
Annet Aris 6/6 n/a 5/5 6/6 5/5 n/a
Birgit Conix 6/6 6/6 n/a n/a n/a 2/2
Mark Durcan 6/6 n/a n/a 6/6 5/5 n/a
Warren East 6/6 6/6 n/a n/a 5/5 n/a
Alexander Everke 6/6 n/a 5/5 n/a n/a 2/2
Terri Kelly 6/6 n/a 5/5 6/6 n/a n/a
Jack de Kreij3 4/4 3/3 3/3 n/a n/a n/a
An Steegen 5/6 n/a n/a n/a 1/2 1/2
Gerard Kleisterlee4 2/2 n/a 1/1 2/2 3/3 n/a
Rolf-Dieter Schwalb4 2/2 3/3 2/2 n/a n/a n/a
1.This overview contains the attendance data as of the formal date of appointment of until the formal end date of the<br><br>appointment.<br><br>2.Appointed at the AGM on April 26, 2023; also appointed as chair of the Selection and Nomination Committee.<br><br>3.Appointed at the AGM on April 26, 2023; also appointed as chair of the Audit Committee and member of the<br><br>Remuneration Committee.<br><br>4.Stepped down per the AGM on April 26, 2023.
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SUPERVISORY BOARD REPORT CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 202
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Meetings and attendance

Composition

The Supervisory Board determines the number of

members required to perform its functions, the minimum

being three members. The Supervisory Board currently

consists of nine members. The Supervisory Board

attaches great importance to its composition,

independence and diversity and strives to meet all the

associated guidelines and requirements. To ensure an

appropriate and balanced composition, the Supervisory

Board spends considerable time on an ongoing basis

discussing its profile, composition and rotation schedule.

Independence

In order to properly perform its tasks, the Supervisory

Board considers it to be very important that its members

are able to act critically and independently of one

another, the Board of Management and other

stakeholders. The independence of the Supervisory

Board and its individual members is assessed on an

annual basis. All current members of the Supervisory

Board are fully independent, as defined by the Dutch

Corporate Governance Code as well as under Nasdaq

rules, and have completed the annual questionnaire

addressing the relevant independence requirements.

Diversity

The current composition of ASML’s Supervisory Board is

diverse in terms of gender, nationality, knowledge,

experience and background and has a suitable level of

experience in the financial, economic, technological,

social and legal aspects of international business. For

more information about diversity, see Corporate

governance – Other Board-related Matters.

Changes in composition in 2023

As their terms of appointment had expired, Gerard

Kleisterlee and Rolf-Dieter Schwalb stepped down from

the Supervisory Board at the 2023 AGM, both having

served eight years on the Supervisory Board. The

Supervisory Board decided, with due observance of the

Supervisory Board profile and rotation schedule, to

nominate Nils Andersen and Jack de Kreij, for

appointment at the 2023 AGM.

The General Meeting resolved to appoint Nils Andersen

and Jack de Kreij for a term of four years effective from

the date of the 2023 AGM.

Changes in composition in 2024

At the 2023 AGM, the Supervisory Board gave notice

that the appointment terms of Annet Aris, Warren East

and Mark Durcan would expire per the 2024 AGM.

Annet Aris, Warren East and Mark Durcan have informed

the Supervisory Board that they are available for

reappointment and the Supervisory Board intends to

nominate these members for reappointment per the

2024 AGM.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SUPERVISORY BOARD REPORT CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 203
Meetings and attendance (continued) Supervisory Board skills
--- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---
Board member General skills ASML skills
Nils Andersen (Chair)
Annet Aris
Birgit Conix
Marc Durcan
Warren East
Alexander Everke
Terri Kelly
Jack de Kreij
An Steegen
(Former)<br><br>Executive<br><br>board<br><br>member<br><br>of (listed)<br><br>international<br><br>company Finance /<br><br>governance Remuneration Human<br><br>resources<br><br>/ employee<br><br>relations IT / digital /<br><br>cyber ESG Semiconductor<br><br>ecosystem Deep<br><br>understanding<br><br>of semiconductor<br><br>technology High-tech<br><br>manufacturing /<br><br>integrated<br><br>supply chain<br><br>management Business<br><br>in Asia

For the position currently held by Annet Aris, the Works

Council has a strengthened recommendation right. The

Works Council informed the Supervisory Board that it

intends to use its strengthened right to recommend

Annet Aris for reappointment.

The Supervisory Board considered the fact that Annet

Aris, per the date of the 2024 AGM, will have been on

the Supervisory Board for nine years. The Supervisory

Board is of the opinion that a reappointment of Annet

Aris, who is also the Vice Chair of the Supervisory Board,

is beneficial for the Company for reasons of continuity,

given the Supervisory Board Chair change in 2023, and

also because of her wealth of knowledge of ASML and

her experience as an ASML Supervisory Board member.

The agenda and explanatory notes for the 2024 AGM will

contain further information about the intended

nominations for reappointment of these three

Supervisory Board members.

Induction and training

We have a comprehensive induction program in place for

newly appointed Supervisory Board members, designed

to ensure that new members gain a good understanding

of our business and strategy, as well as the key risks we

face. The induction program includes meetings with

other Supervisory Board and Board of Management

members, a technology tutorial and detailed

presentations by our business, operational and corporate

sectors. A site visit and factory tour is also part of the

induction program. On joining the Supervisory Board,

Nils Andersen and Jack de Kreij completed the induction

program.

In addition to the fixed elements to the induction

program, additional induction sessions may be planned

depending on the wishes of the Supervisory Board

members concerned. In the case of both Nils Andersen

and Jack de Kreij, several specific sessions were

organized during 2023 to deep dive into topics of

relevance.

To ensure permanent education, the Supervisory Board is

provided with regular deep dives on a variety of topics, both

in the plenary meetings and in the meetings of the

Supervisory Board’s committees. During 2023, strategy and

risk deep dives were held on a variety of topics: see the Our

Activities 2023 section in this Supervisory Board Report.

Furthermore, external speakers or advisers attended various

committee meetings to provide outside-in views on topics

such as technology developments and technology outlook

and executive remuneration.

The Supervisory Board also performed site visits. The

Technology Committee visited ASML’s industrial site in

Wilton, CT, USA. The Committee met with local

management and was updated on the product portfolio and

related technology roadmaps and on the organization and

paid a visit to the factory. The Wilton visit provided the

Technology Committee with valuable insights into the

contributions of this industrial site to ASML's technology and

business. In November 2023, the Supervisory Board

visited Zeiss SMT in Oberkochen, Germany, as further

described in the section Our activities 2023 in this

Supervisory Board Report.

Evaluation

The Supervisory Board greatly values the structural and

ongoing evaluation process as a means of ensuring

continuous improvement in our way of working. Each

year, the Supervisory Board, assisted by the Selection

and Nomination Committee, evaluates the composition,

competence and functioning of the Supervisory Board

and its committees, the relationship between the

Supervisory Board and the Board of Management, its

committees, its individual members, the chairs of both

the Supervisory Board and the committees, as well as

the composition and functioning of the Board of

Management and its individual members, and the

education and training needs for the Supervisory Board

and Board of Management members.

In principle, the evaluation of the Supervisory Board is

performed once every three years by an external adviser; in

the other two years, the evaluation of the Supervisory Board

is performed by means of a self-assessment using a written

questionnaire, followed by one-to-one meetings between

the Chair and individual Supervisory Board members.

The 2023 evaluation of the Supervisory Board and its

committees was performed through a web-based

survey, which was prepared by the Selection and

Nomination Committee. The Chair of the Supervisory

Board also met with the individual Supervisory Board

members. The evaluation was centered around the

following themes: composition, stakeholder oversight,

oversight of strategy, risk management and succession

planning, management and focus of meetings and

priorities for improvement. Specific focus areas were the

follow-up of prior-year recommendations and the

Supervisory Board Chair change that took place in April

  1. An upward review by the Board of Management

was also part of the annual assessment.

The results of the Supervisory Board evaluation were

discussed in early 2024. The conclusion was that the

Supervisory Board and its committees continue to

function well. In particular, the level of progress made on

the Supervisory Board's priorities over 2023 received

positive feedback. The leadership of the new Supervisory

Board Chair and the dynamics and the quality of the

discussions at meetings also received positive feedback.

The performance of each of the Supervisory Board

Committees was positively rated, and the ESG

Committee established in 2023 was considered to have

made a strong start. Suggestions to further improve the

functioning of the Supervisory Board will be implemented

in 2024. These suggestions include continuous

enhancement of the oversight on stakeholders, including

by means of customer and supplier visits, building on the

dynamics following the changes in the Board of

Management that will occur per the 2024 AGM, further

optimizing the flow of information, continued focus on

(implementation of) the transformation programs and

further increasing the exposure to senior management.

The Supervisory Board also noted the importance of a

continued focus on succession and talent management

and sees diversity, in particular amongst management,

as a key area of attention.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SUPERVISORY BOARD REPORT CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 204
Meetings and attendance (continued)

The Board of Management evaluated its own functioning

in 2023, focusing on the role, responsibilities and

performance of the Board of Management collectively,

and on the functioning of the individual Board of

Management members, also in light of the changes in the

Board of Management that will become effective per the

date of the 2024 AGM. This self-evaluation took place in

an offsite Board of Management meetings throughout

the year. Important aspects addressed by the Board of

Management include the Board of Management’s

strategic focus, stakeholder involvement, people &

organization, Board dynamics and (future) Board of

Management organization. The overall conclusion of the

self-evaluation was that ASML has a well-functioning

Board of Management. The self-evaluation was also

discussed with the Supervisory Board and its Selection

and Nomination Committee.

New_MeetingsAttandence_Diagram_170124.jpg

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SUPERVISORY BOARD REPORT CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 205
Meetings and attendance (continued)

Grey_Background.jpg

The Supervisory Board has five standing

committees, with members appointed by the

Supervisory Board from among its members.

The full Supervisory Board remains responsible for

all decisions, including those prepared and taken

by one of the Supervisory Board’s Committees.

The five committees of the Supervisory Board support

the decision-making of the full Board. In the plenary

Supervisory Board meetings, the chairs of the

committees report on the items discussed in their

committee meetings. In addition, the meeting documents

and minutes of the committee meetings are available to

all Supervisory Board members, enabling the full

Supervisory Board to make the appropriate decisions.

Further information about the Audit Committee, the ESG

Committee, the Technology Committee and the Selection and

Nomination Committee can be found in this Supervisory Board

Report. Further information about the Remuneration Committee

can be found in the Remuneration Report.

Supervisory Board
Audit<br><br>Committee ESG<br><br>Committee Remuneration<br><br>Committee Selection and<br><br>Nomination<br><br>Committee Technology<br><br>Committee
Assisting in<br><br>overseeing the<br><br>integrity and quality<br><br>of our financial<br><br>reporting and the<br><br>effectiveness of risk<br><br>management and<br><br>controls Overseeing the ESG<br><br>sustainability<br><br>strategy and<br><br>performance aimed<br><br>at sustainable, long-<br><br>term value creation. Overseeing the<br><br>development and<br><br>implementation of<br><br>the Remuneration<br><br>Policies, in<br><br>cooperation with<br><br>the Audit and<br><br>Technology<br><br>Committee Assisting with the<br><br>preparation of the<br><br>selection criteria<br><br>and appointment<br><br>procedures for the<br><br>Supervisory Board<br><br>and Board of<br><br>Management Providing advice<br><br>with respect to our<br><br>technology plans<br><br>required to execute<br><br>the business<br><br>strategy
3 3 4 4 4
Members Members Members Members Members
Read more on page 208 > Read more on page 210 > Read more on page 221 > Read more on page 212 > Read more on page 214 >
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SUPERVISORY BOARD REPORT CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 206
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Supervisory Board committees

Grey_Background.jpg

Audit Committee
The Audit Committee assists the Supervisory Board in overseeing<br><br>the integrity and quality of our financial reporting and the effectiveness<br><br>of the internal risk management and internal control systems.
Main responsibilities:
•Overseeing the integrity and quality of ASML’s Financial<br><br>Statements and sustainability disclosures and submitting<br><br>proposals to ensure such integrity;<br><br>•Overseeing the accounting, financial and sustainability<br><br>reporting processes and the audits of the Financial<br><br>Statements;<br><br>•Overseeing the effectiveness of our internal risk management<br><br>and control systems, including compliance with the relevant<br><br>legislation and regulations, and the effect of codes of<br><br>conduct;<br><br>•Overseeing the integrity and effectiveness of our system of<br><br>disclosure controls and procedures and our system of<br><br>internal controls over financial and sustainability reporting;<br><br>•Overseeing the External Auditor’s qualifications,<br><br>independence, performance and determining its<br><br>compensation; and<br><br>•Overseeing the functioning of Internal Audit.
Members:
•Jack de Kreij (Chair)<br><br>•Birgit Conix<br><br>•Warren East<br><br>The members of the Audit Committee are all independent<br><br>members of the Supervisory Board.<br><br>The Supervisory Board has determined that both Jack De Kreij<br><br>and Birgit Conix qualify as Audit Committee financial experts<br><br>pursuant to section 407 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act and Dutch<br><br>statutory rules, taking into consideration their extensive financial<br><br>backgrounds and experience.
A key area of focus for the Audit<br><br>Committee in 2023 was how to navigate<br><br>macroeconomic and semiconductor<br><br>industry cycle related challenges while<br><br>investing in future growth Recurring agenda topics (quarterly) Attendance
--- --- ---
•Financial update<br><br>•Review of the quarterly financial results and press release<br><br>•Accounting and Internal Control update<br><br>•Observations of External Auditor<br><br>•Risk update, incl. (IT) Security<br><br>•Internal Audit update<br><br>•Disclosure Committee report<br><br>•Legal matters report<br><br>•Ethics and compliance In addition to the Audit Committee members, the Chair of the<br><br>Supervisory Board attends the Audit Committee meetings whenever<br><br>possible. The external auditor and the internal auditor have a standing<br><br>invitation for Audit Committee meetings and attended all Audit<br><br>Committee meetings in 2023. The CEO, CFO, EVP Finance, Corporate<br><br>Chief Accountant, the Head of Risk and Business Assurance are invited<br><br>to the meetings.
The overview below provides a number of topics discussed during Audit Committee meetings in 2023,<br><br>in addition to the recurring agenda topics.
Q1 Q3
•2022 Annual Report and Financial Statements US GAAP and EU-IFRS<br><br>•Accounting deep dive: Balance sheet review<br><br>•2022 External audit report<br><br>•Annual reporting process<br><br>•Capital return, incl. interim dividend Q1'23 and final dividend 2022<br><br>•Fraud-risk assessment<br><br>•Results of the external auditor evaluation 2022<br><br>•Results of the Audit Committee self-evaluation<br><br>•Annual plans of Risk and Internal Audit<br><br>•Compliance deep dives: Finance, ABC and Antitrust<br><br>•Appointment new head of Internal Audit •Statutory Interim report 2023<br><br>•Capital return, incl. interim dividend Q3'23<br><br>•Compliance deep dive: Finance<br><br>•Audit Committee responsibilities in the area of ESG
Q2 Q4
•2023 SOX plan incl. materiality and scoping<br><br>•External audit plan 2023<br><br>•Audit on expense reporting Board of Management and Supervisory<br><br>Board 2022<br><br>•Update Internal Audit Charter<br><br>•Initial independence discussion with newly to be appointed external<br><br>auditor •Financing<br><br>•Capital return including Q4 2023 interim dividend<br><br>•2023 Annual Report process<br><br>•Long-term financial plan<br><br>•Annual Plan 2024<br><br>•Internal Audit Plan 2024<br><br>•Compliance deep dive: legal compliance<br><br>•Annual tax update<br><br>•External audit update on 'hard close' procedures<br><br>•Review of Rules of Procedure for the Audit Committee
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SUPERVISORY BOARD REPORT CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 207
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Supervisory Board committees (continued)

AuditCommittee_Page2_Background.jpg

Audit Committee

The Audit Committee is provided with all relevant

information to be able to adequately and efficiently

supervise the preparation and disclosure of financial

information. This includes information on the status and

development of the semiconductor market to support

judgment regarding the outlook and budget for the

next six to 12 months, the application of EU-IFRS and

US GAAP, the choice of accounting policies and the

work of the internal and external auditor.

Audit Committee meetings in 2023

The Audit Committee meets at least four times a year

and always before the publication of the quarterly, half-

year and annual financial results. In 2023, the Audit

Committee held six meetings.

Financials

In 2023, the Audit Committee focused, among other

matters, on financial reporting, most particularly the

review of ASML’s Annual and Interim Reports,

including the annual and interim Financial Statements

and non-financial information. The Audit Committee

also closely monitored the progress and discussed the

outcomes of the year-end US GAAP and EU-IFRS

audits. The quarterly results and the accompanying

press releases were reviewed before publication.

On a quarterly basis, the Audit Committee was provided

with accounting updates by the Corporate Chief

Accountant, highlighting the main accounting matters

relevant for the quarter. A recurring item of focus of the

Audit Committee in this regard is revenue recognition, as

this is a complex accounting matter also identified as a

critical audit matter by the external auditor. Other

important elements of the Audit Committee’s quarterly

procedures included the discussion of the observations

of the external auditor in relation to the accounting

matters, as well as the report by the Disclosure

Committee on the accuracy and completeness of the

quarterly disclosures. Throughout the year, specific

accounting topics were addressed in depth and an

annual in-depth balance sheet review was also

performed.

The operational and financial short- and long-term

performance of ASML was discussed extensively,

looking at various performance scenarios and their

impact on ASML’s results and cash generation.

Particular attention was paid to the macroeconomic

challenges including those related to inflation and

semiconductor market developments, where we have

seen reduced investments by customers. Geopolitical

challenges and in particular the potential impact of

increasing export control restrictions on ASML's

business was another topic of focus for the Audit

Committee.

The Audit Committee reviewed and provided the

Supervisory Board with advice regarding the long-term

financial plan, the financing of ASML and ASML’s cash

return policy. Topics specifically discussed included the

execution of the share buyback program and the

proposed final dividend payment in respect of the 2022

financial year and the interim dividends for the financial

year 2023, which were approved by the Supervisory

Board following recommendation by the Audit

Committee. Extra attention was also paid to free cash

flow, which was relatively low compared to prior years

given the challenging economic climate as well as

because ASML decided to support customers and

suppliers in navigating liquidity issues.

Risk management and internal control

Throughout 2023, the Audit Committee closely

monitored risk management and the risk management

process, including the timely follow-up of high-priority

actions based on quarterly progress updates. Key focus

areas of the Audit Committee included those risks

showing an upward trend, such as geopolitics, uncertain

global economy, pressure on the innovation ecosystem

(including security) and strengthening ESG regulations &

increasing stakeholder expectations. The Audit

Committee oversaw the annual internal control process,

with a focus on scoping, materiality levels, updates to the

internal control framework, the tests of design and

effectiveness and management’s assessment of ASML’s

internal control over financial reporting and disclosures.

The observations made by the internal auditor and the

external auditor on the design and effectiveness of

internal controls were also discussed with the Audit

Committee.

Ethics and compliance

We recognize that acting with the highest standards of

integrity is vitally important to value creation for our

stakeholders and the long-term success of ASML. The

Audit Committee received quarterly reports on the

Ethics program, including the trends and risks in the

area of ethics and the Ethics training strategy. During

2023, ASML’s Compliance Program was discussed on

multiple occasions, with deep dives on ABC, Antitrust

and Finance compliance. Furthermore, an annual

update on fraud and fraud risk management was

provided.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SUPERVISORY BOARD REPORT CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 208
Supervisory Board committees (continued)

AuditCommittee_Page2_Background.jpg

Audit Committee

Internal audit

During 2023, a new Head of Internal Audit was

appointed by the Board of Management, after

obtaining a positive recommendation from the Audit

Committee and approval of the Supervisory Board. An

updated Internal Audit Charter was discussed,

incorporating changes resulting from the revision of the

Dutch Corporate Governance Code, among others,

The Audit Committee reviewed the annual internal audit

plan, including the scope of the audit at the start of

  1. During the year, the Audit Committee was kept

updated on the progress of the internal audit activities

on a quarterly basis and reviewed the results of audits

performed as well as the status of the follow-up on

action plans. The Audit Committee also discussed the

internal management letter and monitored the follow-

up by the Board of Management on the recommendations

made in the internal management letter.

External audit

At the 2022 AGM, KPMG was appointed as the

external auditor for the reporting years 2023 and 2024.

In 2023, the Audit Committee reviewed the 2023 external

audit plan, including scoping, materiality level and fees. It

monitored the progress of the external audit activities,

including review of the observations made throughout the

year. The Audit Committee oversaw the follow-up by the

Board of Management on the recommendations made by

the external auditor in their periodic internal control update.

The Audit Committee confirms that the communication

over the 2023 financial year contained no significant items

that need to be mentioned in this report.

The Audit Committee evaluated the performance of the

external auditor at the end of 2023, including a review of

their independence..

After a carefully conducted selection process in 2021

and 2022, the Supervisory Board submitted the proposal

to the 2023 AGM to appoint PricewaterhouseCoopers

Accountants NV (PWC) as external auditor for the

reporting year 2025. This proposal was adopted by the

General Meeting. Due to the fact that the current lead

audit partner, for independence reasons, can only remain

in this role until and including the reporting year 2024, the

current external auditor will rotate off after the 2024

reporting year. The Audit Committee considered it

important to start the preparations and selection process

in a timely manner, given the limited number of qualifying

audit firms available. In addition, the Audit Committee

considered it essential to have sufficient time for

onboarding the new external audit firm and for

transferring any non-audit services currently performed

by the newly appointed external audit firm. In September

2021, the Audit Committee started the selection process

in connection with the mandatory external audit firm

rotation. A Selection Committee was established,

consisting of the members of the Audit Committee, the

CFO, the EVP Finance and the Corporate Chief

Accountant. The Selection Committee invited the other

three ‘Big Four’ audit firms (other than ASML’s current

external auditor) as well as one other from the 'Big Six'

firms,

to participate in the selection process. The three ‘Big

Four’ audit firms decided to participate in the selection

process. Following a series of interviews, as well as two

presentation rounds, in which the participating firms were

offered the opportunity to present themselves and their

audit proposals, the Selection Committee evaluated the

firms based on certain pre-defined selection criteria.

These included the planned involvement of experts, the

fit with the audit partner and the audit team, the level of

innovation in audit approach, experience in the high-tech

industry, quality and reference rating, the international

network of the audit firm, the onboarding strategy, the

competitiveness of the audit fee and the proposal

documentation and presentations provided by the invited

audit firms. The Selection Committee concluded that

Deloitte Accountants BV (Deloitte) was the preferred

audit firm, with PricewaterhouseCoopers Accountants

NV (PwC) as runner-up. Unfortunately, the Supervisory

Board had to withdraw the nomination of Deloitte after it

was informed by Deloitte that they would not be able to

complete in a timely manner and therefore resolve a

conflicting advisory role involving a company in which

ASML holds an equity stake. The Supervisory Board

immediately re-initiated the selection process and

announced in April 2022 that PwC had been identified as

the preferred audit firm to become ASML’s external

auditor for the reporting year 2025.

Other topics

Other topics discussed by the Audit Committee in

2023 included ASML’s tax policy and developments in

the area of tax laws including their potential impact on

ASML, the responsibilities of the Audit Committee in

the area of ESG and the quarterly overviews of legal

matters.

The Audit Committee also performed an annual review

and update of its Rules of Procedure.

Following most Audit Committee meetings, the internal

and external auditor each meet with the Audit

Committee without management present to discuss

their views on the matters warranting the attention of

the Audit Committee. This may include their

relationship with the Audit Committee, the relationship

with the Board of Management and any other matters

deemed necessary to be discussed. The Audit

Committee also held regular one-to-one meetings with

the CFO.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SUPERVISORY BOARD REPORT CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 209
Supervisory Board committees (continued)

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ESG Committee
The ESG Committee advises the Supervisory Board  in carrying out its<br><br>governance and oversight responsibilities with regard to sustainability,<br><br>environmental, social and governance matters.
Main responsibilities:
•the ESG sustainability strategy, including the various sub-<br><br>themes of the ESG sustainability strategy;<br><br>•the integration of ESG in the Company and the ESG<br><br>sustainability strategy;<br><br>• the periodic assessment and evaluation of ASML’s ESG<br><br>sustainability performance and progress against its<br><br>objectives;<br><br>• the relationships and engagement with ASML’s<br><br>stakeholders; and<br><br>•the (impact of) external ESG matters and developments<br><br>which are relevant for ASML and the general evolution of the<br><br>ESG landscape.
Members:
•Birgit Conix  (Chair)<br><br>•Alexander Everke<br><br>•An Steegen<br><br>The ESG Committee may be supported by external experts<br><br>as well as experts from within ASML who act as advisers on<br><br>the subjects reviewed and discussed.
On April 26, 2023, the Supervisory<br><br>Board decided to establish the ESG<br><br>Committee to focus on ESG and<br><br>sustainability in recognition of their<br><br>importance to ASML. Recurring agenda topics (quarterly) Attendance
--- --- ---
•ESG Strategy and performance<br><br>•ESG Governance<br><br>•ESG Compliance In addition to the ESG Committee members, the EVP & Chief Business<br><br>Officer, the EVP & CFO and the Head of ESG Sustainability have a<br><br>standing invitation to attend the ESG Committee meetings. Internal<br><br>experts and external advisers may is also invited to attend the ESG<br><br>Committee meetings when deemed necessary. The advisers do not<br><br>have voting rights.
ESG Committee meetings in 2023
In general, the ESG Committee meets at least twice a year and more<br><br>frequently when deemed necessary. In 2023, the ESG Committee held<br><br>two meetings.
The overview below provides details on the topics discussed during ESG Committee meetings in 2023.
Q1 Q3
•No meetings •Performance on ESG KPIs and ESG targets for the Long-Term<br><br>Incentive (LTI)<br><br>•Feedback from ESG benchmarks<br><br>•Update on preparations for CSRD compliance<br><br>•Deep dive on Scope 1 & 2 emissions<br><br>•Human Rights Policy<br><br>•Formalities related to ESG Committee set-up
Q2 Q4
•No meetings •Performance on ESG KPIs and ESG LTI targets<br><br>•Feedback from relevant benchmarks and update on selection of<br><br>benchmarks<br><br>•ESG Strategy update<br><br>•Update on preparations for CSRD compliance<br><br>•Deep dive on EUV energy use per wafer pass
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SUPERVISORY BOARD REPORT CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 210
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Supervisory Board committees (continued)

AuditCommittee_Page2_Background.jpg

ESG Committee

Setting up an ESG Committee

In April 2023, the Supervisory Board discussed the

possibility of setting up of an ESG Committee as a new

sub-committee of the Supervisory Board. Factors

considered included that ASML had made a step-up in

terms of ESG Sustainability ambition and had amended

its ESG Sustainability strategy; that expectations from

stakeholders in relation to ESG Sustainability are

increasing, including on how the strategy and

performance on ESG Sustainability are being

supervised; that regulatory requirements in the area of

ESG Sustainability are significantly increasing; and that

increased stakeholder expectations and regulatory

requirements result in an increased risk profile for the

company and its Board of Management and

Supervisory Board members. The Supervisory Board

concluded that, in order to ensure sufficient time and

attention is devoted to the topic of ESG Sustainability

at the level of the Supervisory Board, it was desirable

to establish an ESG sub-committee.

In July 2023, the ESG Committee held its first meeting.

Topics discussed were the formalities related to the

set-up of the committee, including the selection of

Birgit Conix as the Committee's chair and the adoption

of the Rules of Procedure. The Committee also

reviewed the latest feedback from the ESG

benchmarks relevant for ASML as well as the

performance on the 21 ESG KPIs and on the ESG

related targets in the Long-Term Incentive of the Board

of Management and ASML's Senior Management.

The progress made in relation to the preparations for

compliance with the EU-CSRD were reviewed and a

deep dive was performed on the progress of ASML's

program to bring scope 1 and 2 emissions to net zero by

  1. The ESG Committee also reviewed the updated

Human Rights Policy. Finally, the ESG Committee

reviewed an overview of supervisory responsibilities in

relation to ESG and how these responsibilities are divided

over the full Supervisory Board and the Supervisory

Board's committees, where the potential areas of overlap

are and how to deal with those areas. A high level

summary of the outcome of this discussion is shown in

the table on this page.

In Q4, the ESG Committee reviewed the preliminary

results of the double materiality assessment for the year

2024 and the proposed minor adjustments to the ESG

Sustainability Strategy. Furthermore, performance on the

21 ESG KPIs and on the ESG related targets in the

Long-Term Incentive of the Board of Management and

ASML's Senior Management was reviewed as was the

progress made in relation to the preparations for

compliance with the EU-CSRD. The ESG Committee

was also updated on the review of which ESG

benchmarks to participate in and a deep dive was

performed on the progress of ASML's program on EUV

energy use per wafer pass.

The ESG Committee's in-depth discussions on ESG and

the subsequent reporting of the main points of these

discussions to the full Supervisory Board are seen as

very valuable, as it further strengthens the Supervisory

Board's oversight over ESG matters.

Supervisory activities in the area of ESG Sustainability

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SUPERVISORY BOARD REPORT CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 211
Supervisory Board committees (continued) Supervisory Board<br><br>Oversight over overall company strategy aimed at sustainable long-term value creation and<br><br>company performance, including ESG aspects
--- --- --- --- ---
Audit<br><br>Committee ESG<br><br>Committee Remuneration<br><br>Committee Selection and<br><br>Nomination<br><br>Committee Technology<br><br>Committee
Non-financial<br><br>reporting, ESG<br><br>internal controls<br><br>and assurance Oversight over<br><br>ESG strategy<br><br>(execution) &<br><br>performance ESG metrics as<br><br>part of executive<br><br>remuneration Corporate<br><br>Governance<br><br>Leadership<br><br>Development &<br><br>succession<br><br>including<br><br>diversity Product &<br><br>Technology<br><br>roadmap related<br><br>ESG matters/<br><br>programs (e.g.<br><br>EUV energy<br><br>efficiency)

Grey_Background.jpg

Selection and Nomination Committee
The Selection and Nomination Committee assists the Supervisory<br><br>Board in relation to its responsibilities over the composition and<br><br>functioning of the Supervisory Board and the Board of Management<br><br>and the monitoring of corporate governance developments.
Main responsibilities:
•Preparing the selection criteria and appointment procedures<br><br>for members of the Supervisory Board and Board of<br><br>Management, and the supervision of the Board of<br><br>Management’s policy in relation to the selection and<br><br>appointment criteria for senior management;<br><br>•Periodically evaluating the scope and composition of the<br><br>Board of Management and the Supervisory Board, and<br><br>proposing the profile of the Supervisory Board;<br><br>•Periodically evaluating the functioning of the Board of<br><br>Management and the Supervisory Board, and their individual<br><br>members;<br><br>•Preparing the Supervisory Board’s decisions for appointing<br><br>and reappointing members of the Board of Management<br><br>and proposing (re)appointments of members of the<br><br>Supervisory Board; and<br><br>•Monitoring and discussing developments in corporate<br><br>governance.
Members:
•Nils Andersen (Chair)<br><br>•Annet Aris<br><br>•Mark Durcan<br><br>•Terri Kelly<br><br>Each member is an independent, non-executive member of our<br><br>Supervisory Board, in accordance with the Nasdaq Listing<br><br>Rules.
In 2023, the Selection and Nomination<br><br>Committee's key area of focus was<br><br>Board of Management composition and<br><br>succession. Recurring agenda topics Attendance
--- --- ---
•Role, composition and functioning of the Board of Management<br><br>•Role, composition and functioning of the Supervisory Board<br><br>•Corporate governance In addition to the Selection and Nomination Committee members, the<br><br>two presidents and the EVP HRO are regularly invited to attend (parts of)<br><br>its meetings. An external adviser is also invited to attend the Selection<br><br>and Nomination Committee meetings when deemed necessary.
The overview below provides details on the topics discussed during Selection and Nomination Committee<br><br>meetings in 2023.
H1 H2
•Composition of Board of Management, including  succession and<br><br>transition pipeline<br><br>•Profile and composition of Supervisory Board and composition of its<br><br>committees<br><br>•Nominations for appointment of Supervisory Board members<br><br>•Induction program for new Supervisory Board members<br><br>•Amendment of Rules of Procedure Board of Management and<br><br>Supervisory Board<br><br>•Outcome of evaluation of Supervisory Board and committees<br><br>•Performance of the Board of Management and individual members<br><br>•Diversity policy of the Board of Management<br><br>•New Dutch Corporate Governance Code<br><br>•ESG Sustainability Committee set-up and composition •Composition of Board of Management, including diversity aspects &<br><br>requirements, and succession pipeline<br><br>•End of appointment term, retirement of the Co-Presidents and<br><br>appointment of Christophe Fouquet as President and CEO per the<br><br>2024 AGM<br><br>•Intended appointment of Jim Koonmen as member of the Board of<br><br>Management per the 2024 AGM<br><br>•Profile and composition of Supervisory Board<br><br>•Nomination for appointment of Annet Aris, Mark Durcan and Warren<br><br>East as Supervisory Board members per the 2024 AGM<br><br>•Approach to the 2023 self-evaluation of the Supervisory Board and<br><br>Committees<br><br>•Implementation of the revised Dutch Corporate Governance Code,<br><br>including related governance documents,<br><br>•Responsibilities of the Selection & Nomination Committee in the area of<br><br>ESG
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SUPERVISORY BOARD REPORT CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 212
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Supervisory Board committees (continued)

AuditCommittee_Page2_Background.jpg

Selection and Nomination Committee

Composition, role and responsibilities of the Board of

Management

In 2023, the Selection and Nomination Committee

devoted significant time to discussing the (future)

composition, role and responsibilities of the Board of

Management. For example, we reviewed the talent

bench and discussed career development of top talent

to prepare for future Board of Management roles. The

Committee also assessed the functioning of the Board

of Management and its individual members. For this

purpose, discussions took place with each individual

Board of Management member, the outcome of which

was discussed with the Committee.

During the 2023 AGM, Wayne Allan was appointed as

EVP and Chief Strategic Sourcing & Procurement

Officer, as member of the Board of Management

effective per the 2023 AGM. Following this

appointment, the Board of Management consisted of

six members. The rationale behind Wayne's

appointment was the increased strategic importance of

the Strategic Sourcing & Procurement Officer function

for ASML’s strategy.

The Selection and Nomination Committee and the

Supervisory Board continually discuss succession

planning with respect to the Board of Management.

During 2023, ample time was spent discussing the end

of the appointment terms, per the 2024 AGM, of

ASML's co-Presidents, Peter Wennink and Martin van

den Brink and their potential succession in case their

appointment terms would not be extended. On

November 30, 2023, we announced that Peter and

Martin will retire from ASML upon completion of their

current appointment terms per the 2024 AGM, and

that we intend to appoint Christophe Fouquet, currently

ASML’s Chief Business Officer and member of the Board

of Management, as the company’s next President and

Chief Executive Officer. This appointment is subject to

notification of the AGM on April 24, 2024. The

Supervisory Board, together with the management team,

has gone through a comprehensive succession planning

process. With Christophe, we have identified a very

experienced leader with deep understanding of ASML’s

technology and the semiconductor industry ecosystem –

acquired through different roles at ASML and other

companies – and the right leadership qualities and

culture fit.

In addition, we intend to appoint Jim Koonmen as Chief

Customer Officer, a new position in ASML’s Board of

Management, subject to notification of the Annual

General Meeting of Shareholders on April 24, 2024. Jim’s

appointment underscores ASML’s ambition to

continuously increase our responsiveness to customer

needs, and to consistently deliver high-performance

products and services.

After the retirement of Martin van den Brink as co-

President of ASML, Martin will continue to support the

future growth of ASML by taking up a role as a

technology advisor.

Composition, role and responsibilities of the Supervisory Board

The Selection and Nomination Committee spent a

significant amount of time discussing the Supervisory

Board’s composition, profile and rotation schedule,

particularly the appointment and reappointment of

Supervisory Board members to fill vacancies both in the

short and longer term. The Supervisory Board profile was

reviewed in light of the long-term strategic challenges

faced by ASML and what these mean for the oversight to

be performed by the Supervisory Board. While the

conclusion was that the requirements for the size of and

the competencies to be represented in the Supervisory

Board were generally still appropriate, some adjustments

were considered desirable. Furthermore, the paragraph

on diversity was shortened, since a separate Supervisory

Board D&I Policy was adopted in light of the revised

Dutch Corporate Governance Code. The revised profile

can be found in the Supervisory Board's Rules of

Procedure on our website. For the actual changes in

composition of the Supervisory Board, reference is made

to the section on Supervisory Board composition in this

Annual Report.

The Selection and Nomination Committee also discussed

changes to the composition of the Supervisory Board

effective per the 2023 AGM. The Selection and

Nomination Committee advised the Supervisory Board

on the nominations for the appointment of successors to

Gerard Kleisterlee and Rolf-Dieter Schwalb, who retired

during the 2023 AGM having served eight years on our

Supervisory Board.

Changes to Supervisory Board Committees in 2023

The Selection and Nomination Committee also discussed

the composition of the Supervisory Board committees in

light of the retirement of Gerard Kleisterlee and Rolf-Dieter

Schwalb and the appointment of Nils Andersen and Jack de

Kreij. Several changes in the composition of the Supervisory

Board Committees took effect per the 2023 AGM. Nils

Andersen became Chair of the Supervisory Board and Chair

of the Selection and Nomination Committee. Jack de Kreij

became Chair of the Audit Committee and a member of the

Remuneration Committee.

Read more in Supervisory Board report - Meetings and

attendance - Composition

At the end of 2023 and in early 2024, the Selection and

Nomination Committee discussed the functioning of the

individual members of the Supervisory Board as well as

the process and outcome of the Supervisory Board’s

self-evaluation.

Read more in Supervisory Board report - Meetings and

attendance - Evaluation

Corporate governance

As part of its responsibility to monitor corporate

governance developments, the Selection and

Nomination Committee discussed the revised Dutch

Corporate Governance Code that came into effect on

December 22, 2022 and what actions were required

for ASML to comply with the revised code. The

Committee reviewed proposed updates to the Rules of

Procedure for the Board of Management and the

Supervisory Board, the D&I Policies for the Supervisory

Board and for the entire workforce of ASML, including

Senior Management, the Stakeholder Engagement

Policy and the updated Policy for Bilateral Contacts

with Shareholders. Where relevant, the Selection and

Nomination Committee provided positive

recommendations to the Supervisory Board for

adoption or approval of these corporate governance

documents. The Committee also discussed

developments in the area of Corporate Governance in

general, including matters of interest to investors and

shareholder organizations.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SUPERVISORY BOARD REPORT CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 213
Supervisory Board committees (continued)

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Technology Committee
The Technology Committee advises the Supervisory Board<br><br>with respect to the technology plans required to execute<br><br>our business strategy.
Main responsibilities:
•Advising on technology trends, the study of potential<br><br>alternative strategies, the technology strategy, product<br><br>roadmaps, required technical resources and operational<br><br>performance in R&D;<br><br>•Making recommendations to the Supervisory Board<br><br>on technology-related projects with respect to ASML’s<br><br>competitive position; and<br><br>•Discussing the technology targets set to measure short-<br><br>and long-term performance as well as the achievements<br><br>related to these, and advising the Remuneration Committee<br><br>on this topic.
Members:
•Mark Durcan (Chair)<br><br>•Annet Aris<br><br>•Warren East<br><br>•An Steegen<br><br>The Technology Committee is supported by external experts<br><br>as well as experts from within ASML who act as advisers on<br><br>the subjects reviewed and discussed. External experts may<br><br>include representatives of customers, suppliers and partners<br><br>to increase the Committee’s understanding of the technology<br><br>and research required to develop our leading-edge systems.
In Q4 2023, the Technology Committee<br><br>visited ASML's facility in Wilton, CT,<br><br>USA. Recurring agenda topics (quarterly) Attendance
--- --- ---
•Role, composition and functioning of the Board of Management<br><br>•Role, composition and functioning of the Supervisory Board<br><br>•Corporate governance In addition to the Technology Committee members, the Committee’s<br><br>external and internal advisers regularly attended committee meetings.<br><br>The advisers do not have voting rights.
Technology Committee meetings in 2023
In general, the Technology Committee meets at least twice a year<br><br>and more frequently when deemed necessary. In 2023, the Technology<br><br>Committee held five meetings.
The overview below provides details on the topics discussed during Technology Committee meetings in<br><br>2023.
Q1 Q3
•Review of Applications<br><br>•Technology Leadership Index performance review 2022 and<br><br>2020-2022 and target setting for 2023 and 2023-2025 •Review of DUV (including Installed Base and Service and Mature<br><br>Products)<br><br>•Device Roadmap
Q2 Q4
•Review of the Development & Engineering, System Engineering and<br><br>Research •Review of EUV Low NA and High NA<br><br>•Visit to ASML's facility in Wilton, CT, USA
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SUPERVISORY BOARD REPORT CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 214
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Supervisory Board committees (continued)

AuditCommittee_Page2_Background.jpg

Technology Committee

Review of technology programs

As in previous years, the Technology Committee’s

primary focus in 2023 was on the review of the

execution and implementation of technology programs

and roadmaps in EUV 0.55 NA (High NA), EUV 0.33

NA, DUV and Applications. In this respect, the key

challenges and opportunities, from a business

perspective as well as from a technology standpoint,

were reviewed and discussed in depth. During each

meeting the Technology Committee also discussed the

progress made on the technology targets included in

the Technology Leadership Index, a performance

measure for the short-term and long-term variable

remuneration of the Board of Management. At the

beginning of the year, in a meeting especially planned

for this purpose, the Technology Committee discussed

the final achievements on the technology targets. In the

same meeting, new technology targets were set for the

new performance period. The Technology Committee

subsequently provided advice to the Remuneration

Committee and the Supervisory Board.

The meeting in Q1 was dedicated to the achievements

within Applications. The Technology Committee was

presented with a recap of the achievements in 2022

and was informed about the roadmap toward 2028,

the market developments, competitive landscape and

the opportunities in that respect. In addition, updates

were provided on computational lithography, optical

metrology, e-beam metrology and control and data

products.

In Q2, the main focus of the meeting was on the

Development & Engineering sector of ASML, including its

Research department. In addition, a presentation was

provided on system engineering within ASML and how

this contributes to the product and technology roadmap.

Furthermore, the Technology Committee was informed

on ASML’s intellectual property portfolio as well as the

protection thereof.

After a successful contribution in 2022 the Technology

Committee invited imec back to provide an update of its

view on the long-term device roadmap for both Logic

and Memory during the Q3 meeting. The presentations

by imec were followed by a detailed discussion of the

potential impact of the device roadmap on ASML’s

lithography roadmap. Next to this, the Technology

Committee discussed the developments and

achievements in DUV. Apart from the product roadmaps

and the technology programs, the Technology

Committee was informed about the installed base and

service strategy. Furthermore, the Committee paid

attention to Mature Products & Services and the related

challenges and opportunities.

In Q4, the Technology Committee visited ASML’s second

largest facility in Wilton, U.S.A. During this two-day

meeting, the Technology Committee primarily focused on

the achievements and challenges in EUV 0.33 NA and

EUV 0.55 NA (High NA). Special attention was paid to

the overall roadmap, market developments and EUV field

performance as well as the status of new product

development. The Technology Committee was also

informed about the focus on quality, productivity, the

drive for commonality and reduction of energy

consumption. The second day of the visit to Wilton was

focused on providing insight in how the facility in Wilton

contributes to ASML’s overall technology and

manufacturing network. Furthermore, the Technology

Committee was provided with a tour through the

cleanroom at the Wilton facility.

The Technology Committee’s in-depth technology

discussions and the subsequent reporting of the main

points of these discussions to the full Supervisory Board

increases the Supervisory Board’s understanding of our

technology requirements. It also enables the Supervisory

Board to adequately supervise the strategic choices we

face, including our investment in R&D.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SUPERVISORY BOARD REPORT CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 215
Supervisory Board committees (continued)

The Financial Statements of ASML for the financial year

2023, as prepared by the Board of Management, have

been audited by KPMG Accountants NV. All members of

the Board of Management and the Supervisory Board

have signed these Financial Statements.

We recommend to shareholders that they adopt the

2023 Financial Statements. We also recommend that our

shareholders adopt the Board of Management’s

proposal to make a final dividend payment of €1.75 per

ordinary share. Together with the interim dividends paid

in respect of the 2023 financial year, which add up to

€4.35 per ordinary share, this leads to a total dividend of

€6.10 per ordinary share for the year 2023.

Finally, we would like to extend a word of thanks to the

Board of Management and all ASML employees for their

continued commitment and hard work during this

challenging year.

The Supervisory Board,

Nils Andersen, Chair

Annet Aris, Vice Chair

Birgit Conix

Mark Durcan

Warren East

Alexander Everke

Terri Kelly

Jack de Kreij

An Steegen

Veldhoven, February 14, 2024

New_FinStatementsProfitAllocation_Image.jpg

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SUPERVISORY BOARD REPORT CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 216
Financial Statements and Profit Allocation

Dear Stakeholder,

On behalf of the Remuneration Committee, I am pleased

to present the 2023 Remuneration Report, which

provides a summary of the remuneration policies for the

Board of Management and the Supervisory Board. The

following pages explain how these policies were applied

in 2023. Transparency is highly important to us, and we

have worked hard to ensure that this report not only

explains what we do but also how we do it and the

factors we considered in arriving at our conclusions.

Making connections

The connections and linkages we make across the

business are absolutely fundamental to the committee’s

efforts. Remuneration can be a sensitive topic and it has

been pleasing to see how our close working relationship

with Board of Management members has set the scene

for reasoned and informed two-way conversations.

Together, we are working to ensure we have the input

we need to make the correct decisions.

Overall, we believe we are setting the right amount of

stretch in our targets, while ensuring that these are both

achievable and aligned with desired behaviors and the

main drivers of ASML strategy.

Our 2023 performance

In 2023, ASML performed very well on the metrics that

are part of the Board of Management’s incentive plans.

For the short-term incentive (STI), performance was

between target and stretch for all performance measures

– EBIT Margin %, Customer Orientation and Technology

Leadership Index – resulting in an overall pay-out of

128.2% of target. For the long-term incentive (LTI)

2021-2023 series, ASML exceeded target on most of the

performance metrics – TSR, ROAIC and Technology

Leadership Index. ASML was below threshold on the

ESG metric, which is measured using ASML's

performance on the Dow Jones Sustainability Index

(DJSI). In absolute terms, ASML scored very well, ranking

#6 out of 347 companies in the DJSI. However, the DJSI

score is measured by the percentage deviation from the

industry leader for incentive purposes. For the

2021-2023 performance period, ASML was slightly

below threshold looking at the percentage deviation from

the industry leader. The overall LTI result is a vesting of

157.7% of target.

Key workstreams

Our philosophy is that if we focus on the right things -

engaging with our people, promoting an inclusive

environment, shaping our corporate culture, investing in

innovation and so on - then the business results and

creation of shareholder value are the logical outcomes.

Societal fairness

One of the most challenging new workstreams of 2023

was our drive to achieve societal fairness. This is a

relatively new and emotional topic – balancing what is

seen as fair within the company and our global peer

group with what is regarded as fair in the external

environment, for example in the Veldhoven area where

we have a large footprint. I think ASML is ahead of many

organizations in trying to unpack this issue and I am

proud of our interactions with the Works Council. With

their support and that of an external advisor, we have

worked to put more quantitative measures around the

concept of societal fairness, and you can read about our

deliberations on the following pages.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 REMUNERATION REPORT STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 217
Message from the Chair of the Remuneration Committee 2023 was again a very dynamic, challenging<br><br>year for ASML and this translated into another<br><br>busy year for our committee as we continued<br><br>to evolve the ways in which we can support the<br><br>growth of the company.”
---
Terri Kelly
Chair of the Remuneration Committee

Improved STI and LTI metrics

Another important area for the committee had to do with

the metrics we use for our incentive plans. With regard to

the STI, we looked into how we can best measure our

customer orientation. Complementing the good work

carried out by the team, we have been devising a new

and better way to ensure that the voice of the customer

plays an enhanced role in our short-term incentives. This

will be implemented in 2024.

For the LTI, we have reintroduced return on average

invested capital (ROAIC) as an important financial

measure, using a revised methodology to better mitigate

some of the inherent risks associated with ASML’s

business model.  We continue to strive for incentive

measures that best align with our strategy and overall

performance. To that end, we have also updated our

ESG sustainability measures, which include a good

balance of social and environmental measures. As noted

in the report, we have opted to move away from the

DJSI, as it was deemed not to be a very meaningful

measure to drive our ESG sustainability strategy and

initiatives.  While we contemplated replacing it with other

external ESG indices which could also be benchmarked

with other peer organizations, based on valuable

feedback from a number of our key stakeholders, we

opted to continue with an important measure related to

the diversity of our talent pipeline.

Remuneration Policy

After spending significant time and effort on updating our

policy for the Board of Management in the previous year,

we turned our attention to the Supervisory Board in 2023

and – after looking at the data as well as the growth and

scale of ASML – we introduced some adjustments to

remuneration, which are explained in the section on

Supervisory Board remuneration of this Remuneration

Report. As Remuneration Committee, we were pleased

that the 2023 Remuneration Policy for the Supervisory

Board was adopted with 98.88% support, and that the

remuneration amounts for the Supervisory Board were

adopted with 99.20% support.

Transparency

While the 2022 Remuneration Report received 93.21%

support at the 2023 AGM, transparency around

remuneration continues to be a topic of focus for the

Remuneration Committee. In the section about the

Remuneration Committee’s activities in 2023, the efforts

we made to further improve the transparency and

readability of the Remuneration Report are explained.

Listening to our stakeholders

When setting remuneration policies, we aim to listen and

respond to the diverse views of all our stakeholders. In

line with our annual stakeholder engagement process,

during 2023 we engaged with both internal and external

stakeholders on the topic of remuneration. As

Remuneration Committee we appreciate this on-going

dialogue, through which we have learned that some of

the views of our stakeholders are quite different. For

example, while some stakeholders will be concerned that

our executive remuneration may not be competitive

enough to attract and retain our leaders, others feel we

are overpaying, considering societal fairness aspects.

ASML is a unique organization, with not many

comparable companies against which to benchmark

remuneration. It is our job to take an overview of the

global pay landscape, to look at the specifics associated

with our particular geographies and growth trajectory,

and then arrive at a balanced judgement that supports

the recruitment, development and retention of the diverse

talent we need to thrive.

In the past we have carried out work to identify the

regions where we gain talent and where we lose it. We

then added a proportion of US-based companies to our

peer group, but also introduced a cap to total incentive

opportunities in order to align more closely with

European practices. We will continue to assess this in

such a way that we are able to achieve our overall

business objectives.

Changes to the committee

At the 2023 AGM, Rolf-Dieter Schwalb stepped down,

and I would like to thank him for his outstanding work

over the past years, particularly as his role as Chair of the

Audit Committee helped forge very solid links between

our two committees. We are pleased to have Jack de

Kreij join our committee, and as Jack is also the Chair of

the Audit Committee, we maintain the valuable

connection between these committees. Jack has already

added a great deal of knowledge and expertise to our

discussions, and I look forward to working with him over

the coming years.

Outlook

As we transition to 2024, we will continue to gather input

from key stakeholders, both internal and external, to help

provide input on some of our new incentive measures

and inform our thinking ahead of the AGM.

Throughout the year, we will be assessing the adequacy

of our Remuneration Policies, particularly in light of the

announced changes in the leadership structure of our

Board of Management and transition to a single

President.

As in previous years, governance policies will continue to

evolve and we will closely follow developments in this

area. We will also continue to manage and anticipate any

further changes in the Board of Management structure,

focusing on potential members and how our policy and

practices can support the desired outcomes.

Finally, I would like to thank the members of the

Remuneration Committee and the Supervisory Board for

their time, skills and wisdom over the last 12 months. It

has been a busy year but one that I firmly believe has

enabled our team to underpin the future prospects of

ASML.

Terri Kelly

Chair of the Remuneration Committee

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 REMUNERATION REPORT CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 218
Message from the Chair of the Remuneration Committee (continued)

Rem_At_A_Glance_Intro_141122.jpg

Our remuneration principles for performance support long-term success and sustainable value
Competitiveness The remuneration structure and levels intend to be competitive in the relevant labor market,<br><br>while at the same time taking into account societal trends and perceptions.
Alignment The remuneration policy is aligned with the short-term and long-term incentive policies for ASML<br><br>senior management and other ASML employees and takes into account internal relativities.
Long-term<br><br>orientation The policy and incentives focus on sustainable and long-term value creation.
Compliance ASML adopts the highest standards of good corporate governance.
Simplicity and<br><br>transparency The policy and its execution are as simple as possible and easily understandable to all<br><br>stakeholders. Linking remuneration to purpose and strategy
--- --- --- --- ---
Purpose Strategy Incentive<br><br>measures Pay for<br><br>performance
Unlocking the<br><br>potential of<br><br>people and<br><br>society by<br><br>pushing<br><br>technology to<br><br>new limits. Grow our holistic<br><br>lithography business Financial measures Remuneration<br><br>outcomes
Secure unique supply<br><br>chain capabilities to<br><br>ensure business<br><br>continuity Customer Orientation
Move toward adjacent<br><br>business<br><br>opportunities Technology leadership
Deliver on our ESG<br><br>sustainability<br><br>commitments Leadership in<br><br>ESG sustainability How we performed in 2023
--- --- --- ---
Financial (based on US GAAP) Non-financial
€27.6bn €14.1bn €9.0bn 7.8
Total sales Gross profit Income from operations Technology Leadership<br><br>Index score
(2022: €21.2bn) (2022: €10.7bn) (2022: €6.5bn) (2022: 8.1)
€5.4bn €19.91 65.8% 10.8%
Net cash provided by<br><br>operating activities Earning<br><br>per share ROAIC (Non-GAAP<br><br>measure)1 Dow Jones Sustainability<br><br>Index (DJSI)2
(2022: €8.5bn) (2022: €14.14) (2022: 48.2%) (2022: 10.8%)

1.The ROAIC (Non-GAAP measure) is based on a three-year (2021-2023) average by dividing the Income after income taxes by the Average Invested

Capital. Average Invested Capital is calculated by taking the average of Total assets minus Cash and cash equivalents, Short-term investments,

Total current liabilities and Non-current contract liabilities at the start and end of each quarter over three years. We believe that ROAIC is a

meaningful measure because it quantifies our effectiveness in generating returns relative to the capital invested in our business over the past three years.

2.The DJSI score is measured by the % deviation from the industry leader at the end of the 3-year performance period.

Relative TSR - ASML vs PHLX

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ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 REMUNERATION REPORT CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 219
Remuneration at a glance
Remuneration is an essential tool to motivate the right talent to continue to achieve our technology<br><br>roadmap and business priorities.

Remuneration at a glance.jpg

We aim to align the total<br><br>remuneration for our Board of<br><br>Management to our business<br><br>strategy through a combination<br><br>of fixed pay and short- and long-<br><br>term incentives, underpinned by<br><br>stretching performance targets.
€24.6m
Total remuneration
128.2%
Achieved of STI target
157.7%
Achieved of LTI target
43:1
CEO vs. average per FTE1 Board of Management
---
Peter T.F.M. Wennink1
Total remuneration 2023 (€’000s)
€5,941
Martin A. van den Brink1
Total remuneration 2023 (€’000s)
€5,939
Frédéric J.M. Schneider-Maunoury
Total remuneration 2023 (€’000s)
€3,574
Roger J.M. Dassen
Total remuneration 2023 (€’000s)
€3,558
Christophe D. Fouquet
Total remuneration 2023 (€’000s)
€3,519
Wayne R. Allan2
Total remuneration 2023 (€’000s)
€2,071
Remuneration summary (€’000s)
---

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| Base salary and benefit | STI | LTI | | --- | --- | --- || Stakeholder engagement in 2023 | | | --- | --- | | During 2023, we consulted with our large<br><br>shareholders and other stakeholders. The<br><br>Remuneration Committee also consulted the<br><br>views of the Board of Management. | | | Shareholders | | | Number of organizations met | 8 | | Number of meetings | 8 | | Percentage of issued share capital owned3 | 20% | | Shareholders representatives<br><br>and proxy advisers | | | Number of organizations met | 3 | | Number of meetings | 3 | | Works Council | | | Number of organizations met | 1 | | Number of meetings | >5 |

1.On November 30, 2023, ASML announced that Mr. Wennink and Mr.

van den Brink will retire as Presidents of ASML on April, 24 2024,

upon completion of their current appointment terms. Mr. Wennink

and Mr. van den Brink will remain entitled to performance shares

granted under their running LTI plans, which will vest in accordance

with the relevant performance criteria as stated in the grant letters. All

LTI expenses for the running LTI plans are accounted over their

remaining service period in 2023 and 2024. For comparison

purposes, if Mr. Wennink's and Mr. van den Brink were to remain in

service, their normalized LTI expense would be €2,575 thousand

each in 2023 and the outcome of the CEO vs. average per FTE ratio

would be 39:1.

2.Wayne R. Allan was appointed as a BoM member on April 26, 2023.

3.Based on the issued share capital and share positions at the time of

the AGM record date, March 29, 2023.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 REMUNERATION REPORT CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 220
Remuneration at a glance (continued)

Grey_Background.jpg

Remuneration Committee
The Remuneration Committee advises the Supervisory Board and<br><br>prepares the Supervisory Board’s resolutions with respect to the<br><br>remuneration of the Board of Management and the Supervisory Board.
Main responsibilities:
•Overseeing the development and implementation of the<br><br>Remuneration Policy for the Board of Management and<br><br>preparing the Supervisory Board Remuneration Policy;<br><br>•Reviewing and proposing to the Supervisory Board<br><br>corporate goals and objectives relevant to the variable part<br><br>of the Board of Management’s remuneration;<br><br>•Carrying out scenario analyses of the possible financial<br><br>outcomes on the variable remuneration of meeting these<br><br>goals, as well as exceeding these goals, before proposing<br><br>these corporate goals and objectives to the Supervisory<br><br>Board for approval; and<br><br>•Evaluating the performance of the members of the Board of<br><br>Management in view of those goals and objectives, and –<br><br>based on this evaluation – recommending to the Supervisory<br><br>Board appropriate compensation levels for the members of<br><br>the Board of Management.<br><br>•Staying apprised of external pay practices and the<br><br>effectiveness of our remuneration policy and incentive<br><br>measures in attracting and retaining top talent.
Members:
•Terri Kelly (Chair)<br><br>•Annet Aris<br><br>•Alexander Everke<br><br>•Jack de Kreij<br><br>Each member is an independent, non-executive member of our<br><br>Supervisory Board in accordance with the Nasdaq Listing<br><br>Rules. Ms. Kelly is neither a former member of our Board of<br><br>Management, nor a member of the management board of<br><br>another company. Currently, no member of the Remuneration<br><br>Committee is a member of the management board of another<br><br>Dutch listed company.
The Committee will continue to consider<br><br>what the optimal incentive measures are<br><br>to drive sustainable long-term value<br><br>creation. Recurring agenda topics Attendance
--- --- ---
•Remuneration of the Board of Management<br><br>•Remuneration of the Supervisory Board<br><br>•Update on performance on targets for short- and long-term incentive In addition to the Remuneration Committee members, the Remuneration<br><br>Committee generally invites the CEO, the EVP HRO, the Head<br><br>of Compensation and Benefits and in some instances also the CFO or the<br><br>CBO, as BoM member responsible for ESG, to attend (parts of) its meetings.<br><br>The Remuneration Committee’s external adviser is also invited to attend the<br><br>Remuneration Committee meetings when deemed necessary.
The below overview provides details on the topics discussed during<br><br>Remuneration Committee meetings in 2023.
Q1 Q3
•Total remuneration BoM 2023, incl. base salary 2023, and STI and LTI<br><br>at-target levels<br><br>•Short-Term Incentive Plan: Performance 2022, pay-out 2022 and<br><br>targets 2023<br><br>•Long-Term Incentive Plan: share vesting performance period 2020-2022,<br><br>and conditional grant and targets performance period 2023-2025<br><br>•Compliance with share ownership requirements<br><br>•Remuneration Report 2022<br><br>•Self-evaluation of Remuneration Committee<br><br>•Supervisory Board Remuneration Policy review including stakeholder<br><br>outreach •Progress STI and LTI targets and metrics<br><br>•Review of potential changes in STI or LTI metrics within limits of<br><br>Remuneration Policy<br><br>•Latest trends in policies and reporting<br><br>•Report on interaction with the Works Council, including discussion on<br><br>societal benchmark<br><br>•ESG related activities within scope of Remuneration Committee
Q2 Q4
•No meetings •Progress STI and LTI targets<br><br>•Board of Management remuneration 2024, including base salary, at-<br><br>target levels for STI and LTI, selection of STI and LTI metrics and<br><br>target levels<br><br>•Update on corporate governance developments: remuneration<br><br>•US Claw Back Policy<br><br>•Engagement of external auditor for agreed-upon procedures on<br><br>remuneration<br><br>•Draft Remuneration Report 2023<br><br>•Share planning for the period AGM 2024-2025<br><br>•Compliance of BoM members with share ownership requirement
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 REMUNERATION REPORT CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 221
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Remuneration Committee

Remuneration of the Board of Management

Following a fundamental review performed in H2 2021 and

Q1 2022, a new Remuneration Policy for the Board of

Management was adopted at the 2022 AGM with 93.18%

support. The 2022 BoM Remuneration Policy contains

market competitive maximum levels for the STI (120% for

the Presidents and 100% for the other Board of

Management members) and the LTI (200%) for on-target

performance. The Supervisory Board decided to implement

a phased approach towards these maximum levels.

At the end of 2022 a light review of Board of

Management remuneration levels was performed in order

to determine whether an increase of the on-target levels

for STI and/or LTI towards the policy maximum levels

was warranted. The Supervisory Board concluded that

this was the case and decided to increase the on-target

levels for the STI from 95% to 105% for the Presidents

and from 90% to 95% for the non-Presidents. For the LTI

the on-target levels were increased from 160% to 170%.

These changes became effective per January 1, 2023.

The Remuneration Committee made recommendations to

the Supervisory Board concerning the total remuneration

package of the Board of Management and the variable

remuneration consisting of an STI in cash and an LTI in

shares. The Remuneration Committee proposed 2023

targets for the Board of Management’s variable

remuneration to the Supervisory Board. During the year, the

Remuneration Committee closely monitored the Board of

Management’s performance. It provided recommendations

to the Supervisory Board regarding the achievement of the

2023 targets and related compensation levels for the Board

of Management members.

In proposing and evaluating the Board of Management’s

performance in relation to the corporate goals and

objectives for the variable remuneration of the Board of

Management members, the Remuneration Committee

closely cooperates with the Audit Committee, the ESG

Committee and the Technology Committee.

A similar review process was conducted at the end of

2023 with regard to the 2024 Board of Management

Remuneration. The Supervisory Board approved the

recommendation from the Remuneration Committee to

increase the on-target levels for the STI of the President

to 120%, the outgoing dual-Presidents to 105%, and for

the non-Presidents to 100%. For the LTI, the on-target

levels for the President were increased to 200% and for

the outgoing dual-Presidents and non-Presidents were

increased to 180%.

The Remuneration Committee has taken note of the views of

the individual members of the Board of Management with

regard to the amount and structure of their remuneration.

The shareholding positions of the Board of Management

members were reviewed by the Remuneration

Committee in order to assess compliance with the share

ownership guideline as included in the Remuneration

Policy for the Board of Management.

The Remuneration Committee engaged the external auditor

to perform certain agreed-upon procedures regarding the

reported performance by the Board of Management on the

STI Plan 2023 and LTI Plan 2021-2023

In order to comply with the rules implementing incentive-

based compensation recovery (clawback) as issued by

the SEC and Nasdaq, the Supervisory Board adopted

the ASML Clawback Policy under US/Nasdaq Rules. This

Policy has been filed as an exhibit to ASML's 2023

Annual Report on Form 20-F.

The Remuneration Committee also prepared the

Remuneration Report, which details the remuneration of

members of the Supervisory Board and the Board of

Management. Transparency around remuneration

continues to be a topic of focus for the Remuneration

Committee and in 2023 we made further efforts to

improve the transparency and readability of the

Remuneration Report, taking into account feedback we

received from our stakeholders during engagement

sessions. For example, we added non-financial indicators

to the table 'Relationship between accounted

remuneration and company’s performance' and we

added visualizations of the target setting process related

to the variable remuneration and the vesting of

performance shares.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 REMUNERATION REPORT CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 222
Remuneration Committee (continued)

Remuneration of the Supervisory Board

In Q1 2023, the Remuneration Committee finalized its

review of the Remuneration Policy for the Supervisory

Board and concluded that it was desirable to make

certain amendments to the remuneration amount and

Remuneration Policy for the Supervisory Board.

The key changes are explained in more detail in:

Remuneration Report - Supervisory Board Remuneration

Before submitting the resulting proposals to the General

Meeting, the Remuneration Committee consulted

extensively with shareholders, shareholder

representatives and other stakeholders, including the

Works Council of ASML Netherlands BV.  For more

information about the stakeholder feedback, reference is

made to the 2023 AGM page on our website. The

Supervisory Board, upon recommendation of the

Remuneration Committee, proposed to the General

Meeting to amend the Remuneration Policy for the

Supervisory Board. The amended policy was adopted on

April 26, 2023 at the 2023 AGM.

Societal benchmark

In the context of the most recent changes to the Board

of Management and Supervisory Board Remuneration

Policies, the Works Council raised the topic of societal

fairness of executive remuneration in relation to non-

executive remuneration. To follow-up on this topic, a

societal benchmark analysis was conducted during 2023

in close collaboration between a delegation of the

Remuneration Committee and the Works Council,

supported by the Remuneration Committee's external

advisor.

As a first step, the societal benchmark group was

established, consisting of companies of societal

relevance in the Netherlands that have comparable and

consistent remuneration disclosure. It was then

established that comparing absolute levels of

remuneration between ASML and the societal

benchmark group would not be appropriate or relevant

given the significant differences in factors (such as size,

scope, geographic footprint, complexity of business,

leadership structure). Therefore, the approach was taken

of comparing relative pay progression of the societal

group versus CEO pay, lowest Collective Labor

Agreement (CLA) scale and Supervisory Board pay, to

determine the pace of remuneration growth over time.

The outcome of the societal benchmark was that overall,

ASML's relative pay progression is well aligned to the

societal benchmark group. CEO pay progression was

below the 75th percentile of the group, the progression

of ASML’s lowest CLA scale progression has outpaced

the benchmarking group and the 2023 increases in

Supervisory Board remuneration is aligned to the

benchmarking group.

The Remuneration Committee intends to perform this

societal benchmark periodically going forward to serve as

reference to overall remuneration.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 REMUNERATION REPORT CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 223
Remuneration Committee (continued)

In this section of the Remuneration Report,

we provide an overview of the Remuneration

Policy for the Board of Management, which

was adopted by the General Meeting on April

29, 2022, and has applied as of January 1,

2022 onwards. It also contains information

about the execution of the Remuneration

Policy for the Board of Management as well

as details of the Board of Management

members’ actual remuneration for the

financial year 2023. The Remuneration Policy

for the Board of Management can be found

in the Governance section of our website.

Remuneration Policy

Remuneration as a strategic instrument

The 2022 Remuneration Policy for the Board of

Management supports the strategy, long-term interests

and sustainability of ASML in a highly dynamic

environment, while aiming to fulfill all stakeholders’

requirements and keeping an acceptable risk profile.

More than ever, the challenges for ASML are to drive

technology, to serve our customers and to satisfy our

stakeholders. These drivers are embedded in the identity,

mission and values of ASML and its affiliated enterprises

and are the backbone of the 2022 Remuneration Policy

for the Board of Management. The Supervisory Board

ensures that the 2022 Remuneration Policy for the Board

of Management and its implementation are linked to

ASML’s objectives. A direct way in which this is achieved

is by determining performance measures and setting

targets with respect to variable compensation that are

linked to our short-term and long-term ambitions.

More indirectly, we want to ensure that our 2022

Remuneration Policy for the Board of Management

enables ASML to attract, motivate and retain qualified

industry professionals for the Board of Management in

order to define and achieve our strategic goals. This is

reflected by our drive to determine a remuneration

structure and remuneration levels that intends to be

competitive in the relevant labor market, while at the

same time being aware of societal trends and

perception. Therefore, the 2022 Remuneration Policy for

the Board of Management acknowledges the internal

and external context as well as our business needs and

long-term strategy.

The 2022 Remuneration Policy for the Board of

Management is designed to encourage behavior that is

focused on long-term value creation and the long-term

interests and sustainability of ASML, while adopting the

highest standards of good corporate governance. The

2022 Remuneration Policy for the Board of Management

is aimed at motivating the Board of Management

members to achieve outstanding results, using a

combination of non-financial and financial performance

measures as well as an appropriate ratio between base

salary and variable compensation. Technology

leadership, customer value creation and employee

engagement are the key drivers of sustainable returns to

our shareholders.

Remuneration principles

The remuneration philosophy that ASML applies for all its

employees includes the principle that ASML wants to be

competitive in its relevant labor markets and pay what is

fair in such markets, while maintaining internal

consistency in reflecting differences in size and

complexity of individual responsibilities. The Supervisory

Board applies the same principle for the Board of

Management of ASML and in doing so takes the pay and

employment conditions for the ASML employees into

account when formulating the Remuneration Policy for

the Board of Management. The level of stakeholder

support, including the support of society, for the

Remuneration Policy for the Board of Management that

ASML applies is important to us and was also taken into

account when formulating the various elements of the

policy. When preparing the Remuneration Policy for the

Board of Management, the Supervisory Board

considered the external environment in which the

Company operates, the relevant statutory provisions and

provisions of the Dutch Corporate Governance Code and

competitive market practice as well as the guidance

issued by organizations representing institutional

shareholders. The Supervisory Board’s Remuneration

Committee engaged extensively with various

stakeholders to obtain their perspectives. These

stakeholders included ASML’s shareholders, shareholder

interest organizations, proxy advisers and the Works

Council of ASML Netherlands BV. In line with the Dutch

Corporate Governance Code, the members of the Board

of Management have been asked to share their views on

their remuneration. Furthermore, advice has been

obtained from an external remuneration expert.

The 2022 Remuneration Policy for the Board of

Management is built on the following principles:

•Competitiveness: The remuneration structure and

levels intend to be competitive in the relevant labor

market, while at the same time taking into account

societal trends and perceptions;

•Alignment: The policy is aligned with the Short-term

Incentive and/or Long-term Incentive Policy for ASML

senior management and other ASML employees and

takes into account internal relativities;

•Long-term orientation: The policy and incentives focus

on sustainable long-term value creation;

•Compliance: ASML adopts the highest standards of

good corporate governance; and

•Simplicity and transparency: The policy and its

execution are as simple as possible and easily

understandable to all stakeholders.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 REMUNERATION REPORT CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 224
Board of Management remuneration

Reference group and market positioning

Similar to the remuneration philosophy for all ASML

employees, we aim to offer the members of the Board of

Management a remuneration package that is competitive

compared with a relevant labor market. To define this

market, we created a reference group consisting of

companies that are comparable to ASML in terms of size

and complexity, industry or business profile, data

transparency and geographical area. The reference

group may include Dutch and international companies

where members of the Board of Management might be

recruited to and from.

For as long as ASML is positioned around the median of

the group of companies with respect to size (measured

by enterprise value, revenue and number of employees)

and thus complexity, the median market level may serve

as a reference in determining the level of remuneration for

the Board of Management.

As ASML is a Dutch-headquartered company, the

Supervisory Board also takes into account the external

environment in which the Company operates in the

Netherlands, and furthermore considers competitive

market practices as well as guidance issued by

organizations representing institutional shareholders in

the Netherlands, and has decided for the 2022

Remuneration Policy not to follow the (high) international

market level for long-term incentives (LTI) and to cap the

maximum target LTI award at 200% of base salary. This

means that the reference to a median market level

described above will be used for the cash compensation

only (i.e. the base salary and the short-term incentive

(STI), as the LTI will be capped).

As ASML has a dual presidency and considers the two

presidents of equal weight and importance to the

Company, for the year 2023 the Supervisory Board has

decided to continue the Company’s longstanding

practice that the relevant benchmark reference level for

the two presidents is the average of the CEO level and

that of the other members of the Board of Management

in the labor market data, instead of benchmarking

against CEO data only. For the other members of the

Board of Management, the Supervisory Board has

applied the average of all non-CEO members of the

Board of Management in the benchmark as relevant

reference, instead of differentiating between members of

the Board of Management. With reference to the

announcement of November 30, 2023, following the

appointment of Christophe Fouquet as our sole president

and CEO effective per the 2024 AGM, references to the

dual presidency and Presidents should be considered a

reference to our sole president. While no changes to our

remuneration policy are being proposed for 2024, the

Remuneration Committee will be contemplating whether

any changes in policy should be implemented for 2025

and beyond.

In principle, a benchmark of the Board of Management

remuneration is conducted every two years. In the year

without a market assessment, the Supervisory Board

considers the appropriateness of any change of base

salary, taking into account the market environment as

well as the salary adjustments for other ASML

employees. To ensure an appropriate composition of the

relevant labor market, the Supervisory Board reviews the

composition of the reference group at the time a

benchmark is conducted. The composition of the

reference group may be adjusted as a result of takeover

transactions, mergers or other corporate activities.

Substantial changes applied to the composition of the

reference group will be proposed to shareholders.

The current reference group consists of the following<br><br>companies:
Current reference group<br><br>composition
European<br><br>companies with<br><br>focus on long-term<br><br>technology/<br><br>industrial<br><br>engineering/R&D Semiconductor<br><br>manufacturing<br><br>companies Semiconductor<br><br>equipment<br><br>companies
ABB Broadcom Applied Materials
Airbus Intel Lam Research
Dassault Systèmes Qualcomm
Infineon<br><br>Technologies
Linde
Medtronic
Novartis
NXP<br><br>Semiconductors
Philips
Roche
SAP
Schneider Electric
Shell
Siemens
Siemens<br><br>Healthineers

Total direct compensation

The remuneration levels are determined using the Total

Cash Compensation (TCC). TCC consists of base salary

and variable remuneration in the form of a capped STI

and a capped LTI, which together constitutes the total

direct compensation.

Base salary

The 2022 Remuneration Policy for the Board of

Management prescribes a benchmark that will only be

conducted for the TCC level. The base salary of Board of

Management members is derived from this TCC level.

The actual base salary and annual increases will be

reported in the Remuneration Report. The base salary for

the Board of Management for the reporting year 2023 is

disclosed in the table 'Total remuneration Board of

Management.'

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 REMUNERATION REPORT CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 225
Board of Management remuneration (continued)

Performance driven scenarios.jpg

Variable compensation

The variable compensation consists of the STI and the LTI. The performance metrics are set by the Supervisory

Board and consist of financial and non-financial metrics in such a way that an optimal balance is achieved between

the various Company objectives, both in the short-term and the long-term. By doing so, we ensure that the variable

compensation contributes to the strategy, long-term interests and sustainability of the Company. The Supervisory

Board may adjust the performance metrics and their relative weighting of the variable income based on the rules and

principles as outlined in the 2022 Remuneration Policy for the Board of Management of ASML Holding NV, if required

by changed strategic priorities in any given year. The Supervisory Board assesses the extent to which performance

metrics are met at the end of a performance period.

The 2022 Remuneration Policy for the Board of Management contains maximum levels for the STI and the LTI for on-

target performance. These maximum levels can be implemented if ASML’s relative positioning in the reference group

is at least equal to the median (in terms of size). The Supervisory Board has decided to apply a gradual transition into

the new policy levels. For 2023, the target STI levels were set at 105% for the presidents (2022: 95%) and 95% for

the other members of the Board of Management (2022: 90%), aligned with a positioning in the reference group

slightly below the median (in terms of size) at the time of designing the Remuneration Policy. For the same reason, the

target LTI level for 2023 was set at 170% of base salary for all members of the Board of Management (2022: 160%).

The Supervisory Board has the discretionary power to adjust the incentive pay-out upward or downward if it feels that

the outcome is unreasonable due to exceptional circumstances during the performance period.

Scenario analyses of the possible outcomes of the variable remuneration components and their effect on the

remuneration of the Board of Management are conducted annually.

The following table represents the variable pay as percentage of base salary for the Board of Management in the

case of on-target performance.

Performance driven scenarios
Retains high proportion of performance related by:
2023 Levels<br><br>for maximum<br><br>performance
--- ---
Presidents
Other members

311711547181540

% Variable 83%
% Variable 83%
2023 Levels<br><br>for on target<br><br>performance
--- ---
Presidents
Other members

311711547181574

% Variable 73%
% Variable 73%
Threshold<br><br>performance
--- ---
Presidents
Other members

311711547181603

n Base salary
n STI
n LTI
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 REMUNERATION REPORT CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 226
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Board of Management remuneration (continued)

Summary of 2022 Remuneration Policy Board of Management

The elements of the 2022 Remuneration Policy for the Board of Management and their link to the strategy of ASML

are summarized below.

Summary of 2022 Remuneration Policy

| Base<br><br>salary | + | STI<br><br>Cash bonus | + | LTI<br><br>Share-based<br><br>incentive | + | Pension and<br><br>other benefits | = | Total<br><br>remuneration | | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- || Fixed remuneration (base salary) | | | --- | --- | | Link to strategy/rationale | 2022 policy | | Attract, motivate and retain qualified industry professionals for the<br><br>Board of Management in order to define and achieve strategic goals. | Benchmark | | | •Consisting of 20 most relevant technology and R&D oriented<br><br>companies, including ASML’s talent competitors and business<br><br>peers and (indirect) customers<br><br>•Composition of companies in the reference group takes into<br><br>account ASML’s geographic location – it’s weighted toward<br><br>European companies (75% weighting), with some US companies<br><br>(25% weighting) | | STI (cash bonus) | | | Link to strategy/rationale | 2022 policy | | Ensure a balanced focus on both the (financial) performance of<br><br>ASML in the short-term, and the sustained company future in terms<br><br>of technological advancement and customer satisfaction, fueling<br><br>long-term success. | •Maximum target STI: 120% of base salary for the presidents and<br><br>100% for the other BoM members<br><br>•2023 target STI: 105% of base salary for the presidents and 95%<br><br>for the other BoM members | | | The weight of the individual STI performance metrics is as follows: | | | •60% Financial<br><br>•20% Technology Leadership Index<br><br>•20% Customer Orientation || LTI (share-based incentive) | | | --- | --- | | Link to strategy/rationale | 2022 policy | | Contribute to the strategy, long-term interests and sustainability of<br><br>ASML using performance measures which balance the direct interest<br><br>of ASML’s investors, the long-term financial success of ASML, the<br><br>long-term continuation of technological advancement and the<br><br>environmental and social dimensions of sustainability. | Maximum target LTI: capped at 200% of base salary<br><br>2023 target LTI: 170% of base salary | | | The weight of the individual LTI performance metrics is as follows: | | | •30% Relative TSR<br><br>•20-30% ESG measures; 2023 weight: 20%<br><br>•20-30% Technology Leadership Index; 2023 weight: 20%<br><br>•20-30% Strategic value drivers; 2023 weight: 30% | | Other elements of fixed remuneration (pension and other benefits) | | | Link to strategy/rationale | 2022 policy | | Contribute to the competitiveness of the overall remuneration<br><br>package and create alignment with market practice. | •Pension arrangement based on the ‘excedent’ (supplementary)<br><br>arrangement for ASML employees in the Netherlands – a defined<br><br>contribution plan<br><br>•Expense reimbursements, such as company car costs, travel<br><br>expenses, representation allowances, housing costs (gross amount<br><br>before taxes), social security costs and health and disability<br><br>insurance costs | | Share ownership guidelines | | | Link to strategy/rationale | 2022 policy | | Requirement for a minimum share ownership by members of the<br><br>Board of Management. Ensure alignment between the interests of<br><br>the Board of Management members and ASML’s long-term value<br><br>creation. | •Presidents three times annual base salary, other Board members<br><br>two times annual base salary<br><br>•5-year period to comply for new members<br><br>•Supervisory Board has discretion to allow a temporary deviation in<br><br>extraordinary circumstances<br><br>•Any shortfall will be remediated through the next vesting of shares | | ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 | REMUNERATION REPORT CONTINUED | STRATEGIC REPORT | CORPORATE GOVERNANCE | FINANCIALS | 227 | | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | | Board of Management remuneration (continued) | | | | | |

Remuneration of Board of Management in 2023.jpg

Remuneration of Board of Management in 2023

The remuneration of the Board of Management for the

financial year 2023 is an implementation of and complies

with the 2022 Remuneration Policy for the Board of

Management, as further explained below. As such, the

remuneration of the Board of Management in 2023

contributed to the objectives of the 2022 Remuneration

Policy for the Board of Management and, as a result, to

ASML’s strategy aimed at sustainable long-term value

creation. The Supervisory Board carried out a scenario

analysis when determining the structure, level and actual

payouts of Board of Management remuneration for 2023,

in accordance with the Dutch Corporate Governance

Code. For variable remuneration elements, the

Supervisory Board reviews performance measures,

target setting and payout levels to understand the

possible outcomes on total remuneration of the Board or

Management and to ensure appropriate pay-for-

performance relationships under different economic

scenarios and performance levels. The Supervisory

Board believes the current remuneration structure and

outcomes are appropriate for 2023 and are aligned with

company performance and shareholder experience.

Base Salary

The base salaries of the members of the Board of

Management were set at the beginning of 2023. To

further implement the 2022 BoM Remuneration Policy

and to more closely align with the market, moderate

base salary increases were applied for the BoM in 2023.

For 2023 base salary levels, reference is made to the

section Total remuneration Board of Management.

Annual plan<br><br>2023 Performance<br><br>metrics selected EBIT %<br><br>Customer<br><br>orientation<br><br>Technology<br><br>leadership Performance<br><br>assessment<br><br>by SB

Short-term incentive 2023

The financial and non-financial target levels for the STI

were set at the beginning of the 2023 financial year in

accordance with the 2022 Remuneration Policy for the

Board of Management and taking into account the

annual plan (forecast) for 2023.

For the STI, the Supervisory Board, taking into

consideration ASML’s business challenges and

circumstances in 2023, decided to select a performance

metric focused on margin and profitability:

•EBIT Margin %, measuring Income from operations as

percentage of Total net sales

In setting the EBIT Margin % target for 2023, the

Supervisory Board considered that it intended to

increase the EBIT Margin % target levels in case of any

change in accounting treatment, which would no longer

result in a delay in revenue recognition related to fast

shipments. During 2023, management made substantial

changes in the operational procedures and testing

protocols for DUV immersion fast shipments. These

optimized procedures and protocols, which were agreed

and accepted by our customers, led to optimizations in

cycle time and to recognition of revenue upon delivery.

In its final determination of the STI pay-out level for 2023,

the Supervisory Board considered that the changes

management had made regarding the DUV immersion

fast shipments procedures were operational in nature,

resulted in efficiency improvements and accordingly were

value adding to the company, rather than a change in

accounting treatment. Therefore, the Supervisory Board

has determined that there is insufficient rationale to

retroactively adjust the EBIT Margin % STI target levels.

In addition, the following non-financial performance

metrics applied for the STI in 2023, in accordance with

the Remuneration Policy for the Board of Management:

•Customer Orientation: This metric consisted of four

equally weighed sub-targets measuring ASML’s

positioning in the market and its performance in terms

of customer experience, customer satisfaction and

quality.

The sub-targets were: the Applications market share of

YieldStar and HMI Single Beam, as these are parts of the

Applications market where ASML faces intense

competition; DUV output in terms of systems, in light of

the 2023 supply-demand situation; EUV availability of the

NXE:3600D tool, which is a key metric reflecting the

quality of the performance of our tools at the customer

site and as such is considered an appropriate metric to

measure customer satisfaction; and overall customer

satisfaction, which was measured using an external

benchmark: the TechInsights (formerly known as VLSI)

Survey.

•Technology Leadership Index: A set of internal targets

related to ASML’s product and technology roadmaps.

The index measures the technological progress made

by ASML over the relevant performance period,

supporting our efforts to drive innovation and thereby

helping our customers achieve their goals and realize

new technology and applications.

The Technology Leadership Index for 2023 consisted

of a list of 19 key projects in Applications, DUV and

EUV. Among others, these projects related to

improvements in inspection and metrology systems,

manufacturing capacity expressed in wafers per day,

component commonality to decrease costs and the

power of the (EUV) light source. Exact details of the key

projects included in the Technology Leadership Index

are not disclosed, given that this would be detrimental

to the Company and its stakeholders from a

competitive and strategic point of view. To calculate

the Technology Leadership Index performance, each

project is scored between 1 and 10; the overall

Technology Leadership Index score is the average of

the 18 individual scores. Both the STI and LTI make

use of the Technology Leadership Index as a qualitative

performance measure. The objectives are the same for

both, but the applicable measures, targets and

performance periods are different and aligned with

specific short- and long-term strategic priorities.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 REMUNERATION REPORT CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 228
Board of Management remuneration (continued)

After the end of the performance period, the Supervisory Board assessed the performance achieved against the

targets, in cooperation with the relevant subcommittees: the Technology Committee, Audit Committee, ESG

Committee and Remuneration Committee. The target and actual achievement levels for the STI performance criteria

are set out in the table below, excluding information which qualifies as commercially or strategically sensitive. The

Supervisory Board considers disclosure of this information not to be in the interest of ASML and its stakeholders. In

view of transparency, we report performance for these metrics as percentage of target.

Performance targets1 Actual<br><br>outcome Pay-out2
Weight Threshold Target Stretch % target
EBIT Margin (%) (Non-GAAP measure) 60% 29% 31% 34% 32.8% 130.2%
Customer Orientation 20% 127.8%
Consisting of the following equally weighted sub-targets:
Applications market share 5% * 110.0%
DUV output (systems) 5% * 101.3%
EUV availability 5% * 150.0%
TechInsights survey 5% Top 5 Top 3 Top 2 Top 2 150.0%
Technology Leadership Index 20% 4 6 10 7.8 122.5%
Total 100% 128.2%

1.Certain performance targets (*) are not disclosed due to strategic or commercial sensitivity.

2.The pay-out % is based on the pay-out levels as included in the Summary of 2022 Remuneration Policy Board of Management.

The 2023 EBIT Margin % (Non-GAAP measure) of 32.8% is calculated as Income from operations of €9,042 million

divided by Total net sales of €27,559 million.

The actual outcome for Customer Orientation amounts to 127.8%, which is an increase compared to last year

performance.

The actual outcome for Technology Leadership Index of 7.8 is in line with last year performance.

The total STI outcome for current Board of Management results in a cash pay-out of €6.0 million, representing a

payout as % of target of 128.2%.

Short-Term Incentive 2024

For 2024, the Supervisory Board has decided to apply the following STI performance measures:

Weight
EBIT Margin (%) (Non-GAAP measure) 60%
Customer Orientation 20%
Consisting of the following sub-targets:
Applications: Adoption of Multi Beam 2.5%
DUV Cost and Competitiveness 2.5%
EUV Low NA Maturity 2.5%
EUV High NA Performance 2.5%
ASML Customer Trust Survey 10%
Technology Leadership Index 20%
Total 100%
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 REMUNERATION REPORT CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 229
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Board of Management remuneration (continued)

Target setting process.jpg

Board of Management Remuneration in 2023 – Long-term incentive

Conditionally granted Long-term incentive 2023–2025 Plan in 2023

At the beginning of 2023, 33,478 performance shares were conditionally granted to the current members of the

Board of Management for the 2023-2025 LTI performance plan. These conditional grants are based on the maximum

achievable opportunity.

Target setting process
Review company<br><br>strategy in line with<br><br>financial plan Determine<br><br>business priorities<br><br>for upcoming<br><br>3-year performance<br><br>period Determine<br><br>LTI performance<br><br>measures for<br><br>3-year performance<br><br>period Finalize long-term<br><br>financial plan
Step 1 Step 2 Step 3 Step 4

At the beginning of 2023, the Supervisory Board, in line with the recommendation of the Remuneration Committee,

selected the performance metrics to be used to measure ASML’s performance related to strategic value drivers and

ESG Sustainability. The Supervisory Board also set the target levels related to all performance metrics for the

2023–2025 LTI Plan, as listed below. This was done taking into account the long-term product roadmap, ESG goals

and the long-term financial plan, thereby ensuring alignment between the various targets and ASML’s long-term

strategic priorities and encouraging behavior focused on sustainable long-term value creation.

For the 2023-2025 LTI Plan, the following performance metrics apply, in accordance with the 2022 Remuneration

Policy for the Board of Management:

•Total shareholder return (TSR) vs. Index: Measuring ASML’s relative change in share price, plus dividends paid

over the relevant performance period. The TSR is calculated as the difference between (i) the average (closing)

share price during the last quarter of the performance period and (ii) the average (closing) share price during the

quarter preceding the performance period; in the calculation, dividends are reinvested at the ex-dividend date. The

TSR of ASML (calculated with the ASML New York share) is compared with the PHLX Semiconductor Sector Index.

This Nasdaq index is designed to track the performance of a set of companies engaged in the design, distribution,

manufacture and sale of semiconductors. There are two versions of this index, a price return index and a total

return index, the latter of which has been chosen (Nasdaq: X.SOX), as this index reinvests cash dividends,

equivalent to the TSR definition described above.

•Strategic value driver: Normalized three-year average cash conversion rate is a measure to ensure a focus on

balance sheet and cash generation, in addition to the focus on margin that is already part of the 2023 STI (by

including EBIT Margin). The Normalized Cash Conversion Rate percentage is calculated over a three-year average

by dividing Normalized Free Cash Flow (non-GAAP measure) by Net Income. Free Cash Flow is a non-GAAP

measure and is defined as net cash provided by operating activities minus purchase of property, plant and

equipment and purchase of intangible assets. Normalized Free Cash Flow (non-GAAP measure) is Free Cash Flow

(non-GAAP measure) excluding early payments received in a certain financial year from customers without a

contractual payment obligation in that financial year.

•Technology Leadership Index: A qualitative measure which is also applied for the STI. As a metric for the LTI, the

Technology Leadership Index is more forward looking than its STI equivalent. It consists of targets to be achieved

three years ahead, two years ahead and in the coming year. Each year, new targets are defined for the period three

years ahead. The targets for two years ahead are based on the prior-year targets (that were three years ahead at

that time) and a correction factor on the score (up or down) depending on whether targets appeared to be easier or

more difficult to achieve. The same approach is utilized for subsequent years. The total score for the Technology

Leadership Index over the three-year performance period is the average of the scores over the three years,

including the relevant correction factors applied on each year’s score.

•ESG: A qualitative measure consisting of three equally weighted sub-targets: (1) ASML Manufacturing net scope

emission (Scope 1+2) with minimum compensation, (2) employee engagement and (3) Inflow % female as part of

total ASML new hire (both total inflow as well as for JG 9+)

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 REMUNERATION REPORT CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 230
Board of Management remuneration (continued)

Vesting of shares process_EMPTY.jpg

Performance metric Performance targets
Weight Threshold Target Maximum
Relative TSR 30% Lower quartile Median Upper quartile
Normalized three-years average Cash<br><br>Conversion Rate %1 30% 85% 90% 95%
ESG Measures 20%
Consisting of equally weighted sub-metrics:
Net zero emission (Scope 1+2) with minimum<br><br>compensation <37kT<br><br>compensation <30kT<br><br>compensation <20kT<br><br>compensation
Employee engagement X2 – 4% point X2 – 2% point X2
Total and JG9+ Inflow of women 22% 24% 26%
Technology Leadership Index 20% 4 6 10
Total 100%

1.The Normalized three-year average Cash Conversion Rate % (CCR) is calculated by dividing Normalized Free Cash Flow (Non-GAAP measure)

by Net Income (three-year average). Free Cash Flow (Non-GAAP measure) is normalized by excluding early payments received in a certain

financial year from customers without a contractual payment obligation in that financial year.

2.X = top 25% companies.

Vesting under the Long-Term Incentive 2021–2023 Plan

Following the end of the three-year performance period 2021-2023, the Supervisory Board assessed the

performance achieved against the LTI targets, in cooperation with the Technology Committee, Audit Committee, ESG

Committee and Remuneration Committee. The performance metrics that applied to the LTI 2021-2023 Plan were

Relative Total Shareholder Return vs. Index, Return on Average Invested Capital (ROAIC), Technology Leadership

Index and Sustainability, in accordance with the 2020 Remuneration Policy for the Board of Management. The target

and actual achievement levels for the LTI performance criteria based on the Remuneration Policy for the Board of

Management are set out in the table below.

Vesting of shares process

Grant<br><br>date Vesting period<br><br>within 3 years Vesting<br><br>date Holding period<br><br>2 years End of<br><br>transfer<br><br>restrictions
–In the period between the Grant date<br><br>and the Vesting date, Performance Shares<br><br>are conditional. –Performance Shares are delivered to the<br><br>Participant. However, Transfer Restrictions<br><br>apply: acquired Performance Shares cannot<br><br>be transferred during the Holding Period<br><br>–Participant is allowed to sell sufficient<br><br>Performance Shares to cover tax obligations
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 REMUNERATION REPORT CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 231
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Board of Management remuneration (continued)
Performance targets Actual<br><br>performance Pay-out %2
--- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---
Performance metric Weight Threshold Target Exceed Stretch % of target
Relative TSR 30% (20%) 0% n/a 20% 11.0% 155.0%
ROAIC1 40% 27.0% 30.0% 33.0% 36.0% 65.8% 200.0%
Technology Leadership Index 20% 4 6 8 10 8.2% 155.8%
Sustainability 10% ≤10.0% ≤9% n/a ≤7% 10.8% 0.0% 4
Total 100% 157.7% 3

1.The ROAIC (Non-GAAP measure) is based on a three-year (2021-2023) average by dividing the Income after income taxes by the Average Invested

Capital. Average Invested Capital is calculated by taking the average of Total assets minus Cash and cash equivalents, Short-term investments,

Total current liabilities and Non-current contract liabilities at the start and end of each quarter over three years.

2.The pay-out % is based on the pay-out levels as included in the Summary of 2020 Remuneration Policy Board of Management.

3.Total Actual Performance score of 157.7% is based on weighting of individual performance metrics multiplied by the pay-out %.

  1. In absolute terms, ASML scored very well, ranking #6 out of 347 companies in the DJSI. However, the DJSI score is measured by the

percentage deviation from the industry leader for incentive purposes. For the 2021-2023 performance period, ASML was slightly below

threshold looking at the percentage deviation from the industry leader.

The total LTI outcome results in a share vesting of 157.7% of target.

LTI Plan 2024-2026

At the beginning of 2024,

24,678

performance shares were conditionally granted to the current members of the

Board of Management for the 2024-2026 LTI performance plan. These conditional grants are based on the maximum

achievable opportunity for 2024.

For the 2024-2026 performance period, the Supervisory Board has decided to apply the following LTI performance

measures and target setting:

Performance targets
Performance metric Weight Threshold Target Maximum
Relative TSR 30% As per remuneration policy
ROAIC (2024-2026)1 30% 45% 70% 90%
ESG measures 20%
Consisting of the following sub-measures:
Employee engagement<br><br>(Relative benchmark target vs top 25% performing<br><br>companies) 6.7% -4 -2 0
Gender diversity: 6.7%
•% Inflow of women all JG and JG 9+ 24% 26% 28%
•% Representation of women in JG 13+ 12% 14% 16%
Commitment of top-80% suppliers (based on<br><br>CO2e emissions) to reduce their CO2e footprint by<br><br>2030 6.7% 65% 75% 85%
Technology Leadership Index 20% 4 6 10
Total 100%

1.For ASML long term incentive purposes, the ROAIC 2024-2026 (Non-GAAP measure) is based on a three-year (2024-2026) average by dividing

the Income after income taxes (at target R&D) by the Average Invested Capital. Average Invested Capital is calculated by taking the average of

Total assets minus Cash and cash equivalents, Short-term investments, Total current liabilities and Non-current contract liabilities at the start

and end of each quarter over three years. Mergers and acquisitions will be excluded from the evaluation after the LTI period. We believe that

ROAIC is a meaningful measure because it quantifies our effectiveness in generating returns relative to the capital invested in our business over

the past three years.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 REMUNERATION REPORT CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 232
Board of Management remuneration (continued)

Other remuneration

In 2023, members of the Board of Management participated in the pension arrangement for the Board of

Management, which is based on the ‘excedent’ (supplementary) arrangement for our employees in the Netherlands,

a defined contribution opportunity as defined in Dutch fiscal regulations. It consists of a gross pension element (for

the salary below approximately €129k) and a net pension element (for the salary above approximately €129k). Some

members opted out of the net pension due to different tax treatment of this outside the Netherlands. Details of the

incurred accounting expenses relating to the application of the pension arrangement in 2023 can be found in the

table Total Remuneration Board of Management.

Expenses reimbursed by ASML in 2023 included company car costs, representation allowances, social security costs

and health and disability insurance costs.

Share ownership guidelines

The table below shows the share ownership guidelines, number of outstanding vested shares and share ownership

ratio of each Board of Management member as per December 31, 2023. All members of the Board of Management

complied with the minimum ownership guidelines per year end 2023.

Board of Management Ownership guidelines 2023 base salary<br><br>(in € thousands) Number of outstanding<br><br>vested shares Ownership ratio1
P.T.F.M. Wennink 3x base 1,040 39,292 25.76
M.A. van den Brink 3x base 1,040 11,609 7.61
F.J.M. Schneider-<br><br>Maunoury 2x base 725 20,685 19.45
R.J.M. Dassen 2x base 725 16,718 15.72
C.D. Fouquet 2x base 725 7,179 6.75
W.R. Allan 2x base 725 4,677 4.40

1.The Ownership ratio is calculated by multiplying the number of outstanding vested shares with the share price of €681.70 (based on the closing

share price of December 29, 2023) and dividing this by the base salary.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 REMUNERATION REPORT CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 233
Board of Management remuneration (continued)

Total remuneration Board of Management

The remuneration of the members of the Board of Management based on incurred accounting expenses in 2023, 2022 and 2021 was as follows (amounts are in € thousands):

Board of<br><br>Management Financial<br><br>Year Base salary Pension Other benefits Total fixed % Fixed STI LTI Total variable % Variable Total<br><br>Remuneration Relative<br><br>proportion fixed<br><br>vs. variable
P.T.F.M. Wennink1 2023 1,040 248 61 1,349 22.7% 1,400 3,192 4,592 77.3% 5,941 0.29
2022 1,020 206 58 1,284 30.0% 961 2,035 2,996 70.0% 4,280 0.43
2021 1,020 206 57 1,283 26.6% 1,098 2,439 3,537 73.4% 4,820 0.36
M.A. van den Brink1 2023 1,040 248 59 1,347 22.7% 1,400 3,192 4,592 77.3% 5,939 0.29
2022 1,020 206 57 1,283 30.0% 961 2,035 2,996 70.0% 4,279 0.43
2021 1,020 206 56 1,282 26.6% 1,098 2,439 3,537 73.4% 4,819 0.36
F.J.M. Schneider-Maunoury 2023 725 148 45 918 25.7% 883 1,773 2,656 74.3% 3,574 0.35
2022 694 141 36 871 30.6% 619 1,354 1,973 69.4% 2,844 0.44
2021 694 115 36 845 26.8% 747 1,566 2,313 73.2% 3,158 0.37
R.J.M. Dassen 2023 725 121 56 902 25.4% 883 1,773 2,656 74.6% 3,558 0.34
2022 694 116 51 861 30.4% 619 1,354 1,973 69.6% 2,834 0.44
2021 694 115 51 860 22.6% 747 2,193 2,940 77.4% 3,800 0.29
C.D. Fouquet 2023 725 82 56 863 24.5% 883 1,773 2,656 75.5% 3,519 0.32
2022 694 78 53 825 29.5% 619 1,354 1,973 70.5% 2,798 0.42
2021 694 78 52 824 26.3% 747 1,566 2,313 73.7% 3,137 0.36
W.R. Allan2 2023 492 82 38 612 29.6% 599 860 3 1,459 70.4% 2,071 0.42
Total Board of Management 2023 4,747 929 315 5,991 24.4% 6,048 12,563 18,611 75.6% 24,602 0.32
2022 4,122 747 255 5,124 30.1% 3,779 8,132 11,911 69.9% 17,035 0.43
2021 4,122 720 252 5,094 25.8% 4,437 10,203 14,640 74.2% 19,734 0.35
  1. On November 30, 2023 it was announced that Mr. Wennink and Mr. van den Brink will retire as Presidents of ASML on April, 24 2024 upon completion of their current appointment terms. Mr. Wennink and Mr. van den Brink will remain entitled to performance shares granted under the LTI plans

in 2021, 2022 and 2023, which will vest in accordance with the relevant performance criteria as stated in the grant letters. All LTI expenses for the running LTI plans are accounted in 2023 and 2024 over the remaining service period, since no services are provided beyond the end of the service

period in 2024. For comparison purposes, if Mr. Wennink's and Mr. van den Brink were to remain in service, their normalized LTI expense would be €2,575 thousand each in 2023.

  1. Wayne R. Allan was appointed as a BoM member on April 26, 2023.

  2. Wayne R. Allan’s 2023 LTI expense is based on the signed grant letter dated January 27, 2023, adopted by the terms and conditions as applicable to other Board of Management members subject to performance and service criteria within 3 years vesting period. Although not a member of the

Board of Management at the grant date, Wayne R. Allan received a grant on January 27, 2023 in anticipation of the appointment as a member of the Board of Management.

The remuneration reported as part of the LTI (share awards) is based on costs incurred under accounting values. The costs of share awards are charged to the Consolidated Statements of Operations over the three-year vesting period

based on the number of awards expected to vest for non-market-based elements. For the first two years, we apply the maximum achievable number of share awards, and in the final performance year of the awards we update this

estimate for the non-market performance conditions to the best estimated number of awards which are anticipated to vest. Any difference between the amount based on the best estimate of achievable number of shares awards and the

amount based on the actual number of share awards that vest, is taken into account in the Consolidated Statements of Operations in the financial year in which the share awards vest. Market-based elements are accounted at target.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 REMUNERATION REPORT CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 234
Board of Management remuneration (continued)

Total remuneration Former Board of Management

F.J. van Hout is no longer part of the Board of Management as he retired from ASML in 2021.

Former Board of Management Financial<br><br>Year Base salary Pension Other benefits Total fixed % Fixed STI LTI Total variable % Variable Total<br><br>Remuneration Relative<br><br>proportion fixed<br><br>vs. variable
F.J. van Hout1 2021 231 47 16 294 11.4% 243 2,036 2,279 88.6% 2,573 0.13

1.The 2021 total remuneration of F.J. van Hout excluded an estimated tax levy payable to the Dutch tax authorities by the Company on termination benefits pursuant to article 32bb of the Dutch Wage Tax Act.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 REMUNERATION REPORT CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 235
Board of Management remuneration (continued)

Share-based payments

Performance-based share-based remuneration for current members of the Board of Management is disclosed in the table below. Fractional shares are rounded down to full shares for reporting purposes.

Market-based element Non-market-based elements
Board of<br><br>Management Grant date Status Full control Number of<br><br>shares at target Fair value at<br><br>grant date Number of<br><br>shares at target Fair value at<br><br>grant date Total number of<br><br>shares at target Total number of<br><br>shares at<br><br>maximum (200%) Vesting date Number of<br><br>vested shares<br><br>on publication<br><br>date Year-end<br><br>closing share<br><br>price in year of<br><br>vesting End of lock-up<br><br>date
P.T.F.M. Wennink 1/27/23 Conditional No 1,049 901.9 2,447 603.4 3,496 6,991 1/1/26 n/a n/a 1/1/28
4/29/22 Conditional No 709 596.0 1,655 533.5 2,364 4,727 1/1/25 n/a n/a 1/1/27
1/22/21 Conditional1 No 1,053 635.6 2,455 454.9 3,508 7,016 1/1/24 5,531 681.7 1/1/26
1/24/20 Unconditional No 1,387 286.9 3,235 263.7 4,622 9,245 1/1/23 8,420 503.8 1/1/25
7/19/19 Unconditional No 2,217 245.4 5,173 194.4 7,390 14,780 1/1/22 13,326 706.7 1/1/24
M.A. van den Brink 1/27/23 Conditional No 1,049 901.9 2,447 603.4 3,496 6,991 1/1/26 n/a n/a 1/1/28
4/29/22 Conditional No 709 596.0 1,655 533.5 2,364 4,727 1/1/25 n/a n/a 1/1/27
1/22/21 Conditional1 No 1,053 635.6 2,455 454.9 3,508 7,016 1/1/24 5,531 681.7 1/1/26
1/24/20 Unconditional No 1,387 286.9 3,235 263.7 4,622 9,245 1/1/23 8,420 503.8 1/1/25
7/19/19 Unconditional No 2,217 245.4 5,173 194.4 7,390 14,780 1/1/22 13,326 706.7 1/1/24
F.J.M.<br><br>Schneider-Maunoury 1/27/23 Conditional No 731 901.9 1,706 603.4 2,437 4,874 1/1/26 n/a n/a 1/1/28
4/29/22 Conditional No 483 596.0 1,126 533.5 1,609 3,217 1/1/25 n/a n/a 1/1/27
1/22/21 Conditional1 No 717 635.6 1,670 454.9 2,387 4,774 1/1/24 3,763 681.7 1/1/26
1/24/20 Unconditional No 858 286.9 2,001 263.7 2,859 5,718 1/1/23 5,208 503.8 1/1/25
7/19/19 Unconditional No 1,371 245.4 3,198 194.4 4,569 9,137 1/1/22 8,239 706.7 1/1/24
R.J.M. Dassen 1/27/23 Conditional No 731 901.9 1,706 603.4 2,437 4,874 1/1/26 n/a n/a 1/1/28
4/29/22 Conditional No 483 596.0 1,126 533.5 1,609 3,217 1/1/25 n/a n/a 1/1/27
1/22/21 Conditional1 No 717 635.6 1,670 454.9 2,387 4,774 1/1/24 3,763 681.7 1/1/26
1/24/20 Unconditional No 858 286.9 2,001 263.7 2,859 5,718 1/1/23 5,208 503.8 1/1/25
7/19/19 Unconditional No 1,371 245.4 3,198 194.4 4,569 9,137 1/1/22 8,239 706.7 1/1/24
1/25/19 Unconditional No 3,000 169.0 7,000 148.3 10,000 20,000 1/1/22 18,032 706.7 1/1/24
C.D. Fouquet 1/27/23 Conditional No 731 901.9 1,706 603.4 2,437 4,874 1/1/26 n/a n/a 1/1/28
4/29/22 Conditional No 483 596.0 1,126 533.5 1,609 3,217 1/1/25 n/a n/a 1/1/27
1/22/21 Conditional1 No 717 635.6 1,670 454.9 2,387 4,774 1/1/24 3,763 681.7 1/1/26
1/24/20 Unconditional No 858 286.9 2,001 263.7 2,859 5,718 1/1/23 5,208 503.8 1/1/25
7/19/19 Unconditional No 1,371 245.4 3,198 194.4 4,569 9,137 1/1/22 8,239 706.7 1/1/24
W.R. Allan2 1/27/23 Conditional No 731 901.9 1,706 603.4 2,437 4,874 1/1/26 n/a n/a 1/1/28

1.The 2021-2023 LTI plans became unconditional after vesting date in January 2024.

  1. Wayne R. Allan was appointed as a BoM member on April 26, 2023. His conditionally granted shares are based on the signed grant letter dated January 27, 2023, adopted by the terms and conditions as applicable to other Board of Management members subject to performance and service

criteria within 3 years vesting period. Although not a member of the Board of Management at the grant date, Wayne R. Allan received a grant on January 27, 2023 in anticipation of the appointment as a member of the Board of Management.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 REMUNERATION REPORT CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 236
Board of Management remuneration (continued)

Performance-based share-based remuneration for former members of the Board of Management is disclosed in below table. Fractional shares are rounded down to full shares for reporting purposes.

Market-based element Non-market-based elements
Former Board of Management Grant date Status Full control Number of<br><br>shares at<br><br>target Fair value at<br><br>grant date Number of<br><br>shares at<br><br>target Fair value at<br><br>grant date Total number<br><br>of  shares at<br><br>target Total number of<br><br>shares at<br><br>maximum<br><br>(200%) Vesting date Number of<br><br>vested shares<br><br>on publication<br><br>date Year-end<br><br>closing share<br><br>price in year of<br><br>vesting End of lock-up<br><br>date
F.J. van Hout 1/22/21 Conditional1 No 239 635.6 557 454.9 796 1,592 1/1/24 1,255 681.7 1/1/26
1/24/20 Unconditional No 858 286.9 2,001 263.7 2,859 5,718 1/1/23 5,208 503.8 1/1/25
7/19/19 Unconditional No 1,371 245.4 3,198 194.4 4,569 9,137 1/1/22 8,239 706.7 1/1/24

1.The 2021-2023 LTI plans became unconditional after vesting date in January 2024.

Reasons, criteria and principal conditions for granting shares

For the reasons and criteria for granting the performance shares to each member of the Board of Management, reference is made to the Summary of 2022 Remuneration Policy Board of Management and to the section Board of

Management Remuneration in 2023 – Long-term incentive as included in this Remuneration Report.

The principal conditions applicable to the 2023 performance shares are described below. These apply to each member of the Board of Management.

Instrument: Performance shares
Grant Conditional grant on an annual basis based on maximum achievable opportunity. The number of performance shares to be conditionally awarded is calculated using the volume-weighted average share price during the last<br><br>quarter of the year preceding the conditional award.
Grant date Date on which the performance shares are conditionally granted.
Performance period Period of three-years over which the achievement of the pre-defined performance targets is measured.
Vesting The shares will become unconditional after the end of the performance period, depending on the level of achievement of the predetermined performance targets.
Lock-up period The minimum holding period is two years after the vesting date.
Upon termination of contract, the transfer restrictions will remain in place during the holding period except in case of decease.
In case a tax payment is due by the members of the Board of Management over the retrieved variable income, performance shares may be partially sold at vesting (‘sell to cover’) in accordance with the law and internal<br><br>regulations.
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 REMUNERATION REPORT CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 237
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Board of Management remuneration (continued)

Relationship between accounted remuneration and company’s performance

The following table provides an overview of the relationship between accounted remuneration and the company’s performance for the past five years:

For the year ended December 31 (€, in thousands) 2019 2020 Change (in %) 2021 Change (in %) 2022 Change (in %) 2023 Change (in %)
Net sales 11,820,001 13,978,452 18% 18,610,994 33% 21,173,448 14% 27,558,506 30%
Net income based on US GAAP 2,592,252 3,553,670 37% 5,883,177 66% 5,624,209 (4)% 7,838,994 39%
Net income based on EU-IFRS 2,581,107 3,696,813 43% 6,134,595 66% 6,395,775 4% 8,115,168 27%
ASML share price (closing price on Euronext Amsterdam in €) 263.7 397.6 51% 706.7 78% 503.8 (29)% 681.7 35%
Average number of payroll employees in FTEs 22,192 24,727 11% 28,223 14% 33,071 17% 38,805 17%
Dow Jones Sustainability Index (DJSI)1 10.2% 9.0% (11.8)% 12.1% 34.4% 10.8% (10.7)% 10.8% —%
Remuneration P.T.F.M. Wennink (CEO)2 4,361 4,564 5% 4,820 6% 4,280 (11)% 5,941 39%
Remuneration M.A. van den Brink2 4,360 4,564 5% 4,819 6% 4,279 (11)% 5,939 39%
Remuneration R.J.M. Dassen 2,956 3,804 29% 3,800 —% 2,834 (25)% 3,558 26%
Remuneration C.D. Fouquet 2,203 2,975 35% 3,137 5% 2,798 (11)% 3,519 26%
Remuneration F.J.M. Schneider-Maunoury 2,724 2,927 7% 3,158 8% 2,844 (10)% 3,574 26%
Remuneration W.R. Allan5 n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a 2,071 n/a
Average remuneration per FTE4 based on US GAAP 114 120 5% 122 2% 125 2% 138 10%
Average remuneration per FTE4 based on EU-IFRS 114 120 5% 122 2% 118 (3)% 143 21%
Internal pay ratio (CEO versus employee remuneration based on US GAAP)2,3 38 38 —% 40 5% 34 (15)% 43 26%
Internal pay ratio (CEO versus employee remuneration based on EU-IFRS)2,3 38 38 —% 40 5% 36 (10)% 42 17%
Ratio of the percentage increase in annual total compensation for CEO to the<br><br>percentage increase in average annual remuneration for all employees4 based on<br><br>US GAAP n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a (5.5) n/a 3.9 (171)%
Ratio of the percentage increase in annual total compensation for CEO to the<br><br>percentage increase in average annual remuneration for all employees4 based on<br><br>EU-IFRS n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a 3.7 n/a 1.9 (49)%

1.The DJSI score is measured by the % deviation from the industry leader at the end of the 3-year performance period.

2.On November 30, 2023, ASML announced that Mr. Wennink will retire from ASML per the 2024 AGM. Consequently, the LTI expenses for his running LTI plans are accelerated for over his remaining service period in 2023 and 2024. For comparison purposes, if Mr. Wennink's and Mr. van den Brink

were to remain in service, their normalized LTI expense would be €2,575 thousand each in 2023 and the outcome of the CEO vs. average per FTE ratio would be and the outcome of the CEO internal pay ratio calculation would be 39 (based on US GAAP) and 37 (based on EU-IFRS) in 2023.

  1. The calculation approach of the internal pay ratio is disclosed in the section Relationship between CEO and average remuneration (pay ratio).

4.The ratio of the percentage increase in annual total compensation for CEO to percentage increase in average annual remuneration for all employees is calculated by dividing the % annual increase in the remuneration of the CEO by the % annual increase in the average remuneration per FTE. This

ratio is only applicable as of 2022 to comply with the GRI Standards 2021.

  1. Wayne R. Allan was appointed as a BoM member on April 26, 2023.
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 REMUNERATION REPORT CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 238
Board of Management remuneration (continued)

Explanation of changes in company’s performance versus

remuneration

The foregoing table aims to provide insight into the

Company’s performance over the past five years and the

development of the remuneration. The metrics net sales,

net income and share price are used to measure

Company performance, as they are key metrics serving

as a good proxy for ASML’s general performance, as

well as in view of comparability with other companies.

The Company has grown significantly over recent years,

not only reflected in the number of employees but also in

terms of performance. Over the last 5 years, net sales

increased by 133%, net income increased by 202%

based on US GAAP (214% based on EU-IFRS) and

ASML's share price increased by more than 150%. This

shows that the Company's performance has improved

significantly over the last five years. The significant

growth of the Company has led to revisions of the

Remuneration Policy for the Board of Management in

2019, 2021 and 2022, resulting in higher base salaries as

well as higher levels of STI (at target) and LTI (at target),

resulting in a relatively similar increase in the

remuneration over this same period. Actual remuneration

may fluctuate year over year depending on actual STI

pay-out in any year, as well as the vesting of

performance shares (LTI) in any year and the share price

at that moment.

Relationship between CEO and average remuneration

(pay ratio)

The internal pay ratio consists of the CEO’s total

remuneration (including all remuneration components)

during 2023 of €5,941 thousand, compared to the

average remuneration of all employees. The average

remuneration of all employees was calculated using the

average number of payroll employees in FTE (wages and

salaries + social security expenses + pension and

retirement expenses + share-based payments) divided

by the average number of payroll employees = €5,341.2

million divided by 38,805 = €138 thousand. This ratio has

not been prepared to comply with the Pay Ratio

Disclosure requirements under SEC regulations. The ratio

is based on the highest paid individual according to

accounting values consisting of fixed and variable

remuneration elements compared to the average

remuneration of all employees that are in service with the

company, which excludes all other Board Members. This

calculation approach brings the ratios more in line with

the requirements from the Corporate Governance Code.

The internal pay ratio (CEO versus employee

remuneration) based on US GAAP increased towards

43:1 in 2023 (2022: 34:1) and based on EU-IFRS

increased towards 42:1 in 2023 (2022: 36:1). The

increase is mainly due to the increase in the overall

performance and an accounting consequence related to

the Mr. Wennink's retirement as per the 2024 AGM. After

this date, Mr. Wennink's service to the Company ends,

which increases the incurred accounting expenses in

2023 and 2024, since his remaining expected LTI

expenses are accelerated over his remaining service

period. ASML intends to grant competitive remuneration

to employees at all position levels within the Company. At

each level remuneration should reflect the responsibilities

of the role. The build-up of remuneration from level to

level should therefore be gradual and in line with

increasing responsibilities, also following market practice.

At the highest level the steps become gradually bigger as

responsibilities ultimately rise from a divisional level to an

overall company level. The Supervisory Board considers

the current build-up and the overall pay ratio to be

equitable, considering the current performance of the

company.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 REMUNERATION REPORT CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 239
Board of Management remuneration (continued)

In this section of the Remuneration Report, we provide

an overview of the 2023 Remuneration Policy for the

Supervisory Board as adopted by the General Meeting

on April 26, 2023, and as in force from April 1, 2023

onwards. It provides information about the

implementation of the 2023 Remuneration Policy for the

Supervisory Board in 2023 and contains the details of the

Supervisory Board members’ actual remuneration in

  1. The 2023 Remuneration Policy for the Supervisory

Board can be found in the Governance section of our

website.

During 2022 the Remuneration Committee performed a

review of the Remuneration Policy for the Supervisory

Board and performed the recurring bi-annual benchmark

of Supervisory Board remuneration. Based on the result

of the review and benchmark, it was proposed to amend

the remuneration for the Supervisory Board.

The key proposed changes to the Remuneration Policy

for the Supervisory Board were:

1.The revised Remuneration Policy for the Supervisory

Board no longer includes specific amounts for the

remuneration of the Supervisory Board, but rather

provides the guidelines for remuneration of the

Supervisory Board, just as is the case for the

Remuneration Policy for the Board of Management.

The actual amounts will be determined by the general

meeting within the scope of the remuneration policy, in

conformity with article 26.2 of ASML's articles of

association.

2.A clause was included which allows the Supervisory

Board to grant additional remuneration in special

circumstances. As a result, the Supervisory Board

may, upon recommendation of the Remuneration

Committee, grant increased Supervisory Board and/or

Committee fees, depending on the character of the

circumstances, for instance in case a significant

increase in time investment by its members. As a

starting point, the Supervisory Board considers an

increase of at least 25% a significant increase. The

additional annual remuneration per member will be

capped at one time the amount of the annual

Supervisory Board membership fee payable to such

member.

Since the actual amounts of the Supervisory Board

remuneration are no longer included in the remuneration

policy itself, a proposal was submitted to the General

Meeting to amend Supervisory Board remuneration.

Both proposals were adopted with a majority of 98.88%

and 99.20% of votes cast respectively.

More details on the changes made to the Supervisory

Board Remuneration Policy and quantum of

remuneration can be found on our website.

Remuneration Policy

Remuneration objectives and principles

The 2023 Remuneration Policy for the Supervisory Board

is designed to enable ASML to attract and retain qualified

Supervisory Board members, who together compose a

diverse and balanced Supervisory Board with the

appropriate level of skills, competencies and experience

required to properly supervise (the execution of) ASML’s

strategy and the performance of ASML, which is focused

on the creation of sustainable long-term value for all

stakeholders.

The 2023 Remuneration Policy for the Supervisory Board

is built on the following principles:

•Competitiveness – The remuneration structure and

levels intend to be competitive in the relevant market,

while at the same time taking into account societal

trends and perceptions.

•Alignment – The Remuneration Policy is benchmarked

to market practice

•Fairness - The remuneration should reflect the time

spent and the responsibilities of the role of the

members of the Supervisory Board

•Independence - the remuneration of a Supervisory

Board member may not be made dependent on the

results of the Company

•Compliance - ASML adopts the highest standards of

good corporate governance

•Simplicity and transparency – the remuneration policy

and its execution are as simple as possible and easily

understandable to all stakeholders

Reference group and market positioning

The remuneration of the Supervisory Board should be

competitive compared with a relevant reference market.

This market is defined using a reference group of

companies with a two-tier board structure included in the

AEX Index of Euronext Amsterdam. To determine the

appropriate positioning within this group, market cap,

revenue and number of employees are taken into

account. In addition given the international character of

ASML and ASML’s Supervisory Board, market

benchmark is also conducted against the international

Board of Management reference group to provide

broader market reference and context.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 REMUNERATION REPORT CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 240
Supervisory Board remuneration

Summary of Remuneration of the Supervisory Board

This table provides an overview and description of the elements of the 2023 Remuneration Policy for the Supervisory Board.

Fixed remuneration
Description in 2023 Remuneration Policy 2022 2023
Fixed remuneration paid in cash Chair of Supervisory Board €130,000 €140,000
including a base membership fee, committee fees and additional Vice Chair of Supervisory Board €94,000 €100,000
c compensation contingent on SB members' activities and Member of Supervisory Board €75,000 €80,000
responsibilities Chair Audit Committee €25,500 €27,000
Member Audit Committee €18,000 €18,000
Chair of other Committees €20,000 €22,000
Member of other Committees €14,500 €16,000
Extra allowance for intercontinental meetings
Description in 2023 Remuneration Policy 2022 2023
Extra, fixed allowance paid in connection with additional time<br><br>commitment for intercontinental travel For each meeting that involves intercontinental<br><br>travel €5,000 €5,000
Expenses
Description in 2023 Remuneration Policy 2022 2023
Expenses incurred in relation to meeting attendance are reimbursed.<br><br>In addition, a fixed net cost allowance is paid, covering certain pre-<br><br>defined out-of-pocket expenses Fixed net cost allowance
Chair of Supervisory Board €1,980 €1,980
Member of Supervisory Board €1,380 €1,380
Remuneration in special circumstances
The Supervisory Board may, upon recommendation of the<br><br>Remuneration Committee, grant additional remuneration in special<br><br>circumstances. This may concern granting increased Supervisory<br><br>Board and/or Committee fees, depending on the character of the<br><br>circumstances, for instance in case of a significant increase in time<br><br>investment by its members. The additional annual remuneration per member will be capped at one<br><br>time the amount of the annual Supervisory Board membership fee<br><br>payable to such member.<br><br><br><br>The Supervisory Board considers an increase of at least 25% a<br><br>significant increase in time investment Loans and guarantees
--- ---
Description Value
No (personal) loans or guarantees or the like will be granted Not applicable
Shares and share ownership
Description Value
No (rights to) shares are granted by way of remuneration. Any holding<br><br>of ASML shares is for the purpose of long-term investment. Any<br><br>trading activity is subject to ASML’s Insider Trading Rules Not applicable
Other arrangements
Description Value
(Re)appointment based on Dutch law and ASML’s Articles of<br><br>Association. No claw-back, severance or change in control<br><br>arrangements are in place Not applicable
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 REMUNERATION REPORT CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 241
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Supervisory Board remuneration (continued)

Remuneration of the Supervisory Board in 2023

Overview of the remuneration of the Supervisory Board members based on incurred accounting expenses over the last five years (amounts are in € thousands):

Membership fees<br><br>2023 Committee fees<br><br>2023 Allowances 20231 Proportion fixed vs.<br><br>variable 2023 Total remuneration<br><br>2023 Total remuneration<br><br>2022 Total remuneration<br><br>2021 Total remuneration<br><br>2020 Total remuneration<br><br>2019
T.L. Kelly 79 37 21 100:0 137 126 107 88 101
A.P. Aris 99 47 6 100:0 152 144 127 95 98
B.M. Conix 79 29 1 100:0 109 99 63 n/a n/a
D.M. Durcan 79 37 21 100:0 137 126 112 57 n/a
D.W.A. East 79 34 6 100:0 119 99 93 59 n/a
N.S. Andersen2 95 27 1 100:0 123 n/a n/a n/a n/a
J.P. de Kreij3 55 29 1 100:0 85 n/a n/a n/a n/a
A.F.M. Everke 79 24 1 100:0 104 66 n/a n/a n/a
A.L. Steegen 79 24 6 100:0 109 66 n/a n/a n/a
Total 723 288 64 100:0 1,075 726 502 299 199

1.Allowances consist of fixed-expense allowances and allowances for intercontinental meetings.

2.Appointed as chair of the Supervisory Board at the AGM on April 26, 2023, also appointed as chair of the Selection and Nomination Committee.

3.Appointed as member of the Supervisory Board at the AGM on April 26, 2023, also appointed as chair of the Audit Committee and member of the Remuneration Committee.

No pay has been granted in 2023 pursuant to the 'Remuneration in special circumstances clause' as included in the 2023 Remuneration Policy for the Supervisory Board. No variable pay has been granted to the current and former

members of the Supervisory Board during the last five years. The remuneration of the Supervisory Board is not directly linked to the performance of ASML, in line with the remuneration principles set out in the 2023 Remuneration Policy for

the Supervisory Board.

Remuneration of former Supervisory Board members

Overview of the remuneration awarded to the former Supervisory Board members in 2023, 2022 and 2021 (amounts are in € thousands):

Membership fees 2023 Committee fees 2023 Allowances 20231 Proportion fixed vs.<br><br>variable 2023 Total remuneration 2023 Total remuneration 2022 Total remuneration 2021
G.J. Kleisterlee2 43 17 1 100:0 61 190 178
R.D. Schwalb2 24 13 100:0 37 116 113
J.M.C. Stork n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a 40 113
D.A. Grose n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a 36
C.M.S. Smits Nusteling n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a 31
Total 67 30 1 100:0 98 346 471

1.Allowances consist of fixed-expense allowances and allowances for intercontinental meetings.

2.Stepped down per the AGM on April 26, 2023.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 REMUNERATION REPORT CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 242
Supervisory Board remuneration (continued)

Other information

Total remuneration

The total annual remuneration for the members of the

Board of Management and the Supervisory Board,

including former members, during 2023 amounts to

€25.8 million (2022: €18.1 million).

Other arrangements

No remuneration has been granted and allocated by

subsidiaries or other companies whose financials are

consolidated by ASML, since all members of the Board

of Management and the Supervisory Board are paid

directly by ASML Holding NV.

No (personal) loans have been granted to the members

of the Board of Management or the Supervisory Board

and no guarantees or the like have been granted in favor

of any of the members of the Board of Management and

the Supervisory Board.

No severance payments were granted to members of the

Board of Management and the Supervisory Board in 2023

and no variable remuneration has been clawed back.

Deviations

In 2023, no deviations took place from the decision-

making process for the implementation of the applicable

Remuneration Policies for the Board of Management and

the Supervisory Board and no temporary deviations took

place from the applicable Remuneration Policies for the

Board of Management and the Supervisory Board.

Shareholder voting

At the 2023 AGM, the 2023 Remuneration Policy for the

Supervisory Board was adopted with 98.88% of the

votes cast in favor of the proposal and the remuneration

amounts for the Supervisory Board were adopted with

99.20% of the votes cast in favor of the proposal.

The Remuneration Report for the financial year 2022 was

submitted to the 2023 AGM for an advisory vote.

93.21% of the votes were cast in favor. In the Message

from the Remuneration Committee Chair at the beginning

of this Remuneration Report, we discuss how we have

taken into account the feedback received on Board of

Management and Supervisory Board remuneration.

This Remuneration Report will be submitted to the 2024

AGM for an advisory vote in line with Dutch law.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 REMUNERATION REPORT CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 243
Remuneration Report - Other Information

New_Financials_NonFinancials_Divider_Background_020223.jpg

Financials &<br><br>Non-financials
IN THIS SECTION
Consolidated Financial Statements
246 Report of Independent Registered Public<br><br>Accounting Firm
248 Consolidated Statements of Operations
249 Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income
250 Consolidated Balance Sheets
251 Consolidated Statements of Shareholders’ Equity
253 Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows
254 Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements
Non-financial statements
298 Assurance Report of the Independent Auditor
300 About the non-financial information
307 Non-financial indicators
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 244
--- --- --- --- ---

New_Finanicals_Divider_310123.jpg

Consolidated<br><br>Financial<br><br>Statements
IN THIS SECTION
246 Report of Independent Registered Public<br><br>Accounting Firm
248 Consolidated Statements of Operations
249 Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive<br><br>Income
250 Consolidated Balance Sheets
251 Consolidated Statements of Shareholders’<br><br>Equity
253 Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows
254 Notes to the Consolidated Financial<br><br>Statements
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 245
--- --- --- --- ---

ASML Holding NV:

Opinions on the Consolidated Financial Statements and Internal Control Over Financial Reporting

We have audited the accompanying consolidated balance sheets of ASML Holding NV and subsidiaries (the

Company) as of December 31, 2023 and 2022, the related consolidated statements of operations, comprehensive

income, shareholders’ equity, and cash flows for each of the years in the three‑year period ended December 31,

2023, and the related notes (collectively, the consolidated financial statements). We also have audited the Company's

internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2023, based on criteria established in Internal Control -

Integrated Framework (2013) issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission.

In our opinion, the consolidated financial statements referred to above present fairly, in all material respects, the

financial position of the Company as of December 31, 2023 and 2022, and the results of its operations and its cash

flows for each of the years in the three‑year period ended December 31, 2023, in conformity with U.S. generally

accepted accounting principles. Also in our opinion, the Company maintained, in all material respects, effective

internal control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2023 based on criteria established in Internal Control -

Integrated Framework (2013) issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission.

Basis for Opinions

The Company’s management is responsible for these consolidated financial statements, for maintaining effective

internal control over financial reporting, and for its assessment of the effectiveness of internal control over financial

reporting, included in the accompanying Management’s report on internal control over financial reporting. Our

responsibility is to express an opinion on the Company’s consolidated financial statements and an opinion on the

Company’s internal control over financial reporting based on our audits. We are a public accounting firm registered

with the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States) (PCAOB) and are required to be independent

with respect to the Company in accordance with the U.S. federal securities laws and the applicable rules and

regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the PCAOB.

We conducted our audits in accordance with the standards of the PCAOB. Those standards require that we plan and

perform the audits to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the consolidated financial statements are free of

material misstatement, whether due to error or fraud, and whether effective internal control over financial reporting

was maintained in all material respects.

Our audits of the consolidated financial statements included performing procedures to assess the risks of material

misstatement of the consolidated financial statements, whether due to error or fraud, and performing procedures that

respond to those risks. Such procedures included examining, on a test basis, evidence regarding the amounts and

disclosures in the consolidated financial statements. Our audits also included evaluating the accounting principles

used and significant estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall presentation of the

consolidated financial statements. Our audit of internal control over financial reporting included obtaining an

understanding of internal control over financial reporting, assessing the risk that a material weakness exists, and

testing and evaluating the design and operating effectiveness of internal control based on the assessed risk. Our

audits also included performing such other procedures as we considered necessary in the circumstances.We believe

that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinions.

Definition and Limitations of Internal Control Over Financial Reporting

A company’s internal control over financial reporting is a process designed to provide reasonable assurance

regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of financial statements for external purposes in

accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. A company’s internal control over financial reporting

includes those policies and procedures that (1) pertain to the maintenance of records that, in reasonable detail,

accurately and fairly reflect the transactions and dispositions of the assets of the company; (2) provide reasonable

assurance that transactions are recorded as necessary to permit preparation of financial statements in accordance

with generally accepted accounting principles, and that receipts and expenditures of the company are being made

only in accordance with authorizations of management and directors of the company; and (3) provide reasonable

assurance regarding prevention or timely detection of unauthorized acquisition, use, or disposition of the company’s

assets that could have a material effect on the financial statements.

Because of its inherent limitations, internal control over financial reporting may not prevent or detect misstatements.

Also, projections of any evaluation of effectiveness to future periods are subject to the risk that controls may become

inadequate because of changes in conditions, or that the degree of compliance with the policies or procedures may

deteriorate.

Critical Audit Matter

The critical audit matter communicated below is a matter arising from the current period audit of the consolidated

financial statements that was communicated or required to be communicated to the audit committee and that: (1)

relates to accounts or disclosures that are material to the consolidated financial statements and (2) involved our

especially challenging, subjective, or complex judgments. The communication of a critical audit matter does not alter

in any way our opinion on the consolidated financial statements, taken as a whole, and we are not, by

communicating the critical audit matter below, providing a separate opinion on the critical audit matter or on the

accounts or disclosures to which it relates.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 246
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm
To the Shareholders and the Supervisory Board

Revenue recognition – Identification of distinct performance obligations and allocation of the total

contract consideration

As discussed in Note 2 to the consolidated financial statements, net system sales was EUR 21,939 million for the

year ended December 31, 2023. Sales of systems are usually entered into with customers under volume purchase

agreements (VPAs). These VPAs contain multiple performance obligations, including for example, delivery of goods,

installation, warranty and training.

We identified the evaluation of the distinct performance obligations identified by the Company in certain VPAs as a

critical audit matter. A high degree of auditor judgment was required in evaluating the Company’s identification of

distinct performance obligations in these VPAs.

The following are the primary procedures we performed to address this critical audit matter. We evaluated the design

and tested the operating effectiveness of an internal control over the Company’s revenue recognition process related

to the identification of distinct performance obligations included in VPAs. We evaluated the identification of distinct

performance obligations in a selection of VPAs by obtaining and reading the VPA and the underlying accounting

analysis. Specifically, we evaluated the completeness and accuracy of the Company’s identification of distinct

performance obligations by considering terms, conditions and promises that were unique to the selected contracts.

/s/ KPMG Accountants N.V.

We have served as the Company’s auditor since 2015.

Amstelveen, the Netherlands

February 14, 2024

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 247
Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm (continued)
Year ended December 31 (€, in millions, except per share data) Notes 2021 2022 2023
--- --- --- --- ---
Net system sales 13,652.8 15,430.3 21,938.6
Net service and field option sales 4,958.2 5,743.1 5,619.9
Total net sales 2, 3 18,611.0 21,173.4 27,558.5
Cost of system sales (6,482.9) (7,582.3) (10,151.0)
Cost of service and field option sales (2,319.1) (2,891.0) (3,271.4)
Total cost of sales1 (8,802.0) (10,473.3) (13,422.4)
Gross profit 9,809.0 10,700.1 14,136.1
Research and development costs (2,547.0) (3,253.5) (3,980.6)
Selling, general and administrative costs (725.6) (945.9) (1,113.2)
Other income 10 213.7
Income from operations 6,750.1 6,500.7 9,042.3
Interest and other, net 16 (44.6) (44.6) 41.2
Income before income taxes 6,705.5 6,456.1 9,083.5
Income tax expense 21 (1,021.4) (969.9) (1,435.8)
Income after income taxes 5,684.1 5,486.2 7,647.7
Profit from equity method investments 9 199.1 138.0 191.3
Net income 5,883.2 5,624.2 7,839.0
Basic net income per ordinary share 23 14.36 14.14 19.91
Diluted net income per ordinary share 23 14.34 14.13 19.89
Number of ordinary shares used in computing per share amounts:
Basic 23 409.8 397.7 393.8
Diluted 23 410.4 398.0 394.1

1.Cost of sales includes amounts with related parties of €2,854.5 million, €2,206.1 million and €1,855.2 million in 2023, 2022, and 2021, respectively.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 248
Consolidated Statements of Operations
Year ended December 31 (€, in millions) Notes 2021 2022 2023
--- --- --- --- ---
Net income 5,883.2 5,624.2 7,839.0
Other comprehensive income (OCI):
Proportionate share of OCI from equity method investments 22.0 37.7 0.2
Foreign currency translation, net of taxes:
Gain (loss) on foreign currency translation 93.3 66.0 (68.3)
Financial instruments, net of taxes:
Gain (loss) on derivative financial instruments 25 16.6 57.6 (15.8)
Transfers to net income 25 22.2 (66.5) 0.6
Other comprehensive income, net of taxes 154.1 94.8 (83.3)
Total comprehensive income, net of taxes 6,037.3 5,719.0 7,755.7
Attributable to equity holders 6,037.3 5,719.0 7,755.7
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 249
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive Income
As of December 31 (€, in millions, except share and per share data) Notes 2022 2023
--- --- --- ---
Assets
Cash and cash equivalents 4 7,268.3 7,004.7
Short-term investments 4 107.7 5.4
Accounts receivable, net 5 5,323.8 4,334.1
Finance receivables, net 6 1,356.7 1,379.2
Current tax assets 21 33.4 1,001.2
Contract assets 2 131.9 240.1
Inventories, net 7 7,199.7 8,850.7
Other assets1 8 1,643.4 1,578.5
Total current assets 23,064.9 24,393.9
Finance receivables, net 6 60.6
Deferred tax assets 21 1,672.8 1,872.3
Loan receivable2 26 364.4 929.2
Other assets3 8 739.8 651.8
Equity method investments 9 923.6 919.6
Goodwill 11 4,555.6 4,588.6
Other intangible assets, net 12 842.4 741.7
Property, plant and equipment, net 13 3,944.2 5,493.2
Right-of-use assets 14 192.7 306.6
Total non-current assets 13,235.5 15,563.6
Total assets 36,300.4 39,957.5
As of December 31 (, in millions, except share and per share data) 2022 2023
--- --- ---
Liabilities and shareholders’ equity
Accounts payable4 2,565.2 2,347.3
Accrued and other liabilities5 1,875.9 2,177.4
Current tax liabilities 315.3 308.9
Current portion of long-term debt 746.2 0.1
Contract liabilities 12,481.0 11,441.0
Total current liabilities 17,983.6 16,274.7
Long-term debt 3,514.2 4,631.5
Deferred and other income tax liabilities 267.0 372.2
Contract liabilities 5,269.9 4,825.5
Accrued and other liabilities 454.9 401.2
Total non-current liabilities 9,506.0 10,230.4
Total liabilities 27,489.6 26,505.1
Ordinary shares; 0.09 nominal value;
700,000,000 shares authorized at December 31, 2023 (2022: 700,000,000)
393,421,721 issued and outstanding at December 31, 2023 (2022: 394,589,411)
Issued and outstanding shares 36.3 36.0
Share premium 3,940.8 3,998.1
Treasury shares at cost (4,641.3) (3,306.2)
Retained earnings 9,046.7 12,379.5
Accumulated other comprehensive income 428.3 345.0
Total shareholders’ equity 8,810.8 13,452.4
Total liabilities and shareholders’ equity 36,300.4 39,957.5

All values are in Euros.

1.Other assets – current includes amounts with related parties of €691.9 million and €479.9 million at December 31, 2023 and

2022

, respectively.

2.Loan receivable includes amounts with related parties of €912.4 million and €364.4 million at December 31, 2023 and 2022, respectively.

3.Other assets – non-current includes amounts with related parties of €490.8 million and €620.4 million at December 31, 2023 and

2022

, respectively.

4.Accounts payable includes amounts with related parties of €4.0 million and €269.2 million at December 31, 2023 and

2022

, respectively.

5.Accrued and other liabilities – current includes amounts with related parties of €199.9 million and €111.2 million at December 31, 2023 and

2022

, respectively.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 250
Consolidated Balance Sheets
Issued and Outstanding Shares Share Premium Treasury Shares<br><br>at Cost Retained Earnings OCI1 Total
--- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---
(, in millions) Number Amount
Balance at January 1, 2021 416.5 37.6 3,780.1 (863.2) 10,731.5 179.4 13,865.4
Components of comprehensive income:
Net income 5,883.2 5,883.2
Proportionate share of OCI from equity method investments 22.0 22.0
Gain (loss) on foreign currency translation 93.3 93.3
Gain (loss) on financial instruments 38.8 38.8
Total comprehensive income 5,883.2 154.1 6,037.3
Purchase of treasury shares (14.4) (8,560.3) (8,560.3)
Cancellation of treasury shares (1.2) 6,926.6 (6,925.4)
Share-based payments 117.5 117.5
Issuance of shares 0.5 0.1 (21.5) 74.1 (3.7) 49.0
Dividend paid (1,368.3) (1,368.3)
Balance at December 31, 2021 402.6 36.5 3,876.1 (2,422.8) 8,317.3 333.5 10,140.6
Components of comprehensive income:
Net income 5,624.2 5,624.2
Proportionate share of OCI from equity method investments 37.7 37.7
Gain (loss) on foreign currency translation 66.0 66.0
Gain (loss) on financial instruments (8.9) (8.9)
Total comprehensive income 5,624.2 94.8 5,719.0
Purchase of treasury shares (8.5) (4,639.7) (4,639.7)
Cancellation of treasury shares (0.3) 2,333.7 (2,333.4)
Share-based payments 68.9 68.9
Issuance of shares 0.5 0.1 (4.2) 87.5 (1.6) 81.8
Dividend paid (2,559.8) (2,559.8)
Balance at December 31, 2022 394.6 36.3 3,940.8 (4,641.3) 9,046.7 428.3 8,810.8

All values are in Euros.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 251
Consolidated Statements of Shareholders’ Equity
Issued and Outstanding Shares Share Premium Treasury Shares<br><br>at Cost Retained Earnings OCI1 Total
--- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---
(, in millions) Number Amount
Balance at December 31, 2022 394.6 36.3 3,940.8 (4,641.3) 9,046.7 428.3 8,810.8
Components of comprehensive income:
Net income 7,839.0 7,839.0
Proportionate share of OCI from equity method investments 0.2 0.2
Gain (loss) on foreign currency translation (68.3) (68.3)
Gain (loss) on financial instruments (15.2) (15.2)
Total comprehensive income 7,839.0 (83.3) 7,755.7
Purchase of treasury shares (1.6) (1,000.0) (1,000.0)
Cancellation of treasury shares (0.3) 2,105.1 (2,104.8)
Share-based payments 134.8 134.8
Issuance of shares 0.5 (77.5) 230.0 (53.1) 99.4
Dividend paid (2,348.3) (2,348.3)
Balance at December 31, 2023 393.5 36.0 3,998.1 (3,306.2) 12,379.5 345.0 13,452.4

All values are in Euros.

1.As of December 31, 2023, accumulated OCI consists of €33.0 million gain relating to our proportionate share of other comprehensive income from equity method investments (2022: €32.8 million gain; 2021: €4.9 million loss), €319.6 million relating to foreign currency translation gain (2022:

€387.9 million gain; 2021: €321.9 million gain) and €7.6 million relating to unrealized loss on financial instruments (2022: €7.6 million gain; 2021: €16.5 million gain).

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 252
Consolidated Statements of Shareholders’ Equity (continued)
Year ended December 31 (€, in millions) Notes 2021 2022 2023
--- --- --- --- ---
Cash Flows from Operating Activities
Net income 5,883.2 5,624.2 7,839.0
Adjustments to reconcile net income to net cash flows from<br><br>operating activities:
Depreciation and amortization1 12, 13 471.0 583.6 739.8
Impairment and loss (gain) on disposal 12, 13 (15.9) 39.3 37.5
Share-based compensation expense 18, 20 117.5 68.9 134.8
Gain on sale of subsidiaries 10 (213.7)
Inventory reserves 7 180.7 278.5 485.3
Deferred tax expense (benefit) 21 (419.6) (564.2) (133.6)
Equity method investments2 9 (49.8) 15.3 4.2
Changes in assets and liabilities:
Accounts receivable, net 5 (1,754.9) (2,338.0) 959.9
Finance receivables, net 6 542.3 212.2 (88.6)
Inventories 7 (483.2) (2,080.9) (1,646.9)
Other assets 8 (222.2) (864.3) (344.3)
Accrued and other liabilities 15 347.6 439.7 222.0
Accounts payable 718.6 406.2 (261.7)
Current tax assets and liabilities 21 214.4 33.6 (939.4)
Contract assets and liabilities 2 5,529.8 6,632.7 (1,564.6)
Net cash provided by operating activities 10,845.8 8,486.8 5,443.4
Cash Flows from Investing Activities
Purchase of property, plant and equipment3 13 (900.7) (1,281.8) (2,155.6)
Purchase of intangible assets 12 (39.6) (37.5) (40.6)
Purchase of short-term investments 4 (1,162.7) (334.3) (23.6)
Maturity of short-term investments 4 1,826.4 864.7 125.6
Loans issued and other investments 26 (124.4) (240.0) (561.5)
Proceeds from sale of subsidiaries (net of cash disposed of) 10 329.0
Acquisition of subsidiaries (net of cash acquired) 10 (33.6)
Net cash used in investing activities (72.0) (1,028.9) (2,689.3) Year ended December 31 (€, in millions) Notes 2021 2022 2023
--- --- --- --- ---
Cash Flows from Financing Activities
Dividend paid 22 (1,368.3) (2,559.8) (2,348.3)
Purchase of treasury shares 22 (8,560.3) (4,639.7) (1,000.0)
Net proceeds from issuance of shares 20 49.0 81.8 99.4
Net proceeds from issuance of notes, net of issuance costs 16 495.6 997.8
Repayment of debt and finance lease obligations 14, 16 (12.1) (516.2) (752.8)
Net cash used in financing activities (9,891.7) (7,138.3) (3,003.9)
Net cash flows 882.1 319.6 (249.8)
Effect of changes in exchange rates on cash 20.3 (3.1) (13.8)
Net increase (decrease) in cash and cash equivalents 902.4 316.5 (263.6)
Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of the year 4 6,049.4 6,951.8 7,268.3
Cash and cash equivalents at end of the year 4 6,951.8 7,268.3 7,004.7
Supplemental Disclosures of Cash Flow Information
Unpaid portion of property, plant and equipment, excluded in<br><br>investing activities, included in Accounts payable 29.3 50.3 49.3
Interest received 36.6 42.4 190.8
Interest paid (83.0) (82.2) (137.8)
Income taxes paid, net of refunds (1,235.0) (1,734.6) (2,568.3)

1.Depreciation and amortization include depreciation of property, plant and equipment, amortization of intangible assets, amortization of

underwriting commissions and discount related to the bonds and credit facility.

2.Equity method investments relates to our 24.9% equity interest in Carl Zeiss SMT Holding GmbH & Co. KG and includes our share of the net

result, dividends received and other equity movements, as well as the capitalization of our R&D funding to Carl Zeiss SMT Holding GmbH & Co.

KG as disclosed in Note 26 Related parties and variable interest entities. The dividend received is a cash inflow of €218.0 million (2022: €178.7

million, 2021: €168.0 million).

3.Purchase of property, plant and equipment includes a cash outflow of €45.1 million (2022: €33.8 million, 2021: €69.2 million) to related parties.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 253
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows

1. General information / summary of general accounting policies

ASML is a leading supplier to the semiconductor industry. The company provides chipmakers with hardware,

software and services to mass produce the patterns of integrated circuits (microchips). Together with its partners,

ASML drives the advancement of more affordable, more powerful and more energy-efficient microchips. ASML

enables groundbreaking technology to solve some of humanity’s toughest challenges, such as in healthcare, energy

use and conservation, mobility and agriculture. Headquartered in Europe’s top tech hub, the Brainport Eindhoven

region in the Netherlands, we are a global team of over 42,000 FTEs. ASML’s principal operations are in EMEA,

North America and Asia.

Our shares are listed for trading in the form of registered shares on Euronext Amsterdam and on Nasdaq. The

principal trading market of our ordinary shares is Euronext Amsterdam.

Basis of preparation

The accompanying Consolidated Financial Statements are stated in millions of euros unless indicated otherwise.

The accompanying Consolidated Financial Statements have been prepared in conformity with US GAAP.

Use of estimates

The preparation of our Consolidated Financial Statements in conformity with US GAAP requires management to

make estimates and assumptions that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities and the disclosure of

contingent assets and liabilities on the balance sheet dates, and the reported amounts of net sales and costs for the

reported periods. The inputs into our estimates and assumptions consider economic implications including supply

chain constraints, inflation and uncertainty in the macroeconomic environment. We believe that the critical accounting

estimates and assumptions are appropriate. ASML will continue to monitor the impacts of economic implications and

incorporate them into accounting estimates. Actual results could differ from those estimates. We evaluate our

estimates on a regular basis and we base our estimates on historical experience and on various other assumptions

that we believe to be reasonable under the circumstances. Actual results may differ from these estimates if the

assumptions prove incorrect. To the extent there are material differences between actual results and these estimates,

our future results could be materially and adversely affected.

We believe that the accounting policies described below require us to make significant judgments and estimates in

the preparation of our Consolidated Financial Statements. Our most critical accounting estimates include:

•Revenue recognition (see Note 2 Revenue from contracts with customers)

•Recoverability of deferred tax assets for capitalized R&D expenditures (see Note 21 Income taxes)

Principles of consolidation

The Consolidated Financial Statements include the Financial Statements of ASML Holding NV and all of its

subsidiaries. Subsidiaries are all entities over which ASML controls the financial and operating activities, generally

accompanying a shareholding of more than 50.0% of the outstanding voting rights. Subsidiaries are fully consolidated

from the date on which control is obtained by ASML. All intercompany transactions, balances and unrealized results

on transactions with subsidiaries are eliminated. We also assess if we are the primary beneficiary of, and thus should

consolidate, any variable interest entity (VIE).

Foreign currency translation

The financial information for subsidiaries with a functional currency outside the euro-zone is measured using a mix of

local currencies or the euro as the functional currency. The Financial Statements of those foreign subsidiaries with a

functional currency different than the euro are translated into euros in the preparation of ASML’s Consolidated

Financial Statements. Assets and liabilities are translated into euros at the exchange rate on the respective balance

sheet dates and income and costs are translated into euros based on the average exchange rate for the

corresponding period. The resulting translation adjustments are recorded directly in shareholders’ equity.

New US GAAP accounting pronouncements adopted

During 2023, there were no new US GAAP accounting pronouncements that were adopted which have a material

impact on our Consolidated Financial Statements.

New US GAAP accounting pronouncements issued but not adopted

For 2023, there are no new US GAAP accounting pronouncements issued which have not yet been adopted and are

expected to have a material impact on our Consolidated Financial Statements.

2. Revenue from contracts with customers

Accounting Policy

We measure revenue based on the consideration specified in the contracts with our customers, adjusted for any

significant financing components, and excluding any taxes collected on behalf of third parties. We recognize revenue

when we satisfy a performance obligation by transferring control over a good or service to our customer. We bill our

customers for, and recognize as revenue, charges for shipping and handling costs.

Depending on the contract, we obtain a right to payment for our systems through a combination of either a

reservation of a production slot or upon delivery of our systems, with the remaining portion upon final acceptance of

our systems. Right to payment for our service and field options occurs upon shipment or completion of the service

unless described otherwise. The payment is typically due 15-45 days after the aforementioned events. Our contracts

typically include cancellation penalties that provide economic protection from the risk of customer cancellation. The

costs related to our sales are recognized as cost of sales.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 254
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements

We generate revenue from the sale of integrated patterning solutions for the semiconductor industry, which mainly

consist of systems, system-related options and upgrades, other holistic lithography solutions and customer services.

The main portion of our net sales is derived from volume purchase agreements with our customers that have multiple

performance obligations, which mainly include the sales of our systems, system-related options, installation, training

and extended and enhanced warranties. In our volume purchase agreements we offer customers discounts in the

normal course of sales negotiations. As part of these volume purchases agreements, we may also offer free goods or

services and credits that can be used towards future purchases. Occasionally, systems, with the related extended

and enhanced warranties, installation and training services, are ordered individually. Our sales agreements do not

include a right of return for any reason other than not meeting the agreed upon specifications.

We account for individual goods and services as separate and distinct performance obligations, including the free or

discounted goods or services, if a product or service is separately identifiable from other items and if a customer can

benefit from it on its own or with other resources that are readily available to the customer. Options to buy goods or

services in addition to the purchase commitment are assessed to determine if they provide a material right to the

customer that they would not have received if they had not entered into this contract. Each option to buy additional

goods or services provided at a discount from the standalone selling price is considered a material right, for which the

likelihood that the option will be exercised is evaluated based on the customer roadmap and their requirements.

The consideration paid for our performance obligations is typically fixed. However, most of our volume purchase

agreements with customers contain some component of variable consideration, typically dependent on the final

volume of systems ordered by the customer or the system performance. Variable consideration is estimated at

contract inception for each performance obligation based on communication with the customer to understand their

requirements and roadmap. This is subsequently updated each quarter, using either the expected value method or

most likely amount method, whichever is determined to best predict the consideration to be collected from the

customer. Variable consideration is only included in the transaction price if it is considered probable that a significant

revenue reversal will not occur.

In certain scenarios when entering into a volume purchase agreement, free goods or services are provided directly or

through a voucher that can be used on future contracts. Consideration from the contract will be allocated to these

performance obligations and revenue recognized when control transfers based on the nature of the goods or services

provided.

As a practical expedient, we do not record a significant financing component when we expect, at contract inception,

that the period between the transfer of the products or services to the customer and customer payment for the

products or services will be one year or less. In addition most of our contracts require our customers to pay a down

payment on systems to be shipped. We do not record a significant financing component for down payments as the

timing difference between when the consideration is paid and when the system is transferred to the customer arises

from reasons other than financing.

The total consideration of the contract is allocated between all distinct performance obligations in the contract based

on their standalone selling prices. The standalone selling prices are determined based on other standalone sales that

are directly observable, when possible. However, for the majority of our performance obligations these are not

available. If no directly observable evidence is available, the standalone selling price is determined using the adjusted

market assessment approach, which requires judgment and is based on multiple factors including, but not limited to,

historical pricing practices and discounting trends for products and services.

For options to buy goods or services that are considered a material right, the discount offered from the standalone

selling price will be allocated from the consideration of the other goods and services in the contract if it is determined

the customer will exercise the option to buy, adjusted for the likelihood. Revenue will be recognized in line with the

nature of the related goods or services. If it is subsequently determined the customer will not exercise the option to

buy, or the option expires, revenue will be recognized.

Occasionally we enter into bill-and-hold transactions where we invoice a customer for a system that is ready for

delivery but not shipped to the customer until a later date, based on customer’s request. Transfer of control is

determined to have occurred only when there is a substantive reason for the arrangement, the system is separately

identified as belonging to the customer, the good has been accepted by the customer and is ready for delivery, and

we do not have the ability to direct the use of the system.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 255
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)

We generate revenue from lessor agreements, which we classify as a sales-type lease when the lease meets any of

the following criteria at lease commencement:

•The lease transfers ownership of the underlying asset to the lessee by the end of the lease term;

•The lease grants the lessee an option to purchase the underlying asset, that the lessee is reasonably certain to

exercise;

•The lease term is for the major part of the remaining economic life of the underlying asset. However, if the

commencement date falls at or near the end of the economic life of the underlying asset, this criterion shall not be

used for purposes of classifying the lease;

•The present value of the sum of the lease payments and any residual value guaranteed by the lessee that is not

already reflected in the lease payments equals or exceeds substantially all of the fair value of the underlying asset;

or

•The underlying asset is of such a specialized nature that it is expected to have no alternative use to the lessor at

the end of the lease term.

For sales-type leases where substantially all the risks and rewards incidental to ownership of an asset are transferred

to the lessee, revenue is recognized at commencement of the lease. If material, the difference between the gross

finance receivable and the present value of the minimum lease payments is initially recognized as unearned interest

and presented as a deduction to the gross finance receivable. Interest income is recognized in the Consolidated

Statements of Operations over the term of the lease contract using the effective interest method.

Leases that are not a sales-type lease are operating lease arrangements. If we have offered the customer an

operating lease arrangement, the system is included in Property, plant and equipment upon commencement of the

lease. Revenue from operating lease arrangements is recognized in the Consolidated Statements of Operations on a

straight-line basis over the term of the lease contract.

Goods or services Nature, timing of satisfying the performance obligations, and significant<br><br>payment terms
New systems (established<br><br>technologies) New systems sales include i-line, KrF, ArF, ArFi and NXE-related systems, along with<br><br>the related factory options ordered with the base system, as well as metrology and<br><br>inspection systems.
Prior to shipment, the majority of our systems undergo a Factory Acceptance Test (FAT)<br><br>in our cleanroom facilities, effectively replicating the operating conditions that will be<br><br>present on the customer’s site, in order to verify whether the system meets its standard<br><br>specifications and any additional technical and performance criteria agreed with the<br><br>customer.
A system undergoing FAT is shipped only after all contractual specifications are met or<br><br>discrepancies from agreed upon specifications are waived and customer sign-off is<br><br>received for delivery. Each system’s performance is re-tested through a Site<br><br>Acceptance Test (SAT) after installation at the customer site. We have never failed to<br><br>successfully complete installation of a system at a customer’s premises; therefore,<br><br>acceptance at FAT is considered to be proven for established technologies with a<br><br>history of successful customer acceptances at SAT (equal or better than FAT).
Transfer of control and recognition of revenue of a system undergoing a FAT and for<br><br>which customer acceptance at FAT is proven, will occur upon delivery of the system.
Transfer of control and recognition of revenue of a system not undergoing a FAT or for<br><br>which customer acceptance at FAT is not proven, will occur after successful installation<br><br>upon customer acceptance of the system at SAT.
New system sales do not meet the requirements for over time revenue recognition<br><br>because our customers do not simultaneously receive and consume the benefits<br><br>provided by our performance, or control the asset throughout any stage of our<br><br>production process, as well as the systems are considered to have alternative use.
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 256
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)
Goods or services Nature, timing of satisfying the performance obligations, and significant<br><br>payment terms
--- ---
Used systems We have no repurchase commitments in our general sales terms and conditions,<br><br>however we occasionally repurchase systems that we previously manufactured and<br><br>sold, in order to refurbish and resell the system to a different customer. This repurchase<br><br>decision is mainly driven by market demand expressed by other customers.
Transfer of control of a used system, and recognition of revenue, follow the same logic<br><br>as for our “New systems (established technologies)”.
Field upgrades and options<br><br>(system enhancements) Field upgrades and options mainly relate to goods and services that are delivered for<br><br>systems already installed in the customer factories. Certain upgrades require significant<br><br>installation efforts, enhancing an asset the customer controls, therefore resulting in<br><br>transfer of control over the period of installation, measured using the cost incurred<br><br>method which is estimated using labor hours, as this best depicts the satisfaction of our<br><br>obligation in transferring control. For the options and other upgrades for which the<br><br>customer receives and consumes the benefit at the moment of delivery, the transfer of<br><br>control and recognition of revenue will occur upon delivery.
As long as we are not able to make a reliable estimate of the total efforts needed to<br><br>complete the upgrade, we only recognize revenue to cover costs incurred. Margin will<br><br>be realized at the earlier of us being able to make a reliable estimate or completion of<br><br>the upgrade.
New product introduction We sell new products and services, which are evolutions of our existing technologies. If<br><br>installation is determined not to be a separate performance obligation or if there is not a<br><br>sufficient established history of acceptance on FAT, the product is determined to be a<br><br>“new product introduction”.
New product introductions are typically newly developed options to be used within our<br><br>systems. Transfer of control and revenue recognition for new product introductions<br><br>occurs after successful installation and customer acceptance at SAT. Once there is an<br><br>established history of successful installation and customer acceptance, revenue will be<br><br>recognized consistent with other systems and goods after transfer of control.
Installation Installation is provided within the selling price of a system. Installation is considered to<br><br>be distinct as it does not significantly modify the system being purchased and the<br><br>customer or a third party could be capable of performing the installation themselves, if<br><br>desired. Transfer of control takes place over the period of installation from delivery<br><br>through SAT, measured on a straight-line basis, as our performance is satisfied evenly<br><br>over this period of time. Installation is not considered to be distinct when recognition of<br><br>revenue related to a system occurs upon customer acceptance of the system at SAT<br><br>after installation is complete.
Warranties We provide standard warranty coverage on our systems for 12 months, providing labor<br><br>and non-consumable parts necessary to repair our systems during these warranty<br><br>periods. These standard warranties cannot be purchased and do not provide a service<br><br>in addition to the general assurance the system will perform as promised. As a result,<br><br>no revenue is allocated to these standard warranties.
Both the extended and enhanced warranties on our systems are accounted for as a<br><br>separate performance obligation, with transfer of control taking place over the warranty<br><br>period, measured on a straight-line basis, as this is a stand-ready obligation. Goods or services Nature, timing of satisfying the performance obligations, and significant<br><br>payment terms
--- ---
Time-based licenses and<br><br>related service Time-based licenses relate to software licenses and the related service which are sold<br><br>for a period of time. The licenses and the related service are not considered to be<br><br>individually distinct as the support services are integral to the customer’s ability to<br><br>continue to use the software license in the rapidly changing technological environment.<br><br>The transfer of control takes place over the license term, measured on a straight-line<br><br>basis, as our performance is satisfied evenly over this period of time. Payments are<br><br>generally made in installments throughout the license term.
Application projects Application projects are node transition and consulting projects which at times may be<br><br>provided as free service within a volume purchase agreement. Measuring satisfaction of<br><br>this performance obligation is performed through an input method based on the labor<br><br>hours expended relative to the estimated total labor hours as this best depicts the<br><br>transfer of control of these kind of services.
Service contracts Service contracts are entered into with our customers to support our systems used in<br><br>their ongoing operations during the systems life cycle, typically in the form of full-service<br><br>agreements, limited manpower agreements, other labor agreements, parts availability or<br><br>parts usage agreements. These services are for a specified period of time and typically<br><br>have a fixed price. Control transfers over this period of time, measured on a straight-line<br><br>basis, as these are stand-ready obligations. For service contracts where the price is not<br><br>fixed, the transaction price has a variable component that is based on the performance<br><br>of the system.
Billable parts and labor Billable labor represents maintenance services to our systems installed in the<br><br>customer’s factories while in operation, through purchase orders from our customer.<br><br>Control over these services is transferred to the customer upon receipt of customer<br><br>sign-off.
Billable parts represent spare parts including optical components relating to our<br><br>systems installed in the customer’s factories while in operation, through purchase<br><br>orders from our customer.
Billable parts can be:
•Sold as direct spare parts, for which control transfers point in time upon delivery; or
•Sold as part of maintenance services, where control transfers point in time upon<br><br>receipt of customer sign-off.
Field projects (relocations) Field projects represent mainly relocation services. Measuring satisfaction of this<br><br>performance obligation is performed through an input method based on the labor hours<br><br>expended relative to the estimated total labor hours as this best depicts the transfer of<br><br>control of our service.
OnPulse Maintenance OnPulse maintenance services are provided over a specified period of time on our light<br><br>source systems. Payment is determined by the number of pulses counted from each<br><br>light source system, which is variable. Invoicing is monthly based on the pulses<br><br>counted. Revenue is recognized in line with invoicing using the practical expedient in<br><br>ASC 606-10-55-18.
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 257
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)

Disaggregation of revenue

Our revenue from contracts with customers, on a disaggregated basis, aligns with our reportable segment

disclosures with the addition of disaggregation of net system sales per technology and per end-use.

Net system sales per technology were as follows:

Year ended December 31 Net system sales<br><br>in units Net system sales<br><br>in € millions
2023
NXE 53 9,124.0
ArFi 125 9,017.4
ArF dry 32 780.2
KrF 184 2,202.5
I-line 55 278.4
Metrology & Inspection 151 536.1
Total 600 21,938.6
2022
NXE 40 7,045.3
ArFi 81 5,236.5
ArF dry 28 623.7
KrF 151 1,653.7
I-line 45 211.5
Metrology & Inspection 216 659.6
Total 561 15,430.3
2021
NXE 42 6,284.0
ArFi 81 4,959.6
ArF dry 22 431.9
KrF 131 1,321.3
I-line 33 142.3
Metrology & Inspection 196 513.7
Total 505 13,652.8

Net system sales per end-use were as follows:

Year ended December 31 Net system sales<br><br>in units Net system sales<br><br>in € millions
2023
Logic 439 15,984.7
Memory 161 5,953.9
Total 600 21,938.6
2022
Logic 357 9,977.6
Memory 204 5,452.7
Total 561 15,430.3
2021
Logic 327 9,588.5
Memory 178 4,064.3
Total 505 13,652.8

Contract assets and liabilities

The contract assets relate to our right to a consideration in exchange for goods or services delivered, when that right

is conditional on something other than the passage of time. The contract assets are transferred to the receivables

when the receivables become unconditional. The contract liabilities primarily relate to remaining performance

obligations for which consideration has been received for systems not yet recognized in revenue, as well as deferred

revenue from system shipments, based on the allocation of the consideration to the related performance obligations

in the contract.

The majority of our customer contracts result in both asset and liability positions. At the end of each reporting period,

these positions are netted on a contract basis and presented as either an asset or a liability in the Consolidated

Balance Sheets. Consequently, a contract balance can change between periods from a net contract asset balance to

a net contract liability balance in the balance sheet.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 258
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)

Significant changes in the contract assets and the contract liabilities balances during the periods are as follows.

Year ended December 31 (€, in millions) 2022 2023
Contract Assets Contract<br><br>Liabilities Contract Assets Contract<br><br>Liabilities
Balance at beginning of the year 164.6 11,160.9 131.9 17,750.9
Transferred from contract assets to accounts<br><br>receivables (393.4) (402.0)
Revenue recognized during the year ending in<br><br>contract assets 116.5 135.1
Revenue recognized that was included in contract<br><br>liabilities (6,326.6) (11,106.1)
Changes as a result of cumulative catch-up<br><br>adjustments arising from changes in estimates (118.0) (24.9)
Remaining performance obligations for which<br><br>considerations have been received, or for which we<br><br>have an unconditional right to consideration 12,790.4 9,416.3
Transfer between contract assets and liabilities 244.2 244.2 375.1 375.1
Other (144.8)
Total 131.9 17,750.9 240.1 16,266.5

The decrease in the net contract liabilities to €16.0 billion as of December 31, 2023 compared to €17.6 billion as of

December 31, 2022 is mainly driven by a lower volume of fast shipment systems shipped for which revenue has not

yet been recognized. This is partially offset by an increase of down payments for systems which will be shipped in the

future. Cumulative catch-up adjustments recognized in our current year revenue are due to updated estimates for

system volume, discounts and credits included in our volume purchase agreements.

Remaining performance obligations

Our customers generally commit to purchase systems, service, or field options through separate sales orders and

service contracts. Typically the terms and conditions of these sales orders come from volume purchase agreements

with our customers which can cover up to 5 years. The revenues for each committed performance obligation are

estimated based on the terms and conditions agreed through the volume purchase agreements.

When revenues will be recognized is mainly dependent on when systems are delivered or installed, as well as when

service projects and field upgrades are performed and completed. All of which is estimated based on contract terms

and communication with our customers, including the customer facility readiness to take delivery of our goods or

services. The volume purchase agreements may be subject to modifications, impacting the amount and timing of

revenue recognition for the anticipated revenues.

As of December 31, 2023, the remaining performance obligations amount to €45.0 billion (December 31, 2022:

€45.4 billion). The remaining performance obligations mainly include orders related to DUV immersion and NXE

lithography systems, and our next-generation EUV platform, High NA. We estimate that 57% (December 31, 2022:

56%) of these anticipated revenues will be recognized during the next 12 months.

3. Segment disclosure

ASML has one reportable segment, since we are a holistic lithography solution provider, for the development,

production, marketing, sales, upgrading and servicing of advanced semiconductor equipment systems, consisting of

lithography, metrology and inspection systems. The Chief Operating Decision Maker regularly sets and monitors

goals and boundaries on a consolidated basis to make decisions about resource allocation and assess performance.

Management reporting includes net system sales figures of new and used systems, sales per technology and sales

per end-use. For sales per technology and end-use, see Note 2 Revenue from contracts with customers.

Net system sales for new and used systems were as follows:

Year ended December 31 (€, in millions) 2021 2022 2023
New systems 13,446.1 15,152.3 21,622.4
Used systems 206.7 278.0 316.2
Net system sales 13,652.8 15,430.3 21,938.6

For geographical reporting, total net sales are attributed to the geographic location in which the customers’ facilities

are located. Long-lived assets are attributed to the geographic location in which these assets are located. Total net

sales and long-lived assets by geographic region were as follows:

Year ended December 31 (€, in millions) Total net sales Long-lived assets
2023
Japan 613.6 10.4
South Korea 6,949.2 148.1
Singapore 282.1 5.0
Taiwan 8,074.6 354.5
China 7,251.8 48.6
Rest of Asia 3.9 0.2
Netherlands 25.1 3,783.6
EMEA 1,206.8 314.5
United States 3,151.4 1,134.9
Total 27,558.5 5,799.8
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 259
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)
Year ended December 31 (€, in millions) Total net sales Long-lived assets
--- --- ---
2022
Japan 1,008.6 7.9
South Korea 6,045.6 85.4
Singapore 475.5 5.5
Taiwan 8,095.5 216.3
China 2,916.0 40.8
Rest of Asia 7.2 0.2
Netherlands 9.2 2,748.5
EMEA 624.5 228.5
United States 1,991.3 803.8
Total 21,173.4 4,136.9
2021
Japan 459.3 5.5
South Korea 6,223.0 61.2
Singapore 126.2 7.3
Taiwan 7,327.9 163.6
China 2,740.8 17.0
Rest of Asia 1.8 0.2
Netherlands 14.2 2,048.1
EMEA 134.6 124.0
United States 1,583.2 555.8
Total 18,611.0 2,982.7

In 2023, 2 customers exceed more than 10% of total net sales, totaling €14.9 billion, or 53.9%, of total net sales. In

2022 and 2021, 2 customers exceeded more than 10% of total net sales, in 2022 totaling €11.8 billion, or 55.8%

(2021: €12.5 billion, or 67.2%). Our three largest customers (based on total net sales) accounted for €3.7 billion, or

64.4%, of accounts receivable and finance receivables at December 31, 2023, compared with €5.3 billion, or 78.6%,

at December 31, 2022 and €3.9 billion, or 83.7%, at December 31, 2021.

The increase in total net sales of €6.4 billion, or 30.2%, to €27.6 billion in 2023, from €21.2 billion in 2022 is driven by

higher sales volumes for NXE and DUV immersion systems, a catch-up in the backlog of orders from Chinese

customers and the timing of revenue recognition for DUV immersion fast shipments. For 2023 DUV immersion fast

shipments, customer acceptance after FAT is considered to be proven for established technologies with a history of

successful customer acceptances after the SAT. Transfer of control and recognition of revenue related to these

systems has occurred upon delivery of the systems.

The decrease in net service and field option sales is mainly driven by lower field upgrade sales due to lower

lithography tool utilization levels and customers delaying productivity enhancement packages, partially offset by

higher service sales, which has benefited from a growing installed base.

The Logic sector continued to be strong in 2023 and was the largest consumer of our most advanced EUV systems.

Revenue growth in the Memory market was less pronounced in 2023, stemming from historically low lithography tool

utilization levels. China saw the largest geographic sales growth in support of expanding capacity to meet worldwide

demand and a catch-up in backlog of orders that were previously unfulfilled due to supply constraints.

The increase in non-current assets in the Netherlands during 2023 is primarily related to the construction of ASML's

logistics facility, the High NA factory and office space at our headquarters in Veldhoven, in order to support our

continued growth.

4. Cash and cash equivalents and short-term investments

Accounting Policy

Cash and cash equivalents consist primarily of highly liquid investments, such as bank deposits, deposits with

governments and government-related bodies, money market funds and bank accounts readily convertible to known

amounts of cash with insignificant interest rate risk and original maturities to the entity holding the investments 3

months or less at the date of acquisition.

Investments with original maturities at the date of acquisition greater than 3 months and 1 year or less are presented

as short-term investments. Fair value changes in these investments, which are not temporary, are recognized in the

Consolidated Statements of Operations. Short-term investments have insignificant interest rate risk.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 260
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)

Cash and cash equivalents and short-term investments consist of the following:

Year ended December 31 (€, in millions) 2022 2023
Deposits with financial institutions, governments and government-related bodies 2,548.1 1,348.7
Investments in money market funds 3,196.7 3,167.4
Bank accounts 1,523.5 2,488.6
Cash and cash equivalents 7,268.3 7,004.7
Deposits with financial institutions, governments and government-related bodies 107.7 5.4
Short-term investments 107.7 5.4

Cash and cash equivalents and short-term investments are mainly impacted by net cash provided by operating

activities, driven by net income and down payments, mainly offset by purchase of property, plant and equipment,

purchase of treasury shares and dividend paid.

Deposits with financial institutions, governments and government-related bodies and investments in money market

funds have an investment-grade credit rating as rated by credit rating institutions such as Standard & Poor's,

Moody’s or Fitch. Our cash and cash equivalents are predominantly denominated in euros and to some extent in US

dollars, Taiwanese dollars, South Korean won and Chinese yuan.

The carrying amount of these assets approximates their fair value.

As of December 31, 2023, no restrictions on usage of cash and cash equivalents exist (2022: no restrictions).

5. Accounts receivable, net

Accounting Policy

Accounts receivable are measured at fair value and are subsequently measured at amortized cost, less allowance for

credit losses, if material. The carrying amount of the accounts receivable approximates the fair value. We perform

ongoing credit evaluations on our customers’ financial condition. We periodically review whether an allowance for

credit losses is needed by considering factors such as historical payment experience, credit quality, aging of the

accounts receivable balances, expected lifetime losses, and current economic conditions that may affect a

customer’s ability to pay.

When entering into arrangements to sell our receivable, we derecognize the receivable only when meeting the

derecognition criteria. The criteria require isolation from the seller, granting the buyer the right to pledge or exchange

the receivables, and legal transfer of control over the receivable.

Accounts receivable consist of the following:

Year ended December 31 (€, in millions) 2022 2023
Accounts receivable, gross 5,327.9 4,334.1
Allowance for credit losses (4.1)
Accounts receivable, net 5,323.8 4,334.1

The decrease in accounts receivable as of December 31, 2023, compared to December 31, 2022, is mainly due to

the factoring of receivables during 2023 and the timing of cash receipts from our customers, which is partially offset

by an increase in our sales.

In

2023

, €993.4 million of receivables were sold through factoring arrangements (2022: €0.0 million). The amounts

consist of €245.8 million (2022: €0.0 million) of regular trade receivables and €747.6 million (2022: €0.0 million) of

absolute, unconditional, irrevocable accounts receivable for down payments on systems to be shipped in 2024. The

amounts have been derecognized since the asset is isolated from the seller, control is transferred to the buyer and

there are no restrictions on the buyer related to the factored items. The fair value of the receivables sold was

substantially the same as their carrying value. The cash receipt is treated as an operating cash flow within the

Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows.

6. Finance receivables, net

Accounting Policy

Finance receivables consist of receivables in relation to sales-type leases. We perform ongoing credit evaluations of

our customers’ financial condition. We periodically review whether an allowance for credit losses is needed by

considering factors such as historical payment experience, credit quality, the aging of the finance receivables

balances, expected lifetime losses, and current economic conditions that may affect a customer’s ability to pay.

The following table lists the components of the finance receivables as of December 31, 2023 and 2022:

Year ended December 31 (€, in millions) 2022 2023
Finance receivables, gross 1,356.7 1,439.8
Unearned interest
Finance receivables, net 1,356.7 1,439.8
Current portion of finance receivables, gross 1,356.7 1,379.2
Current portion of unearned interest
Non-current portion of finance receivables, net 60.6
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 261
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)

The increase in finance receivables as of December 31, 2023, compared to December 31, 2022, is the result of

providing additional systems with a free-use or evaluation period, partly offset by the expiration of free-use and

evaluation periods of systems shipped. These sales-type leases support the capacity ramp-up of high-end systems

which are part of the early-insertion life cycle of the technology or system type. It is expected that these systems will

be purchased at the end of the free-use or evaluation period.

Gross profit recognized at the commencement date of the lease for our sales-type leases amounted to €460.9 million

during 2023 (2022: €429.1 million; 2021: €514.2 million).

At December 31, 2023, payment of the finance receivables in the next five years and thereafter are:

(€, in millions) Amount
2024 1,379.2
2025 60.6
2026
2027
2028
Thereafter
Finance receivables, gross 1,439.8

In 2023, 2022 and 2021 we did not record any expected credit losses from finance receivables. As of December 31,

2023, the finance receivables were neither past due nor impaired.

7. Inventories, net

Accounting Policy

Inventory costs are computed on a first-in, first-out basis. Our inventory values are comprised of purchased materials,

freight expenses, customs, duties, production labor and overhead. The valuation of inventory includes determining

which fixed production overhead costs should be capitalized into inventory based on the normal capacity of our

manufacturing and assembly facilities. During periods when production is below our established normal capacity

level, a portion of our fixed overhead costs are not included in the cost of inventory; instead, it is recognized as cost

of sales as incurred.

Inventory is valued at the lower of cost or net realizable value, based on assumptions about future demand and

market conditions. Valuation of inventory also requires us to establish provisions for inventory that is defective,

obsolete or in excess. We use our demand forecast to develop manufacturing plans and utilize this information to

compare against raw materials, work-in-progress and finished product levels to determine the amount of defective,

obsolete or excess inventory.

Inventories consist of the following:

Year ended December 31 (€, in millions) 2022 2023
Raw materials 3,198.9 4,057.3
Work-in-process 2,163.9 3,388.1
Finished products 2,303.8 2,098.5
Inventories, gross 7,666.6 9,543.9
Inventory reserves (466.9) (693.2)
Inventories, net 7,199.7 8,850.7

The increase in inventory in 2023, compared to 2022, is driven by the continued strong demand from customers.

Additionally, inventory increased in 2023 due to higher costs of our latest technologies and growing install base.

A summary of movements in the inventory reserves is as follows:

Year ended December 31 (€, in millions) 2022 2023
Balance at beginning of year (418.0) (466.9)
Additions for the year (278.5) (485.3)
Effect of changes in exchange rates (1.1) 2.4
Utilization of the reserve 230.7 256.6
Balance at end of year (466.9) (693.2)

The additions for

2023

,

2022

and 2021 are recorded in Cost of sales. The additions for the year mainly relate to

inventory items which became obsolete due to technological developments and design changes.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 262
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)

8. Other assets

Other current and non-current assets consist of the following:

Year ended December 31 (€, in millions) 2022 2023
Advance payments to Carl Zeiss SMT GmbH1 479.9 691.9
Prepaid expenses 678.6 472.1
Derivative financial instruments2 17.3 19.8
VAT receivable 201.2 302.2
Other assets 266.4 92.5
Other current assets 1,643.4 1,578.5
Advance payments to Carl Zeiss SMT GmbH1 620.4 490.8
Prepaid expenses 32.4 40.9
Derivative financial instruments2 11.3
Compensation plan assets 71.1 95.2
Other assets 15.9 13.6
Other non-current assets 739.8 651.8

1.For further details on advance payments to Carl Zeiss SMT GmbH see Note 26 Related parties and variable interest entities.

2.For further details on derivative financial instruments see Note 25 Financial risk management.

Prepaid expenses mainly include prepaid income taxes of intercompany profit on inventory that has not been realized

by ASML of €324.5 million (2022: €515.3 million).

9. Equity method investments

Accounting Policy

Equity investments over which we are able to exercise significant influence but do not control, are accounted for

using the equity method and presented on our Consolidated Balance Sheets within Equity method investments. The

difference between the cost of our investment and our proportionate share in the carrying value of the investee’s

underlying net assets as of the acquisition date is the basis difference. The basis difference is allocated to the

identifiable assets and liabilities based on their fair value as of the acquisition date (i.e. the date on which we obtain

significant influence), with the excess costs of the investment over our proportional fair value of the identifiable assets

and liabilities being equity method goodwill.

We amortize the basis difference related to the other intangible assets over the estimated remaining useful lives of

these assets that gave rise to this difference. The remaining weighted-average life of the finite-lived intangible assets

acquired is 13.1 years and is amortized using a straight-line method. In-process R&D is initially capitalized at fair value

as an intangible asset with an indefinite life. When the R&D project is complete, it is reclassified as an amortizable

purchased intangible asset and is amortized over its estimated useful life. If the project is abandoned, we will record

the full basis difference charge for the value of the related intangible asset in our Consolidated Statements of

Operations in the period of abandonment. Equity method goodwill is not amortized or tested for impairment; instead

the equity method investment is tested for impairment whenever events or changes in circumstances indicate that the

carrying value of the investment may not be recoverable.

Under the equity method, after initial recognition at cost, our Equity method investments are adjusted for our

proportionate share in the profit or loss and other comprehensive income of the investee, recognized on a one-

quarter time lag to allow for the timely preparation of financial information and presented within Profit from equity

method investments. Our proportionate share in the profit or loss of the investee is adjusted for any differences in

accounting principles and policies, basis difference adjustments and intra-entity profits. Receipt of dividends reduces

our Equity method investments, which is presented as an operating cash flow based on the nature of the

distributions.

Equity method investments consists of a 24.9% equity interest acquired on June 29, 2017 in Carl Zeiss SMT Holding

GmbH & Co. KG, a limited partnership that owns Carl Zeiss SMT GmbH, our single supplier of optical columns.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 263
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)

For the year ended December 31, 2023, we recorded a profit from Equity method investments of €191.3 million

(2022: €138.0 million) in our Consolidated Statements of Operations. This profit includes the following components:

•Profit of €212.1 million (2022: €169.1 million) related to our share of Carl Zeiss SMT Holding GmbH & Co. KG’s net

income after accounting policy alignment

•Cost due to basis difference amortization related to intangible assets of €26.7 million (2022: €26.7 million)

•Cost/(Gain) due to intercompany profit elimination of €(5.9) million (2022: €4.4 million)

In 2023, we received a dividend of €218.0 million (2022: €178.7 million) from Carl Zeiss SMT Holding GmbH

& Co. KG.

Carl Zeiss SMT Holding GmbH & Co. KG is a privately held company; therefore, quoted market prices for its stock

are not available.

10. Business combinations and divestitures

Accounting Policy

Acquisitions of subsidiaries are included on the basis of the acquisition method. The cost of acquisition is measured

based on the consideration transferred at fair value, the fair value of identifiable assets distributed and the fair value of

liabilities incurred or assumed at the acquisition date (i.e. the date which we obtain control). Goodwill is capitalized as

the excess of the costs of an acquired subsidiary, net of the amounts assigned to identifiable assets acquired and

liabilities incurred or assumed. Acquisition-related costs are expensed when incurred in the period they arise or the

service is received.

Business combinations

During 2023 we concluded the acquisitions of EO Technical Solutions, LLC (PAS 5500 parts repair company) and

part of the semiconductor equipment activities from Philips Engineering Solutions. The goodwill (€33.0 million) has

been allocated to the ASML reporting unit.

Divestitures

During 2021, we sold the non-semiconductor businesses of the acquired Berliner Glas (ASML Berlin GmbH) group.

The proceeds from these disposals totaled €339.4 million, which primarily related to the sale of the Medical

Applications and Swiss Optic business on November 30, 2021. The remaining proceeds are from the sale of the

Berliner Glas Technical Glas business on April 30, 2021.

A pre-tax gain of €213.7 million was recognized on these transactions which was recorded in the line item Other

income (loss) in our Consolidated Statements of Operations in 2021.

11. Goodwill

Accounting Policy

Goodwill represents the excess of the costs of an acquisition over the fair value of the amounts assigned to assets

acquired and liabilities incurred or assumed of the acquired subsidiary at the date of acquisition. Goodwill on

acquisition of subsidiaries is allocated to reporting units for the purpose of impairment testing. The allocation is made

to those reporting units that are expected to benefit from the business combination in which the goodwill arose.

Goodwill is stated at cost less accumulated impairment losses.

Goodwill is tested for impairment annually or whenever events or changes in circumstances indicate that the carrying

amount of the goodwill may not be recoverable. To determine whether it is necessary to perform the quantitative

goodwill impairment test, we perform a step-zero qualitative assessment, annually. If we determine that it is more

likely than not that the fair value of a reporting unit exceeds its carrying amount, we do not perform a quantitative

goodwill impairment test.

Goodwill mainly results from the acquisitions of Cymer and HMI. The balance as of December 31, 2023, is €4,588.6

million (2022: €4,555.6 million).

We have identified two reporting units: Reporting Unit ASML and Reporting Unit Cymer Light Sources. As of

December 31, 2023, the goodwill allocated to Reporting Unit ASML amounts to €4,126.3 million (2022: €4,093.3

million) and Reporting Unit Cymer Light Sources amounts to €462.3 million (2022: €462.3 million).

Based on our assessment during the annual goodwill impairment test, we believe it is more likely than not that the fair

values of the reporting units exceed their carrying amounts, and therefore goodwill was not impaired as of

December 31, 2023. The accumulated impairment as of December 31, 2023 is nil (2022: nil).

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 264
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)

12. Intangible assets, net

Accounting Policy

Intangible assets include brands, intellectual property, developed technology, customer relationships, and other

intangible assets not yet available for use. These finite-lived intangible assets are stated at cost, less accumulated

amortization and accumulated impairment losses. Amortization is calculated using the straight-line method based on

the estimated useful lives of the assets.

Finite-lived intangible assets are assessed for impairment, annually or whenever there is an indication that the balance

sheet carrying amount may not be recoverable using cash flow projections for the useful life.

The following table shows the respective useful lives for intangible assets:

Category Estimated useful life
Brands 20 years
Intellectual property 3–10 years
Developed technology 6–15 years
Customer relationships 8–18 years
Other 2–10 years
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 265
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)

As of December 31, 2023, intangible assets consist mainly of brands, intellectual property, developed technology and customer relationships obtained from the acquisitions of HMI (2016) and Cymer (2013):

€, in millions Brands Intellectual<br><br>property Developed<br><br>technology Customer<br><br>relationships Other Total
Cost
Balance at January 1, 2022 38.9 144.8 1,220.2 228.6 190.0 1,822.5
Additions 1.5 32.5 34.0
Disposals (1.6) (1.6)
Effect of changes in exchange rates 0.8 1.6 2.4
Balance at December 31, 2022 38.9 147.1 1,220.2 228.6 222.5 1,857.3
Additions 39.3 39.3
Disposals (0.3) (0.3)
Effect of changes in exchange rates (1.4) (1.4)
Balance at December 31, 2023 38.9 147.1 1,220.2 228.6 260.1 1,894.9
Accumulated amortization
Balance at January 1, 2022 13.0 87.2 594.0 108.6 67.6 870.4
Amortization 1.9 8.6 83.4 12.7 28.5 135.1
Impairment charges 9.2 9.2
Disposals (1.4) (1.4)
Effect of changes in exchange rates 1.6 1.6
Balance at December 31, 2022 14.9 95.8 677.4 121.3 105.5 1,014.9
Amortization 1.9 8.3 76.8 12.7 27.9 127.6
Impairment charges 11.1 11.1
Disposals (0.3) (0.3)
Effect of changes in exchange rates (0.1) (0.1)
Balance at December 31, 2023 16.8 104.1 754.2 134.0 144.1 1,153.2
Carrying amount
December 31, 2022 24.0 51.3 542.8 107.3 117.0 842.4
December 31, 2023 22.1 43.0 466.0 94.6 116.0 741.7
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 266
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)

The Consolidated Statements of Operations include the following amortization charges:

Year ended December 31 (€, in millions) 2021 2022 2023
Cost of Sales 107.8 105.9 102.7
R&D Costs 14.5 18.2 19.5
SG&A 10.7 11.0 5.4
Total Amortization 133.0 135.1 127.6

As of December 31, 2023, the intangible assets not yet available for use, as included in Other, amount to

€37.3

million (

2022

: €34.0 million) and are allocated to Reporting Unit ASML.

During

2023

we recorded €11.1 million impairment charges (

2022

: €9.2 million;

2021

: €0.0 million).

As of December 31, 2023, the estimated amortization expenses for intangible assets for the next five years and

thereafter is as follows:

€, in millions Amount
2024 124.9
2025 122.8
2026 117.5
2027 114.3
2028 93.3
Thereafter 168.9
Total 741.7

13. Property, plant and equipment, net

Accounting Policy

Property, plant and equipment is stated at cost, less accumulated depreciation and accumulated impairment losses.

Costs of assets manufactured by ASML include direct manufacturing costs, production overhead and interest costs

incurred for qualifying assets during the construction period. Property, plant and equipment are depreciated on a

straight-line basis in the Consolidated Statements of Operations over their estimated useful lives, except for land

which is not depreciated.

Evaluation systems leased to our customers under an operating lease are capitalized as Property, plant and

equipment at cost and depreciated over the respective lease term. Leased assets that are returned to ASML upon

expiration of the lease term are either taken back into Property, plant and equipment as they will be used internally by

D&E or transferred back to Inventories to be reworked and sold.

The carrying values of prototypes, tooling and equipment that are intended to be sold, but first internally utilized for

more than one year for R&D purposes, are reclassified from Inventories to Property, plant and equipment and

depreciated while being internally used. When no longer required for R&D activities, the assets’ carrying value is

reclassified back to Inventories and reworked to make them ready for sale to our customers. These transfers are

reported as Net non-cash movements to/from Inventories in our Property, plant and equipment movement schedule.

Property, plant and equipment is assessed for impairment whenever there is an indication that the carrying amount

may not be recoverable using cash flow projections for the useful life.

The following table shows the respective useful lives for Property, plant and equipment:

Category Estimated useful life
Buildings 5–45 years
Machinery and equipment 1–7 years
Leasehold improvements 1–10 years
Furniture, fixtures and other 3–5 years
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 267
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)

Property, plant and equipment consists of the following:

€, in millions Land and<br><br>buildings Machinery<br><br>and equipment Leasehold<br><br>improvements Furniture, fixtures<br><br>and other Total
Cost
Balance at January 1, 2022 2,803.7 2,028.7 368.6 414.1 5,615.1
Additions 510.9 665.4 34.4 87.6 1,298.3
Disposals (1.3) (42.2) (1.0) (3.0) (47.5)
Net non-cash movements to/from Inventories 129.2 129.2
Effect of changes in exchange rates 0.7 (3.5) (1.2) (1.7) (5.7)
Balance at December 31, 2022 3,314.0 2,777.6 400.8 497.0 6,989.4
Additions 1,019.3 1,050.2 79.7 94.4 2,243.6
Disposals (1.6) (45.1) (0.8) (2.1) (49.6)
Net non-cash movements to/from Inventories (75.3) (75.3)
Effect of changes in exchange rates (8.3) (17.4) (1.2) (1.4) (28.3)
Balance at December 31, 2023 4,323.4 3,690.0 478.5 587.9 9,079.8
Accumulated depreciation and impairment
Balance at January 1, 2022 947.7 1,115.6 311.0 258.1 2,632.4
Depreciation 134.8 232.6 21.9 55.9 445.2
Impairment charges 10.9 6.4 0.5 17.8
Disposals (2.3) (29.5) (0.9) (2.4) (35.1)
Net non-cash movements to/from Inventories (10.9) (10.9)
Effect of changes in exchange rates (0.5) (1.9) (0.6) (1.2) (4.2)
Balance at December 31, 2022 1,090.6 1,312.3 331.9 310.4 3,045.2
Depreciation 154.2 352.0 31.0 68.4 605.6
Impairment charges 2.9 15.0 17.9
Disposals (0.6) (37.7) (0.7) (2.0) (41.0)
Net non-cash movements to/from Inventories (29.3) (29.3)
Effect of changes in exchange rates (4.0) (6.7) (0.7) (0.4) (11.8)
Balance at December 31, 2023 1,243.1 1,605.6 361.5 376.4 3,586.6
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 268
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)
€, in millions Land and<br><br>buildings Machinery<br><br>and equipment Leasehold<br><br>improvements Furniture, fixtures<br><br>and other Total
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Carrying amount
December 31, 2022 2,223.4 1,465.3 68.9 186.6 3,944.2
December 31, 2023 3,080.3 2,084.4 117.0 211.5 5,493.2

As of December 31, 2023, the carrying amount includes assets under construction of €1,658.0 million (2022: €869.8

million) primarily consisting of buildings, as well as Machinery and equipment.

As of December 31, 2023, the carrying amount of land amounts to €229.7 million (2022: €178.7 million).

The additions in 2023 in Land and buildings, as well as Furniture, fixtures and other mainly relate to the construction

of the EUV 0.55 NA (High NA) factory and office space at our headquarters in Veldhoven, in order to support our

continued growth.

The additions in 2023 in Machinery and equipment mainly relate to the upgrade and expansion of production tooling

to support the growth of our business, as well as investments in prototypes of new technologies.

The additions in 2023 in Leasehold improvements mainly relate to installation of cleanrooms and office space for

leased properties in both the US and Taiwan. During 2023, we entered into 8 contracts that will require further

Leasehold improvement investments amounting to €53.5 million.

The Consolidated Statements of Operations include the following depreciation charges:

Year ended December 31 (€, in millions) 2021 2022 2023
Cost of Sales 188.6 248.2 330.4
R&D Costs 101.4 163.7 236.2
SG&A 31.6 33.3 39.0
Total Depreciation 321.6 445.2 605.6
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 269
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)

14. Right-of-use assets and lease liabilities

Accounting Policy

We determine whether an arrangement contains a lease at inception. Leases are included in Right-of-use assets,

Accrued & other current liabilities, Accrued & other non-current liabilities, current portion of Long-term debt, and

Long-term debt in our Consolidated Balance Sheets.

Right-of-use assets represent our right to use an underlying asset for the lease term and lease liabilities represent our

obligation to make lease payments arising from the lease. Right-of-use assets and lease liabilities are recognized at

commencement date based on the present value of lease payments over the lease term. As our leases do not

provide an implicit rate, we use our incremental borrowing rate based on the information available at commencement

date in determining the present value of lease payments. The Right-of-use assets include any lease payments made

at or before the commencement date and are reduced by lease incentives. Our Right-of-use asset and lease liability

valuation may include options to extend or terminate the lease when it is reasonably certain that we will exercise that

option. Lease expenses are recognized on a straight-line basis over the lease term.

We have lease agreements with lease and non-lease components. The lease components are accounted for

separately from non-lease components. The allocation of the consideration between lease and non-lease

components is based on the relative standalone prices of lease components included in the lease contracts.

Right-of-use assets consist of the following leases:

Year ended December 31 (€, in millions) 2022 2023
Properties 148.9 270.3
Cars 5.1 5.4
Warehouses 38.0 30.3
Other 0.7 0.6
Right-of-use assets 192.7 306.6

ASML owns the majority of real estate we utilize for manufacturing, supply chain management and general

administration at our headquarters in Veldhoven, the Netherlands. At our other locations worldwide, most of the

properties we occupy are leased.

Lease liabilities are split between current and non-current. The non-current portion mainly consists of properties and

warehouses. For the year ended December 31, 2023, Lease liabilities under an operating lease arrangement

increased by €30.5 million, mainly due to new leases of properties that commenced during 2023.

Year ended December 31 (€, in millions) 2022 2023
Current 47.6 46.7
Non-current 151.5 181.2
Lease liabilities 199.1 227.9

The Consolidated Statements of Operations include the following lease expenses:

Year ended December 31 (€, in millions) 2021 2022 2023
Properties 52.2 52.3 40.4
Cars 4.8 2.7 5.9
Warehouses 3.0 4.0 5.9
Other 2.4 1.4 0.8
Lease expenses 62.4 60.4 53.0

The total cash flows relating to the leases are as follows:

Year ended December 31 (€, in millions) 2021 2022 2023
Total cash flows 68.9 57.9 148.2

The total cash flow increased in 2023 compared to 2022 due to a prepayment of a new land lease €85 million.

The weighted average remaining lease term and weighted average discount rate related to the leases are as follows:

Year ended December 31 (€, in millions) 2021 2022 2023
Weighted average remaining lease term (months) 62 67 365
Weighted average discount rate (%) 1.9% 2.2% 2.5%

The weighted average remaining lease term increased in 2023 compared to 2022 due to a new land lease which has

a lease term of 70 years.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 270
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)

15. Accrued and other liabilities

Accrued and other liabilities consist of the following:

Year ended December 31 (€, in millions) 2022 2023
Costs to be paid1 511.6 632.7
Personnel-related items 1,070.9 1,328.5
Derivative financial instruments2 261.2 156.7
Operating lease liabilities3 196.7 227.2
Provisions 90.5 76.7
Standard warranty reserve 143.6 142.3
Other 56.3 14.4
Accrued and other liabilities 2,330.8 2,578.5
Less: non-current portion of accrued and other liabilities 454.9 401.2
Current portion of accrued and other liabilities 1,875.9 2,177.4

1.Costs to be paid includes an amount payable to related parties. For further details see Note 26 Related parties and variable interest entities.

2.For further details on derivative financial instruments see Note 25 Financial risk management.

3.For further details on lease liabilities see Note 14 Right-of-use assets and lease liabilities.

Costs to be paid represent ASML’s estimate of contractual liability as of the reporting date, to be settled in a future

period, based upon the underlying terms and conditions. Costs to be paid as of December 31, 2023, include Value

Added Tax (VAT) payables and accrued costs for unbilled services provided by suppliers including contracted labor,

outsourced services and consultancy.

Personnel-related items mainly consist of accrued annual STI bonus plans, accrued vacation days, accrued pension

premiums, accrued wage tax and accrued vacation allowance. The increase in the accrued personnel-related items

compared to prior year is mainly of an increase in the number of our employees to support the continued growth of

our business.

The standard warranty reserve is based on historical product performance and total expected costs to fulfill our

warranty obligation. Annually, we assess and update the standard warranty reserve based on the latest actual

historical warranty costs and expected future warranty costs. Total changes in standard warranty reserve for the

years 2023 and 2022, are as follows:

Year ended December 31 (€, in millions) 2022 2023
Balance at beginning of year 145.3 143.6
Additions for the year 191.5 232.2
Utilization of the reserve (193.5) (233.3)
Effect of exchange rates 0.3 (0.2)
Balance at end of year 143.6 142.3

16. Long-term debt and interest and other costs

Accounting Policy

Long-term debt represents debt issued privately without registration with a government authority and is payable to

others under the terms of a signed agreement. Long-term debt is initially recognized at fair value and subsequently

measured at amortized cost. Debt is qualified as long-term debt as long as the group has an unconditional right to

defer settlement of the liability for at least 12 months after the reporting period.

Interest accruals and payments relating to long-term debt are accounted for as part of Accrued and other liabilities.

Interest and other costs should be accrued and recorded with the passage of time over the agreed term, regardless

of when the interest receipt or payment has taken place.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 271
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)

Long-term debt consists of the following (amounts for bonds represent carrying amount, not the principle amount):

Year ended December 31 (€, in millions) 2022 2023
€750 million 3.375% senior notes issued September 2013 and principal due<br><br>September 19th 2023 interest annually payable on September 19th 744.6
€1,000 million 1.375% senior notes issued July 2016 and principal due July 7th 2026<br><br>interest annually payable on July 7th 893.9 936.8
€750 million 1.625% senior notes issued November 2016 and principal due May 28th<br><br>2027 interest annually payable on May 28th 666.8 701.3
€750 million 0.250% senior notes issued February 2020 and principal due February<br><br>25th 2030 interest annually payable on February 25th 742.7 743.7
€750 million 0.625% senior notes issued May 2020 and principal due May 7th 2029<br><br>interest annually payable on May 7th 747.5 747.9
€500 million 2.250% senior notes issued May 2022 and principal due May 17th 2032<br><br>interest annually payable on May 17th 440.3 472.1
€1,000 million 3.500% senior notes issued June 2023 and principal due December 6th<br><br>2025 interest annually payable on December 6th 1,008.6
Debt acquired from Berliner Glas (ASML Berlin GmbH) 22.3 20.5
Other 2.3 0.7
Long-term debt 4,260.4 4,631.6
Less: current portion of long-term debt 746.2 0.1
Non-current portion of long-term debt 3,514.2 4,631.5

All senior notes are redeemable at the option of ASML, in whole or in part, at any time by paying a make whole

premium, and unless previously redeemed, will be redeemed at 100% of their principal amount on the maturity date.

Our obligations to make principal repayments under our senior notes and other borrowing arrangements excluding

interest expense as of December 31, 2023 are as follows:

€, in millions Amount
2024 0.1
2025 1,004.2
2026 1,002.0
2027 752.0
2028 2.0
Thereafter 2,011.0
Total debt maturities 4,771.3

Eurobonds

The following table summarizes the carrying amount of our outstanding Eurobonds, including the fair value of interest

rate swaps used to hedge the change in the fair value of the Eurobonds:

Year ended December 31 (€, in millions) 2022 2023
Amortized cost amount 4,479.0 4,731.7
Fair value interest rate swaps1 (243.2) (121.3)
Carrying amount 4,235.8 4,610.4

1.The fair value of the interest rate swaps excludes accrued interest.

We use interest rate swaps to minimize the net interest exposure for the group by aligning the interest terms of the

available cash and the interest-bearing debt. The fair value changes of these interest rate swaps are recorded on the

Consolidated Balance Sheets under current and non-current accrued and other liabilities, as well as current and non-

current other assets, and the carrying amount of the Eurobonds is adjusted for these fair value changes. We did not

enter into interest rate swaps in connection with the Eurobonds issued in

2020

.

The following table summarizes the estimated fair value of our Eurobonds:

Year ended December 31 (€, in millions) 2022 2023
Principal amount 4,500.0 4,750.0
Carrying amount 4,235.8 4,610.4
Fair value1 4,072.8 4,496.2

1.Source: Bloomberg Finance LP.

The fair value of our Eurobonds is estimated based on quoted market prices as of December 31, 2023. The fair value

deviates from the principal amount, due to changes in market interest rates and credit spreads since the issue of our

Eurobonds which carry a fixed coupon interest rate.

Debt acquired from Berliner Glas (ASML Berlin GmbH)

The loan of Berliner Glas (ASML Berlin GmbH) is a mortgage loan of €20.5 million with an annual interest rate of

0.5%, repayable in 2034. Debt decreased compared to

2022

, due to repayments made in

2023

.

Lines of credit

We maintain an available committed credit facility maturing in July 2026, with a group of banks, of €700.0 million as

of December 31, 2023 and as of December 31, 2022. No amounts were outstanding under the committed credit

facility at the end of

2023

and

2022

. Outstanding amounts under this credit facility will bear an interest of Euribor

plus a margin. The margin depends on our credit rating and ESG score.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 272
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)

We have a non-committed guarantee facility of €85.0 million under which guarantees in the ordinary course of

business, such as customs or rental guarantees, can be provided to third parties. As of December 31, 2023, an

amount of €46.8 million has been provided as guarantee. In addition, ASML has a non-committed credit facility for

our Chinese subsidiary of €130.0 million. This non-committed credit facility covers bank guarantees, standby letters

of credit, as well as advances up to €130.0 million. No amounts were outstanding under this facility. ASML also has

non-committed lines of credit available. These facilities provide ASML with the ability to request short-term unsecured

loans from time to time for an aggregate amount not exceeding €1.25 billion. No amounts have been drawn under

these lines of credit. Outstanding amounts under the non-committed facility will bear interest based on market

conditions at the moment of draw down.

Interest and other, net

Interest and other, net consist mainly of interest income and interest expenses. In 2023, the interest income

component is €193.9 million (

2022

: €16.2 million;

2021

: €10.0 million). Income mainly relates to interest income on

cash and cash equivalents. In 2023, the interest expense component is €152.7 million (

2022

: €60.8 million;

2021

:

€54.6 million). The expenses mainly relate to interest expense on our Eurobonds and interest rate swaps.

17. Commitments and contingencies

Commitments

We have various contractual obligations, some of which are required to be recorded as liabilities in our Consolidated

Balance Sheets, including long- and short-term debt and lease commitments. Other contractual obligations, namely

unconditional purchase obligations, are generally not required to be recognized as liabilities but are required to be

disclosed.

Our contractual obligations as of December 31, 2023 can be summarized as follows:

Payments due by period (€, in billions) Total 1 year 2 years 3 years 4 years 5 years >5 years
Long-term debt obligations, including<br><br>interest1 5.1 0.1 1.1 1.0 0.8 2.1
Lease obligations2 0.2 0.1 0.1
Purchase obligations 14.1 10.7 1.8 0.8 0.4 0.2 0.2
Total contractual obligations 19.4 10.9 2.9 1.8 1.2 0.2 2.4

1.Long-term debt obligations mainly relate to principal amounts and interest payments of our Eurobonds. For the amounts excluding interest

expenses and for further details see Note 16 Long-term debt and interest and other costs.

2.For further details see Note 14 Right-of-use assets and lease liabilities.

We have purchase obligations towards suppliers in the ordinary course of business which mainly relate to goods and

services for our operations and obligations relating to further expansion and upgrade of our facilities. The general

terms and conditions of the agreements relating to the major part of our purchase obligations as of December 31,

2023, contain clauses that enable us to delay or cancel delivery of ordered goods and services up to the dates

specified in the purchase agreements, in line with the timing of future sales. The terms and conditions that we

normally agree with our suppliers give us additional flexibility to adapt our purchase obligations to our requirements in

light of the cyclicality and technological developments inherent in the industry in which we operate.

Contingencies

ASML is subject to proceedings, litigation and other actual or potential claims, including those related to a potential

violation of laws and regulations. ASML’s customers may be subject to claims of infringement from third parties

alleging that the ASML equipment used by those customers in the manufacture of semiconductor products, and/or

the methods relating to use of the ASML equipment, infringes one or more patents issued to those third parties. If

these claims were successful, ASML could be required to indemnify such customers for some or all of the losses

incurred or damages assessed against them as a result of that infringement. As reported in the 2022 Annual Report,

ASML was subject to misappropriation of data relating to proprietary technology by a (now) former employee in

China. Although we do not believe that the misappropriation is material to our business, certain export control

regulations may have been violated. ASML reported the incident to relevant authorities.

In connection with any proceedings and claims, our management evaluates, based on the relevant facts and legal

principles, the likelihood of an unfavorable (or favorable) outcome, and whether the amount of the loss (or gain) can

be reasonably estimated. Judgment is required in these evaluations, including judgments regarding the validity of

asserted claims and the likely outcome of legal and administrative proceedings. The outcome of these proceedings,

however, is subject to a number of factors beyond our control, most notably the uncertainty associated with

predicting decisions by courts and administrative agencies. In addition, estimates of the potential costs (or gains)

associated with legal and administrative proceedings frequently cannot be subjected to any sensitivity analysis, as

damage estimates or settlement offers by claimants may bear little or no relation to the eventual outcome. Finally, in

any particular proceeding, we may agree to settle or to terminate a claim or proceeding in which we believe that it

would ultimately prevail where we believe that doing so, when taken together with other relevant commercial

considerations, is more effective than engaging in an expensive and protracted litigation, the outcome of which is

uncertain.

As of December 31, 2023, management has determined that ASML does not have any material contingencies which

are considered probable or reasonably probable for each year presented in our Consolidated Balance Sheets.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 273
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)

18. Personnel expenses and employee information

Personnel expenses for all payroll employees were as follows:

Year ended December 31 (€, in millions) 2021 2022 2023
Wages and salaries 2,842.7 3,502.5 4,447.0
Social security expenses 249.8 300.7 410.5
Pension and retirement expenses 229.2 255.9 348.9
Share-based payments 117.5 68.9 134.8
Personnel expenses 3,439.2 4,128.0 5,341.2

The continued increase in personnel expenses is mainly due to an increase in payroll employees to support the

continued growth of our business.

The average number of payroll employees in FTEs was:

Average number of payroll employees in FTEs 2021 2022 2023
Netherlands 14,222 16,722 19,876
Worldwide (including Netherlands) 28,223 33,071 38,805

The total number of payroll and temporary employees as of December 31 in FTE per sector was:

Year ended December 31 (in FTE) 2021 2022 2023
Customer Support 7,485 8,901 9,851
Manufacturing and Supply Chain Management 8,237 9,953 9,954
Strategic Supply Management 707 1,541 2,033
General and Administrative 2,761 3,768 4,035
Sales and Mature Products and Services 766 742 939
Research and Development 12,060 14,181 15,604
Total 32,016 39,086 42,416
Less: Temporary employees 2,155 2,974 2,107
Payroll employees 29,861 36,112 40,309

Short-term incentive bonus plans

We have annual performance-related STI bonus plans for our employees. Under these plans, the employee bonus

payout depends on the employee’s job grade, the type of bonus plan and the company/individual performance. The

employee bonus payout (excluding the Board of Management) ranges between 0% and 126% of their annual base

gross salary. The 2023 STI bonus is accrued for as part of Accrued and other liabilities in the Consolidated Balance

Sheets and will be paid in the first quarter of 2024.

The STI bonus expenses for the (former) Board of Management and other employees were as follows:

Year ended December 31 (€, in millions) 2021 2022 2023
Board of Management 4.4 3.8 6.0
Former Board of Management 0.2
Other employees 423.5 629.6 712.6
Total STI bonus expenses 428.1 633.4 718.6
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 274
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)

19. Employee benefits

Accounting Policy

Contributions to defined contribution retirement benefit plans are recognized as an expense when employees have

rendered service entitling them to the contributions. Payments made to state-managed retirement benefit schemes

are dealt with as payments to defined contribution plans where our obligations under the plans are equivalent to

those arising in a defined contribution retirement benefit plan.

We maintain one multi-employer union defined benefit pension plan and various other defined contribution pension

plans covering a substantial number of our employees. ASML accounts for its multi-employer defined benefit plan as

if it were a defined contribution plan for the following reasons:

•ASML is affiliated to an industry-wide pension fund and uses the pension scheme in common with other

participating companies

•Under the regulations of the pension plan, the only obligation these participating companies have towards the

pension fund is to pay the annual premium liability. Participating companies are under no obligation whatsoever to

pay off any deficits the pension plan may incur. Nor have they any claim to any potential surpluses

Our pension and retirement expenses for all employees for the years ended December 31, 2023, 2022 and 2021,

were:

Year ended December 31 (€, in millions) 2021 2022 2023
Pension plan based on multi-employer union plan 161.7 181.2 244.4
Pension plans based on defined contribution and other plans 67.5 74.7 104.5
Pension and retirement expenses 229.2 255.9 348.9

The accrued pension premiums were €39.2 million as at December 31, 2023 and €53.2 million as at December 31,

2022.

Multi-employer union plan

In accordance with the collective bargaining agreements effective for the industry in which we operate, which has no

expiration date, there are 21,586 eligible payroll employees in the Netherlands (53.6% of our total payroll FTEs) that

participate in a multi-employer union plan. Our net periodic pension cost for this multi-employer union plan for any

period is the amount of the required employer contribution for that period.

This multi-employer union plan is managed by PME (Stichting Pensioenfonds van de Metalektro) and this plan covers

approximately 1,568 companies and approximately 183,685 contributing members. Every participating company

contributes a premium that is based on the same contribution rate. This contribution rate can fluctuate yearly based

on the coverage ratio of the multi-employer union plan. For 2023, the contribution percentage was 28.0% (2022:

28.0%, 2021: 27.6%). For 2023, our contribution to this multi-employer union plan (including the premiums paid by

employees), was 18.3% (2022: 15.7%, 2021: 13.6%) of the total contribution to the plan. For 2024, we expect to

contribute around €365.0 million to this plan (including the premiums paid by employees). The pension rights of each

employee are based upon the employee’s average salary during employment.

The PME multi-employer union plan monitors its risks on a global basis and is subject to regulation by Dutch

governmental authorities. By Dutch law (the Dutch Pension Act), a multi-employer union plan must be monitored

against specific criteria, including the coverage ratio of the plan’s assets to its obligations. The coverage ratio is

calculated by dividing the funds capital by the total sum of pension liabilities and is based on actual market interest

rates. The legally required minimal coverage ratio is 104.3% (2022: 104.3%). Compared to the previous year, the

coverage ratio of PME slightly decreased to 109.4% as per December 31, 2023 (December 31, 2022: 110.4%). A

recovery plan is in place intended to improve this coverage ratio towards 120%. ASML has no obligation to pay any

deficits the pension fund may incur, nor does it have any claim to any potential surpluses.

Other defined contribution and pension plans

We also participate in several other defined contribution pension plans (inside and outside the Netherlands), with our

expenses for these plans equaling the employer contributions made in the relevant period.

Deferred compensation plans

For more senior US employees we have a non-qualified deferred compensation plan that allows them to defer a

portion of their salary, bonus, and commissions. The plan allows us to credit additional amounts to the participants’

account balances. The participants divide their funds among the investments available in the plan. Participants elect

to receive their funds in future periods after the earlier of their employment termination or their withdrawal election, at

least 3 years after deferral. Expenses were close to nil relating to this plan in 2023, 2022 and 2021. As of

December 31, 2023, our liability under deferred compensation plans was €94.7 million (2022: €70.5 million). The

related compensation plan assets are €95.2 million (2022: €71.1 million).

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 275
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)

20. Share-based compensation

ASML has the following plans in place for its employees:

•Long-term incentive bonus plans

•Option plans

•Employee purchase plan

Long-term incentive bonus plans

Our LTI plans are covered by an overarching Employee Umbrella Share Plan, which is effective as of January 1, 2014,

and covers all employees. The main purpose of the grants of Equity Incentives under this Employee Umbrella Share

Plan is to continue to attract, reward and retain qualified and experienced industry professionals in an international

labor market. All grants under the Employee Umbrella Share Plan typically have a 2.5 to 3 year vesting period and are

subject to performance and/or service criteria.

As part of our LTI bonus, employees can be granted either a service or performance share-based payment plan. For

service-type plans, shares are granted at grant date and after having been in service for a set period, the participant

is awarded these shares at the vesting date. For performance plans, the same conditions apply as a service-type

plan. Additionally, the shares are conditionally granted and awarded based on the company specific performance

criteria, which can be split between market and non-market-based elements. These shares vest after completion of

the service period and the performance reached at vesting date.

The General Meeting approved the adoption of the most recent Remuneration Policy for the Board of Management

and the number of shares to be issued. The most recent Remuneration Policy includes the target and maximum

levels of the LTI plans, the performance measures and payout zone percentages. The policies for employees are

approved by the Board of Management. The General Meeting also approved the restrictions and limits to the Board

of Management for issuance/granting of ordinary shares, limits for restricting or excluding the preemption rights

accruing to shareholder and the restrictions and limits to the Board of Management for repurchasing ordinary shares

on behalf of the company.

The table below shows the performance criteria and the corresponding weight of the LTI performance plans granted

in 2023.

LTI performance plan criteria Market/Non-Market element Weight
Relative TSR Market 30%
Strategic value drivers Non-Market 30%
Technology Leadership Index Non-Market 20%
ESG Measures Non-Market 20%
Total 100%

Accounting Policy

The fair value of the market-based element is measured at the grant date incorporating the expected vesting and

expected value at vesting, using a tailored Monte Carlo simulation model. The fair value of the service plans and the

non-market-based elements of the performance plans is the share price at grant date less the present value of

expected dividends during the vesting period, as participants are not entitled to dividends payable and voting rights

during the vesting period. The likelihood of the conditions being met for service and non-market performance plans is

assessed as part of the company’s best estimate of the number of equity instruments that will ultimately vest.

Participants are entitled to a conditional grant of company shares upon awarding. Performance plans are subject to

cliff vesting and are accounted for on a straight-line basis. Service only plans are subject to graded vesting. Each

installment of the plan is therefore accounted as a separate grant with a separate fair value. This means that each

installment will be separately measured and attributed to expense over the related vesting period. Expenses for the

market-based element are recognized during vesting at a fixed vesting level (as the vesting expectation is

incorporated in the fair value) provided that all other performance conditions are met. Expenses for the non-market-

based elements and service plans are recognized during vesting at expected vesting levels, which are updated during

vesting period as necessary, with a final update/adjustment at vesting date. All share-based remuneration expenses

are recognized as personnel expense, with a corresponding entry in equity, during the vesting period of the award.

Share-based remuneration expenses are included in the same income statement line or lines in the functional

grouped Consolidated Statement of Operations as the compensation paid to the employees receiving the stock-

based awards.

The most important assumptions for the calculation of the fair value of shares for the LTI performance plans, which

include a market-based performance criteria, are set out in the following table:

Year ended December 31 2021 2022 2023
Share price in € at grant date 462.9 548.0 620.1
Expected volatility ASML 38.5% 41.8% 46.2%
Expected volatility PHLX index 35.3% n/a n/a
Average volatility of the peer group (market practice) n/a 47.8% 50.0%
Vesting period 2.9 years 2.7 years 2.9 years
Dividend yield 0.6% 1.0% 0.9%
Risk free interest rate (Eurozone) (0.8)% 0.5% 2.4%
Risk free interest rate (US) 0.2% 2.8% 3.9%
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 276
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)

Expenses for LTI plans, including the Board of Management, were as follows:

Year ended December 31 (€, in millions) 2021 2022 2023
Total incurred expenses 117.5 68.9 134.8
Recognized income tax benefit (excluding excess income tax benefits) 8.2 10.2 16.3
Total expected expenses in future periods 125.4 113.0 187.2
Weighted average period in which these expected expenses are to be<br><br>recognized 1.7 years 1.4 years 1.6 years

Details with respect to shares granted and vested during the year are set out in the following table:

-denominated -denominated
Year ended December 31 2021 2023 2021 2023
Total fair value at vesting date of shares vested during the year<br><br>(in millions) 156.9 175.5 164.0 127.0
Weighted average fair value of shares granted 547.79 587.42 498.64 624.10

All values are in Euros.

A summary of the status of conditionally outstanding shares as of December 31, 2023, and changes during the year

ended December 31, 2023, is presented below:

-denominated -denominated
Numberof shares Numberof shares
Conditional shares outstanding at January 1, 2023 292,765 238,394
Granted 244,069 295,235
Vested (257,451) (167,746)
Forfeited (3,812) (2,764)
Conditional shares outstanding at December 31, 2023 275,571 363,119

All values are in Euros.

Option plans

Since 2017, we no longer grant any options, but there are still outstanding options which may be exercised by

employees.

Accounting Policy

The grant-date fair value of stock options was estimated using a Black-Scholes option valuation model. This Black-

Scholes model required the use of assumptions, including expected share price volatility, the estimated life of each

award and the estimated dividend yield. The risk-free interest rate used in the model is determined, based on an

index populated with euro-denominated European government agency bonds with high credit ratings and with a life

equal to the expected life of the equity-settled share-based payments. Our option plans typically vest over a 3-year

service period with any unexercised stock options expiring 10 years after the grant date. Options granted have fixed

exercise prices equal to the closing price of our shares listed at Euronext Amsterdam on grant date. The purchase of

shares against the exercise price is settled with the employees involved through deductions on their salary and the

issuance of shares upon exercising the stock options is deducted from our treasury shares.

Details with respect to stock options exercised and outstanding are set out in the following table:

-denominated -denominated
Year ended December 31 2021 2023 2021 2023
Weighted average share price at the exercise date of stock options 583.33 613.03 658.16 678.41
Aggregate intrinsic value of stock options exercised (in millions) 5.7 8.1 4.1 4.8
Weighted average remaining contractual term of currently<br><br>exercisable options (in years) 2.81 1.48 2.93 1.43
Aggregate intrinsic value of exercisable stock options (in millions) 36.7 19.7 24.9 15.9
Aggregate intrinsic value of outstanding stock options (in millions) 36.7 19.7 24.9 15.9

All values are in Euros.

The number and weighted average exercise prices of stock options as of December 31, 2023, and changes during

the year then ended are presented below:

-denominated -denominated
Numberof options Numberof options
Outstanding, January 1, 2023 47,607 32,138
Granted1
Exercised (14,768) (8,175)
Forfeited
Expired (1)
Outstanding, December 31, 2023 32,839 23,962
Exercisable, December 31, 2023 32,839 23,962

All values are in Euros.

1.Since 2017, we no longer grant options to our employees.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 277
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)

Details with respect to stock options exercised in the relevant year and outstanding stock options as of December

31, 2023, are set out in the following table:

-denominated -denominated
Range of exercise prices () Weighted average<br><br>remaining<br><br>contractual life of<br><br>outstanding (years) Range of exercise prices () Weighted average<br><br>remaining<br><br>contractual life of<br><br>outstanding (years)
50–60 0.30 50–60 0.00
60–70 0.31 60–70 0.00
70–80 1.34 70–80 0.00
80–90 1.84 80–90 0.97
90–100 1.75 90–100 1.59
100–110 0.00 100–110 1.73
Total 1.48 Total 1.43

All values are in Euros.

Employee Purchase Plan

Additionally, we offer an Employee Purchase Plan to our payroll employees, except the Board of Management who is

excluded from participation in this plan. Through this plan, payroll employees are given the opportunity to buy our

shares through their monthly paycheck. The maximum amount for which employees can participate in the plan

amounts to 10.0% of their annual gross base salary. When employees retain the shares for a minimum of 12 months,

ASML will pay out a 20.0% gross cash bonus on the initial participation amount.

Accounting Policy

Employee purchase plans are accounted on an accrual basis. The shares for employee purchase plans are issued on

a quarterly basis and the share purchase price is based on the closing share price of our listed shares on grant date,

which is the date after our quarterly filings. The purchased shares by employees are issued from our treasury shares.

In 2023, ASML received €99.4 million (2022: €81.8 million and 2021: €49.0 million) from issuance of shares for our

employee purchase plan.

21. Income taxes

Accounting Policy

The asset and liability method is used in accounting for income taxes. Under this method, deferred tax assets and

liabilities are recognized for the tax effect of operating loss and tax credit carry forwards as well as for tax

consequences attributable to differences between the balance sheets carrying amounts of existing assets and

liabilities and their respective tax bases. If it is more likely than not that the carrying amounts of deferred tax assets will

not be realized, a valuation allowance is recorded for the difference. Income tax expense includes current and

deferred taxes on profit, related interest and penalties and non-recoverable withholding taxes that qualify as income

tax, as well as actual or potential withholding taxes on current and expected dividend income from group companies.

Deferred tax assets and liabilities are measured using enacted tax rates expected to apply to taxable income in the

years in which temporary differences, operating loss carry forwards and tax credit carry forwards are expected to be

recovered or settled. The effect on deferred tax assets and liabilities of a change in tax rates is recognized in the

Consolidated Statements of Operations in the period that includes the enactment date. Deferred income taxes

originally recognized through OCI are recycled through earnings in future periods upon release of the connected item

from OCI to the statement of income.

We assess unrecognized tax benefits based on a two-step process. The first step is to evaluate the tax position for

recognition by determining if the weight of available evidence indicates that it is more likely than not that the position

will be sustained on audit, including resolution of related appeals or litigation processes, if any. The second step is to

measure the tax benefit as the largest amount that is more than 50% likely of being realized upon settlement. While

we believe we have appropriate support for the positions taken on our tax returns, we regularly assess the potential

outcomes of examinations by tax authorities in determining the adequacy of our income tax expense, and adjust the

income tax expense, income taxes payable and deferred taxes in the period in which the facts that give rise to a

revision become known.

Income taxes are affecting our Consolidated Statements of Operations, Consolidated Statements of Comprehensive

Income and Consolidated Balance Sheets. The disclosure of the income taxes is therefore split into:

•Income tax expense

•Liability for unrecognized tax benefits

•Deferred taxes

Income tax expense

The components of income tax expense are as follows, whereby ‘Income tax expense Netherlands’ represents the

total tax expense on taxable income generated by our entities in the Netherlands and ‘Income tax expense Foreign’

represents the total tax expense on taxable income generated by our non-Dutch group entities. Hereby ‘Total income

tax expense Netherlands’ includes withholding tax expense withheld at source on income paid by non-Dutch entities

to the Netherlands.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 278
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)
Year ended December 31 (€, in millions) 2021 2022 2023
--- --- --- ---
Netherlands 5,982.8 5,881.0 8,453.5
Foreign 722.7 575.1 630.0
Income before income taxes 6,705.5 6,456.1 9,083.5
Income tax (expense) / benefit current (865.0) (818.4) (1,211.7)
Income tax (expense) / benefit deferred (28.6) (44.4) (58.4)
Income tax (expense) / benefit Netherlands (893.6) (862.8) (1,270.1)
Income tax (expense) / benefit current (523.5) (678.3) (441.3)
Income tax (expense) / benefit deferred 395.7 571.2 275.6
Income tax (expense) / benefit Foreign (127.8) (107.1) (165.7)
Total income tax (expense) / benefit current (1,388.5) (1,496.7) (1,653.0)
Total income tax (expense) / benefit deferred 367.1 526.8 217.2
Total income tax (expense) / benefit (1,021.4) (969.9) (1,435.8)

Current and deferred tax (expense) / benefit can be further broken down into:

Year ended December 31 (€, in millions) 2021 2022 2023
Current year tax (expense) / benefit (1,367.2) (1,440.9) (1,766.1)
Prior year tax (expense) / benefit (21.3) (55.8) 113.1
Total current tax (expense) / benefit (1,388.5) (1,496.7) (1,653.0) Year ended December 31 (€, in millions) 2021 2022 2023
--- --- --- ---
Changes to recognition of operating losses and tax credits (37.2) (41.2) 3.0
Prior year tax (expense) / benefit (2.4) 79.2 (85.2)
Tax rate changes 1.5 (1.1) 13.5
Origination and reversal of temporary differences, operating losses and<br><br>tax credits 405.2 489.9 285.9
Total deferred tax (expense) / benefit 367.1 526.8 217.2

The Dutch statutory tax rate was 25.8% in 2023 (25.8% for 2022 and 25.0% for 2021). Tax amounts in other

jurisdictions are calculated at the rates prevailing in the relevant jurisdictions.

The effective tax rate (ETR) increased to 15.8% in

2023

, compared with

15.0%

in

2022

. The higher rate is mainly

caused by an increase in our liability for unrecognized tax benefits and a reduction in US Foreign Derived Intangible

Income (FDII) deduction.

The reconciliation of the income tax expense from the Dutch statutory rate to the effective income tax rate is as

follows:

Year ended December 31 (€, in millions) 2021 %1 2022 %1 2023 %1
Income before income taxes 6,705.5 100.0% 6,456.1 100.0% 9,083.5 100.0%
Income tax expense based on ASML’s domestic rate (1,676.4) 25.0% (1,665.7) 25.8% (2,343.5) 25.8%
Effects of tax rates in foreign jurisdictions (4.6) 0.1% 13.0 (0.2)% 14.7 (0.2)%
Adjustments in respect of tax-exempt income —% —% 1.4 —%
Adjustments in respect of tax incentives 727.3 (10.8)% 741.2 (11.5)% 941.9 (10.4)%
Adjustments in respect of prior years’ current taxes (21.3) 0.3% (55.8) 0.9% 113.1 (1.2)%
Adjustments in respect of prior years’ deferred taxes (2.4) —% 79.2 (1.2)% (85.2) 0.9%
Movements in the liability for unrecognized tax benefits (21.6) 0.3% (9.9) 0.2% (55.0) 0.6%
Tax effects in respect of acquisition/restructuring<br><br>related items 35.9 (0.5)% —% —%
Change in valuation allowance (37.2) 0.6% (41.2) 0.6% 3.0 —%
Equity method investments (46.7) 0.7% (38.3) 0.6% (42.6) 0.5%
Effect of change in tax rates 1.5 —% (1.1) —% 13.5 (0.1)%
Other (credits) and non-tax deductible items 24.1 (0.4)% 8.7 (0.1)% 2.9 —%
Income tax expense (1,021.4) 15.2% (969.9) 15.0% (1,435.8) 15.8%

1.As a percentage of income before income taxes.

The individual line items in the table above are explained in more detail below.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 279
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)

Income tax expense based on ASML’s domestic rate

The income tax expense based on ASML’s domestic rate is based on the Dutch statutory income tax rate. It reflects

the income tax expense that would have been applicable assuming that all of our income is taxable against the Dutch

statutory tax rate and there are no differences between taxable base and financial results and no tax incentives are

applied.

Effects of tax rates in foreign jurisdictions

A portion of our results is realized in countries other than the Netherlands where different tax rates are applicable. The

effect can differ from year to year depending on the profit before tax in respective foreign jurisdictions.

Adjustments in respect of tax-exempt income

Some interest income earned is exempt for tax purposes. The increase in 2023 as compared to prior years is driven

by an increase in interest rates.

Adjustments in respect of tax incentives

Adjustments in respect of tax incentives mainly relate to a reduced tax rate as a result of application of the Dutch

Innovation Box, which is a facility under Dutch corporate tax law pursuant to which qualified income associated with

R&D is subject to an effective tax rate of 9.0%. The innovation box benefit is determined according to Dutch laws and

published tax policy, whereby the application has been confirmed in an agreement between ASML and the Dutch tax

authorities. This agreement has recently been renewed for the years 2024 through 2028 assuming facts and

circumstances do not change.

Furthermore, this category includes the benefit of the FDII deduction applicable at the level of our US group

companies. The FDII deduction is a facility under US corporate tax law which reduces the effective tax rate on income

derived from tangible and intangible products and services in foreign markets. Based on new guidance issued by the

US Internal Revenue Service (IRS) in 2023 on funded R&D, FDII deduction for 2023 has  significantly reduced.

Increase in absolute number of this line item in 2023 as compared to 2021 and 2022 is driven by increase of our

innovation box benefit commensurate with the increase in profit before tax at the level of our Dutch group companies.

Decrease in relative impact is caused by a reduction in FDII deduction.

The increase in relative weight of this item in the effective tax rate reconciliation for 2022 as compared to 2021 is

mainly caused by an increase in the general Dutch corporate income tax (CIT) rate to 25.8% as of 2022 (2021:

25.0%).

Adjustments in respect of prior years’ current taxes

The adjustments in respect of prior years’ current taxes relate to differences between the initially estimated income

taxes and final CIT returns filed or arrangements agreed upon with tax authorities. These are mainly  caused by

modifications in temporary differences on contract liabilities and are offset by similar movements in prior year deferred

tax balances.

Adjustments in respect of prior years’ deferred taxes

The movements in the adjustments in respect of prior years’ deferred taxes mainly relate to differences between the

initially estimated income taxes and final CIT returns filed. This is mainly caused by modifications in temporary

differences on contract liabilities.

Movements in the liability for unrecognized tax benefits

In 2023, similar to prior years, the effective tax rate was impacted by movements in the liability for unrecognized tax

benefits. The movement for 2023 is mainly driven by continued dialogues with Dutch and foreign tax authorities in the

area of transfer pricing. Additionally, some prior year positions have been released as a result of the lapse of statute.

Tax effects in respect to acquisition/restructuring-related items

The 2021 effect relates to divestment of part of the Berliner Glas (ASML Berlin GmbH) entities, whereby the

commercial transaction result was, to a large extent, exempt for income tax purposes. No such transaction has taken

place in 2022 or 2023.

Change in valuation allowance

Changes in valuation allowance mainly relate to R&D and withholding tax credits for the respective year at the level of

our group companies in the Netherlands and the US for which it is considered not more likely than not that these can

be realized in future years. Additionally, in 2023 a reduction in valuation allowance is recorded for a refund of

withholding taxes in Taiwan.

Equity method investments

This line includes the income tax expense relating to our investment in Carl Zeiss SMT Holding GmbH & Co. KG,

whereby the expense for 2021 as compared to 2022 and 2023 was also negatively influenced by the tax accounting

consequences following from an adjustment in the outside basis difference for the equity investment.

Effect of change in tax rates

In 2023 there was a small tax rate change impact relating to revaluation of deferred tax positions of our Dutch fiscal

unity following from the renewed innovation box agreement with the Dutch tax authorities, which slightly changed the

effective tax rate of the Dutch fiscal unity against which temporary differences reverse. Additionally in 2023 a rate

change effect is included following an internal group restructuring in the US.

The 2021 and 2022 tax rate changes related to adjustments enacted in respective years in the general CIT rates

applying in South Korea and the Netherlands.

Other credits and non-tax deductible items

Other credits and non-tax deductible items reflect the impact on our statutory rates of permanent non-tax deductible

items such as non-deductible withholding taxes, non-deductible shared-based payment expenses and non-

deductible meals and entertainment expenses, as well as the impact of various tax credits (e.g. US R&D credits) on

our income tax expense.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 280
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)

US Tax Reform

The year-end tax positions also reflect the regulations of 2017 US Tax Reform, thereby taking into account the

guidance issued by the US government. Hereby the most recent guidance for the final FDII regulations has been

applied as of 2021 onward, not retrospectively as permitted by aforementioned regulations. With regard to the Global

Intangible Low Taxed Income (GILTI) and Base Erosion and Anti-Abuse Tax (BEAT) regulations, the decision has

been taken to treat these as a period permanent item.

In 2022, the US enacted the CHIPS and Science Act which, among other things, implemented a 25% investment tax

credit on semiconductor and semiconductor equipment manufacturing assets. Pending the release of further

guidance, it is currently uncertain whether the company will claim the investment tax credit to which we may be

entitled as of 2023.

Additionally, in 2022 the US enacted the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) , which, among other things, implements a 15%

minimum tax on book income of certain large corporations, a 1% excise tax on share buybacks, several clean energy

provisions, and additional funding for the IRS. Relevant tax aspects of the IRA have been assessed and included in

our tax positions reported for 2023. Based on our current analysis, we do not believe the IRA will have a material

impact on our Consolidated Financial Statements for years 2023 and onward.

Global minimum tax

In 2023, the Netherlands enacted new legislation to implement the global minimum tax, which will come into effect

from January 1, 2024. Since the rules were not yet effective at the reporting date, the group has no related current

tax exposure for 2023.

In conformity with the FASB staff comments of February 1, 2023, we have treated the global minimum tax as an

alternative minimum tax and did not recognize deferred tax impacts or remeasure existing deferred taxes under local

regular income tax systems. Any incremental effect of the global minimum tax is recognized as current tax as it is

incurred.

The group monitors its impact to the global minimum tax rules for when it comes into effect on a regular basis. An

assessment of the impact has been performed as if the global minimum tax had been applied in 2023. The

assessment shows that the tax might have applied to profits relating to the group's operations in the Netherlands,

Ireland, Hong Kong and the US.

However, although for 2023 the effective tax rate for global minimum tax purposes for the respective countries is

below 15%, we don't expect to be subject to paying global minimum taxes in relation to Ireland and the Netherlands.

This is due to the expected increase in Irish effective tax rate to 15% as of 2024. For the Netherlands the main driver

is the impact of the renewed innovation box agreement concluded with the Dutch tax authorities applicable as of

2024.

With regard to Hong Kong we also expect the potential exposure to be remote given the cease of (the already limited)

activities.

With regard to the US, the quantitative impact is yet still difficult to estimate as the ETR for global minimum tax

purposes is highly impacted by the movement in temporary differences on contract assets/liabilities and

corresponding recalculation of deferred tax. As such movements in contract assets/liabilities balances are not yet

known for coming years and highly dependent on future business transactions to take place, a reliable estimate can

not yet be made. Overall impact on group ETR however, is currently expected to be limited.

Liability for unrecognized tax benefits and deferred taxes

The liability for unrecognized tax benefits and related accrued interest and penalties and total deferred tax position

recorded on the Consolidated Balance Sheets is as follows:

Year ended December 31 (€, in millions) 2021 2022 2023
Liability for unrecognized tax benefits (205.9) (215.5) (249.7)
Deferred tax assets 1,098.7 1,672.8 1,872.3
Deferred tax liabilities (34.7) (51.5) (122.6)
Deferred and other tax assets (liabilities) 858.1 1,405.8 1,500.0

Liability for unrecognized tax benefits

We have operations in multiple jurisdictions, where we are subject to the application of complex tax laws. Application

of these complex tax laws may lead to uncertainties on tax positions. We aim to resolve these uncertainties in

discussions with the tax authorities. We record unrecognized tax benefits in line with the requirements of ASC 740,

which requires us to estimate the potential outcome of any tax position. Our estimate for the potential outcome of any

uncertain tax position is highly judgmental. We believe that we have adequately provided for uncertain tax positions.

However, settlement of these uncertain tax positions in a manner inconsistent with our expectations could have a

material impact on our Consolidated Financial Statements.

Consistent with the requirements of ASC 740, as of December 31, 2023, the liability for unrecognized tax benefits

(excluding interest and penalties) amounts to €193.6 million (2022: €160.0 million) which is classified as Deferred and

other income tax liabilities. If recognized, these unrecognized tax benefits would affect our effective tax rate for

approximately €176.7 million benefit (2022: €139.2 million benefit).

Interest and penalties related to the liability for unrecognized tax benefits amount to €56.1 million (

2022

: €55.5 million)

and are included in the total liability position as specified below. The impact on the Consolidated Statements of

Operations of accrued interest and penalties in

2023

amount to an expense of €3.4 million (

2022

: €5.0 million benefit;

2021: €9.7 million benefit).

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 281
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)

A reconciliation of the beginning and ending balance of the liability for unrecognized tax benefits (excluding interest

and penalties) is as follows:

Year ended December 31 (€, in millions) 2021 2022 2023
Balance as at January 1 (138.0) (144.3) (160.0)
Gross increases – tax positions in prior period (21.6) (11.7) (44.1)
Gross decreases – tax positions in prior period 8.9 2.0 12.6
Gross increases – tax positions in current period (18.8) (23.1) (27.7)
Settlements 2.5 6.8 2.2
Lapse of statute of limitations 32.0 13.2 17.9
Effect of changes in exchange rates (9.3) (2.9) 5.5
Total liability for unrecognized tax benefits (144.3) (160.0) (193.6)
Balance of accrued interest and penalties (61.6) (55.5) (56.1)
Total liabilities for unrecognized tax benefits including interest<br><br>and penalties (205.9) (215.5) (249.7)

We conclude our liability for unrecognized tax benefits to be appropriate. Based on the information currently available,

we estimate that the liability for unrecognized tax benefits will decrease by €8.5 million (excluding interest and

penalties) within the next 12 months, mainly as a result of expiration of statute of limitations.

Settlements reported in 2023 mainly relate to adjustment of the 2021 CIT return of our Dutch fiscal unity. Settlements

in 2022 mainly relate to final settlement of 2018 and 2019 Dutch CIT returns.

We file income tax returns in all countries where we operate, with the Netherlands, US, Taiwan, South Korea and

China being the major jurisdictions. The years for which tax returns are still open for examination for respective

jurisdictions are as follows:

Country Years
Netherlands 2020-2023
US 2017-2023
Taiwan 2018-2023
South Korea 2019-2023
China 2013-2023

We are routinely subject to examinations and audits from tax and other authorities in the various jurisdictions in which

we operate. We believe that adequate amounts of taxes and related interest and penalties have been provided for,

and any adjustments as a result of examinations are not expected to have a material adverse effect.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 282
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)

Deferred taxes

The composition of total deferred tax assets and liabilities reconciled to the classification in the Consolidated Balance Sheets is:

Deferred taxes (€, in millions) January 1, 2023 Credits and other Consolidated Statements<br><br>of Operations Effect of changes<br><br>in exchange rates December 31, 2023
Deferred tax assets:
Capitalized R&D expenditures 592.1 (54.5) (23.5) 514.1
Goodwill 65.0 65.0
R&D & other tax credit carry forwards 213.4 (28.1) 39.5 (7.0) 217.8
Inventories 45.2 17.6 (1.4) 61.4
Contract liabilities 820.8 174.4 (35.4) 959.8
Accrued and other liabilities1 113.9 30.5 (4.9) 139.5
Operating loss carry forwards 4.5 0.2 (0.8) 3.9
Property, plant and equipment 18.9 10.7 (0.4) 29.2
Lease liabilities 27.4 2.3 (1.0) 28.7
Other intangible assets 124.8 (5.5) 119.3
Share-based payments 11.4 5.9 (0.5) 16.8
Other temporary differences 23.3 (6.6) 5.8 22.5
Total deferred tax assets, gross 1,995.7 (28.1) 279.5 (69.1) 2,178.0
Valuation allowance2 (215.4) 3.0 5.7 (206.7)
Total deferred tax assets, net 1,780.3 (28.1) 282.5 (63.4) 1,971.3
Deferred tax liabilities:
Other intangible assets (65.4) 10.9 2.5 (52.0)
Goodwill (28.8) (9.7) (38.5)
Inventories (4.1) 0.3 (3.8)
Right-of-use assets (27.4) (2.3) 1.0 (28.7)
Property, plant and equipment (9.8) (5.1) 1.3 (13.6)
Accrued and other liabilities (0.5) (0.5)
Contract liabilities (16.3) (64.2) 0.5 (80.0)
Long-term debt (1.5) (0.1) (1.6)
Other temporary differences (9.8) 9.8 (2.9) (2.9)
Total deferred tax liabilities (159.0) (65.3) 2.7 (221.6)
Net deferred tax assets (liabilities) 1,621.3 (28.1) 217.2 (60.7) 1,749.7
Classified as:
Deferred tax assets – non-current 1,672.8 1,872.3
Deferred tax liabilities – non-current (51.5) (122.6)
Net deferred tax assets (liabilities) 1,621.3 1,749.7

1.For presentation purposes the 'standard warranty reserve' under the deferred tax assets has been classified as part of the 'Accrued and other liabilities' as of 2023. Comparative figures have been updated accordingly.

2.The valuation allowance disclosed above relates to R&D and other tax credit carry forwards and operating loss carry forwards that may not be realized.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 283
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)
Deferred taxes (€, in millions) January 1, 2022 Credits and other Consolidated<br><br>Statements<br><br>of Operations Income tax recognized<br><br>in Other<br><br>Comprehensive Income Effect of changes<br><br>in exchange rates December 31, 2022
--- --- --- --- --- --- ---
Deferred tax assets:
Capitalized R&D expenditures 420.4 151.2 20.5 592.1
R&D & other tax credit carry forwards 162.7 23.7 20.6 6.4 213.4
Inventories 31.5 12.5 1.2 45.2
Contract liabilities 423.2 400.8 (3.2) 820.8
Accrued and other liabilities1 109.4 0.3 4.2 113.9
Operating loss carry forwards 7.4 (2.8) (0.1) 4.5
Property, plant and equipment 18.6 1.7 (1.4) 18.9
Lease liabilities 23.2 3.1 1.1 27.4
Other intangible assets 143.5 (18.7) 124.8
Share-based payments 9.6 1.2 0.6 11.4
Other temporary differences 27.5 3.7 (6.5) (1.4) 23.3
Total deferred tax assets, gross 1,377.0 23.7 573.6 (6.5) 27.9 1,995.7
Valuation allowance2 (167.6) (41.2) (6.6) (215.4)
Total deferred tax assets, net 1,209.4 23.7 532.4 (6.5) 21.3 1,780.3
Deferred tax liabilities:
Other intangible assets (79.9) 19.8 (5.3) (65.4)
Goodwill (20.9) (7.9) (28.8)
Right-of-use assets (23.2) (3.1) (1.1) (27.4)
Property, plant and equipment (10.9) 1.5 (0.4) (9.8)
Contract liabilities (7.9) (8.4) (16.3)
Long-term debt (1.5) (1.5)
Other temporary differences (1.1) (7.5) (2.1) 0.9 (9.8)
Total deferred tax liabilities (145.4) (5.6) (2.1) (5.9) (159.0)
Net deferred tax assets (liabilities) 1,064.0 23.7 526.8 (8.6) 15.4 1,621.3
Classified as:
Deferred tax assets – non-current 1,098.7 1,672.8
Deferred tax liabilities – non-current (34.7) (51.5)
Net deferred tax assets (liabilities) 1,064.0 1,621.3

1.For presentation purposes the 'standard warranty reserve' under the deferred tax assets has been classified as part of the 'Accrued and other liabilities' as of 2023. Comparative figures have been updated accordingly.

2.The valuation allowance disclosed above relates to R&D and other tax credit carry forwards and operating loss carry forwards that may not be realized.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 284
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)

Operating loss carry forwards and Tax credit carry forwards

The deferred tax assets from operating loss carry forwards and R&D and other tax credit carry forwards recognized

as per December 31, 2023, are almost fully reserved. R&D and other tax credit carry forwards for the amount of

€174.7 million have no expiration date. The remaining R&D and other tax credit carry forwards of €43.1 million have

an expiration date between 2024 and 2044. For an amount of €13.4 million the operating loss carry forwards have an

expiration date between 2024 and 2033. The remaining operating loss carry forwards of €13.8 million have no

expiration date.

Unrecognized Deferred Tax Liability Related to Investments in Foreign Subsidiaries

ASML periodically reviews the capital structure of each group entity and may distribute retained earnings, repay

capital or inject fresh capital in case the projected cash flows, freely available funds of the respective entity and the

capital adequacy requirements in the respective country allow/require for this. At December 31, 2023 the

undistributed retained earnings of our non-Dutch subsidiaries are indefinitely reinvested. As such no deferred tax

liability has been recognized in respect of undistributed retained earnings of our non-Dutch subsidiaries. As the tax

implications of such distributions are dependent on local tax and accounting regulations applying at the moment of

distribution, these can also not practically be determined. As per December 31, 2023, the aggregate amount of

unrecognized temporary differences approximately amounts to €673.9 million (

2022

: €451.3 million).

22. Shareholders’ equity

Share capital

ASML’s authorized share capital amounts to €126.0 million and is divided into:

Type of shares Number of shares Nominal value Votes per share
Cumulative preference shares 700,000,000 €0.09 per share 1
Ordinary shares 700,000,000 €0.09 per share 1

The issued and fully paid-up ordinary shares with a nominal value of €0.09 each were as follows:

Year ended December 31 2021 2022 2023
Issued ordinary shares with nominal value of €0.09 402,601,613 394,589,411 393,421,721
Issued ordinary treasury shares with nominal value of €0.09 3,873,663 8,548,631 6,162,857
Total issued ordinary shares with nominal value of €0.09 406,475,276 403,138,042 399,584,578

As of December 31, 2023, 86,366,821 ordinary shares were held by 268 registered holders with a registered address

in the US. Since certain of our ordinary shares were held by brokers and nominees, the number of record holders in

the US may not be representative of the number of beneficial holders, or of where the beneficial holders are resident.

Each ordinary share consists of 900 fractional shares. Fractional shares entitle the holder thereof to a fractional

dividend, but do not give entitlement to voting rights. Only those persons who hold shares directly in the share

register in the Netherlands, held by us at our address at 5504 DR Veldhoven, de Run 6501, the Netherlands, or in the

New York share register, held by JP Morgan Chase Bank, N.A., P.O. Box 64506, St. Paul, MN 55164-0506, United

States, can hold fractional shares. Shareholders who hold ordinary shares through the deposit system under the

Dutch Securities Bank Giro Transfer Act maintained by the Dutch central securities depository Euroclear Nederland or

through the Depository Trust Company cannot hold fractional shares.

No cumulative preference shares have been issued. Each share carries one vote.

There are no special voting rights on the issued shares in our share capital.

In 2012, we issued shares to three key customers – Intel, TSMC and Samsung – as part of the customer co-

investment program (CCIP) to accelerate ASML’s development of EUV. Under this program, the participating

customers funded certain development programs and invested in ASML’s ordinary shares. The shares issued in the

CCIP were held by foundations which issued depository receipts to participants in the CCIP. In 2023, the remaining

participating customer cancelled its depository receipts in accordance with the terms and conditions of the

agreement between ASML and the relevant customer.

There are currently no limitations, either under Dutch law or in ASML’s Articles of Association, on the transfer of

ordinary shares in the share capital of ASML. Pursuant to ASML’s Articles of Association, the Supervisory Board’s

approval shall be required for every transfer of cumulative preference shares.

Issue and repurchase of (rights to) shares

Our Board of Management has the power to issue ordinary shares and cumulative preference shares insofar as it has

been authorized to do so by the General Meeting. The Board of Management requires approval of the Supervisory

Board for such an issue. The authorization by the General Meeting can only be granted for a certain period not

exceeding five years and may be extended for no longer than five years on each occasion. If the General Meeting has

not authorized the Board of Management to issue shares, the General Meeting will be authorized to issue shares on

the Board of Management’s proposal, provided that the Supervisory Board has approved such a proposal.

Holders of ASML’s ordinary shares have a preemptive right, in proportion to the aggregate nominal amount of the ordinary

shares held by them. This preemptive right may be restricted or excluded. Holders of ordinary shares do not have

preemptive right with respect to any ordinary shares issued for consideration other than cash or ordinary shares issued to

employees. If authorized for this purpose by the General Meeting, the Board of Management has the power, subject to

approval of the Supervisory Board, to restrict or exclude the preemptive rights of holders of ordinary shares.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 285
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)

At our 2023 AGM, the Board of Management was authorized from April 26, 2023 through October 26, 2024, subject

to the approval of the Supervisory Board, to issue shares and/or rights thereto representing up to a maximum of 5%

of our issued share capital at April 26, 2023, plus an additional 5% of our issued share capital at April 26, 2023, that

may be issued in connection with mergers, acquisitions and/or (strategic) alliances. Our shareholders also authorized

the Board of Management through October 26, 2024, subject to approval of the Supervisory Board, to restrict or

exclude preemptive rights with respect to holders of ordinary shares up to a maximum of 5% of our issued share

capital in connection with the general authorization to issue shares and/or rights to shares, plus an additional 5% in

connection with the authorization to issue shares and/or rights to shares in connection with mergers, acquisitions

and/or (strategic) alliances.

We may repurchase our issued ordinary shares at any time, subject to compliance with the requirements of Dutch

law and our Articles of Association. Any such repurchases are subject to the approval of the Supervisory Board and

the authorization by the General Meeting, which authorization may not be for more than 18 months.

At the 2023 AGM, the Board of Management was authorized, subject to Supervisory Board approval, to repurchase

through October 26, 2024, up to a maximum of 10% of our issued share capital at April 26, 2023, at a price between

the nominal value of the ordinary shares purchased and 110% of the market price of these securities on Euronext

Amsterdam or Nasdaq.

ASML Preference Shares Foundation

The ASML Preference Shares Foundation (Stichting Preferente Aandelen ASML), a foundation organized under Dutch

law, has been granted an option right to acquire preference shares in the share capital of ASML. The Foundation may

exercise the Preference Share Option in situations where, in the opinion of the Foundation’s Board of Directors,

ASML’s interests, ASML’s business or the interests of ASML’s stakeholders are at stake. This may be the case if:

•A public bid for ASML’s shares is announced or made, or there is a justified expectation that such a bid will be

made without any agreement having been reached with ASML in relation to such a bid; or

•In the opinion of the Foundation’s Board of Directors, the (attempted) exercise of the voting rights by one

shareholder or more shareholders, acting in concert, is materially in conflict with ASML’s interests, ASML’s

business or ASML’s stakeholders.

The Foundation’s objectives are to look after the interests of ASML and the enterprises maintained by and/or affiliated

in a group with ASML, in such a way that the interests of ASML, of those enterprises and of all parties concerned are

safeguarded in the best possible way, and that influences in conflict with these interests, which might affect the

independence or the identity of ASML and those companies, are deterred to the best of the Foundation’s ability, and

everything related to the above or possibly conducive thereto. The Foundation aims to realize its objects by acquiring

and holding cumulative preference shares in the capital of ASML and by exercising the rights attached to these

shares, particularly the voting rights.

The Preference Share Option gives the Foundation the right to acquire such number of cumulative preference shares

as the Foundation will require, provided that the aggregate nominal value of such number of cumulative preference

shares shall not exceed the aggregate nominal value of the ordinary shares issued at the time of exercise of the

Preference Share Option. The subscription price will be equal to their nominal value. Only one-fourth of the

subscription price would be payable at the time of initial issuance of the cumulative preference shares, with the other

three-fourths of the nominal value only being payable when ASML calls up this amount. Exercise of the preference

Share Option could effectively dilute the voting-power of the outstanding ordinary shares by one-half.

Cancellation and repayment of the issued cumulative preference shares by ASML requires authorization by the

General Meeting, on a proposal to this effect made by the Board of Management and approved by the Supervisory

Board. If the Preference Share Option is exercised and as a result cumulative preference shares are issued, ASML will

initiate the repurchase or cancellation of all cumulative preference shares held by the Foundation on the Foundation’s

request. In that case, ASML is obliged to effect the repurchase and respective cancellation as soon as possible. A

cancellation will result in a repayment of the amount paid and exemption from the obligation to pay up on the

cumulative preference shares. A repurchase of the cumulative preference shares can only take place when such

shares are fully paid up.

If the Foundation does not request ASML to repurchase or cancel all cumulative preference shares held by the

Foundation within 20 months of issuance of these shares, we will be required to convene a General Meeting for the

purpose of deciding on a repurchase or cancellation of these shares.

The Foundation is independent of ASML. The Board of Directors of the Foundation is composed of four independent

members from the Netherlands’ business and academic communities. The Foundation’s Board of Directors is

composed per December 31, 2023, of the following members: Mr. A.P.M. van der Poel, Mr. S. Perrick, Mr. S.S.

Vollebregt and Mr. J. Streppel.

Other than the arrangements made with the Foundation as described above, ASML has not established any other

anti-takeover devices.

Dividend Policy

ASML aims to distribute a dividend that will be growing over time, paid quarterly. On an annual basis, the Board of

Management, upon prior approval from the Supervisory Board, submits a proposal to the AGM with respect to the

amount of dividend to be declared with respect to the prior year, taking into account any interim dividend

distributions. The dividend proposal in any given year will be subject to availability of distributable profits, retained

earnings and cash, and may be affected by, among other things, our view of potential future liquidity requirements

including for investments in production capacity, working capital requirements, the funding of our R&D programs and

acquisition opportunities that may arise from time to time and by future changes in applicable tax and corporate laws

(for example plans of Dutch government to tax share buybacks).

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 286
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)

ASML intends to declare a total dividend in respect of 2023 of €6.10 per ordinary share. Recognizing the interim

dividends of €1.45 per ordinary share paid in August 2023, November 2023 and February 2024, this leads to a final

dividend proposal to the General Meeting of €1.75 per ordinary share. The total 2023 dividend is a 5.2% increase

compared to the 2022 total dividend of €5.80 per ordinary share.

Dividends on ordinary shares are payable out of net income or retained earnings as shown in our Financial

Statements as adopted by our AGM, after payment first of (accumulated) dividends out of net income on any issued

cumulative preference shares.

Purchase of equity securities

In addition to dividend payments, we intend to return cash to our shareholders on a regular basis through share

buybacks or capital repayment, subject to our actual and anticipated level of liquidity requirements and other relevant

factors.

On November 10, 2022, we announced a new share buyback program to be executed by December 31, 2025. As

part of this program, ASML intends to repurchase shares up to an amount of €12 billion, of which we expect a total

of up to 2 million shares will be used to cover employee share plans. ASML intends to cancel the remainder of the

shares repurchased. The new program has replaced the previous €9 billion share buyback program 2021-2023

which was completed on October 18, 2022. The share buyback program may be suspended, modified or

discontinued at any time.

In 2023, we repurchased 1,620,128 shares (2022: 8,538,787 shares) for a total consideration of €1,000.0 million

(2022: €4,639.7 million), all of which were purchased under the new program. In 2023, we canceled 3,553,815

shares (2022: 3,337,825 shares canceled), all of which were purchased under the 2021-2023 program.

The following table provides a summary of shares repurchased by ASML in 2023:

Period Total number<br><br>of shares<br><br>purchased Average<br><br>price paid per<br><br>Share (€) Total number of<br><br>shares<br><br>purchased under<br><br>programs Maximum value<br><br>of shares that may yet<br><br>be purchased<br><br>(€ millions)
January 1 - 31, 2023 57,478 609.46 57,478 11,765.0
February 1 - 28, 2023 294,059 611.28 351,537 11,585.2
March 1 - 31, 2023 337,136 589.74 688,673 11,386.4
April 1 - 30, 2023 239,865 589.92 928,538 11,244.9
May 1 - 31, 2023 283,210 617.07 1,211,748 11,070.1
June 1 - 30, 2023 263,635 663.39 1,475,383 10,895.2
July 1 - 31, 2023 144,745 657.99 1,620,128 10,800.0
August 1 - 31, 2023 1,620,128 10,800.0
September 1 - 30, 2023 1,620,128 10,800.0
October 1 - 31, 2023 1,620,128 10,800.0
November 1 - 30, 2023 1,620,128 10,800.0
December 1 - 31, 2023 1,620,128 10,800.0
Total 1,620,128 617.23
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 287
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)

23. Net income per ordinary share

Basic net income per ordinary share is calculated by dividing net income by the weighted average number of ordinary

shares outstanding for that period.

The dilutive effect is calculated using the treasury stock method by dividing net income by the weighted average

number of ordinary shares outstanding for that period plus shares applicable to options and conditional shares

(dilutive potential ordinary shares). The calculation of diluted net income per ordinary share does not assume exercise

of options when exercise would be anti-dilutive. Excluded from the diluted weighted average number of shares

outstanding calculation are cumulative preference shares contingently issuable to the preference share foundation,

since they represent a different class of stock than the ordinary shares.

The basic and diluted net income per ordinary share has been calculated as follows:

Year ended December 31 (€, in millions, except per share data) 2021 2022 2023
Net income 5,883.2 5,624.2 7,839.0
Weighted average number of shares outstanding 409.8 397.7 393.8
Basic net income per ordinary share 14.36 14.14 19.91
Weighted average number of shares outstanding 409.8 397.7 393.8
Plus shares applicable to options and conditional shares 0.6 0.3 0.3
Diluted weighted average number of shares 410.4 398.0 394.1
Diluted net income per ordinary share 14.34 14.13 19.89

24. Vulnerability due to certain concentrations

We rely on outside vendors for components and subassemblies used in our systems including the design thereof,

each of which is obtained from a single supplier or a limited number of suppliers. Our reliance on a limited group of

suppliers involves several risks, including a potential inability to obtain an adequate supply of required components,

reduced control over pricing and the risk of untimely delivery of these components and subassemblies.

25. Financial risk management

We are exposed to certain financial risks such as foreign currency risk, interest rate risk, credit risk, liquidity risk and

capital risk. Our overall risk management program focuses on the unpredictability of financial markets and seeks to

minimize potentially adverse effects on our financial performance. Our risk management program focuses

appropriately on the current environment of uncertainty in the financial markets.

A key element within our risk management program is our long held prudent financing policy, which is based on three

foundational elements:

•Liquidity: Maintain sufficient liquidity to ensure continued business growth and to provide buffer for cash flow

volatility

•Capital structure: Maintain a capital structure that targets a solid investment-grade credit rating

•Cash return: Provide a sustainable dividend per share that will grow over time, paid quarterly, while returning

excess cash to shareholders through share buybacks or capital repayment

We use derivative financial instruments to hedge certain risk exposures. None of these transactions are entered into

for trading or speculative purposes. We use market information to determine the fair value of our derivative financial

instruments.

Foreign currency risk management

Our Consolidated Financial Statements are expressed in euros. Accordingly, our results of operations are exposed to

fluctuations in exchange rates between the euro and other currencies. Changes in currency exchange rates can

result in losses in our Consolidated Financial Statements. We are particularly exposed to fluctuations in the exchange

rates between the US dollar and the euro, and to a lesser extent to the Japanese yen, the South Korean won, the

Taiwanese dollar and Chinese yuan, in relation to the euro. We incur costs of sales predominantly in euros with

portions also denominated in US and Taiwanese dollars. A small portion of our operating results are driven by

movements in currencies other than the euro, US dollar, Japanese yen, South Korean won, Taiwanese dollar or

Chinese yuan.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 288
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)

Foreign currency sensitivity

The following table details our sensitivity to a 10.0% strengthening of foreign currencies against the euro. The

sensitivity analysis includes foreign currency denominated monetary items outstanding and adjusts their translation at

the period end for a 10.0% strengthening in foreign currency rates. A positive amount indicates an increase in net

income or equity.

Year ended December 31 (€, in millions) 2022 2023
Impact on net<br><br>income Impact on<br><br>equity Impact on net<br><br>income Impact on<br><br>equity
US dollar (7.2) 65.3 4.2 78.3
Japanese yen (0.1) (16.6) (2.6) (3.8)
Taiwanese dollar (12.8) 0.4
Other currencies (1.3) (10.0)
Total (21.4) 48.7 (8.0) 74.5

It is our policy to limit the effects of currency exchange rate fluctuations on our Consolidated Statements of

Operations. The impact on net income reflects our net exposure to currencies other than the euro at year-end 2023.

The negative effect on net income as presented in the table above for 2023 is mainly attributable to timing differences

between the arising and hedging of exposures.

The effects of the fair value movements of cash flow hedges entered into for US dollar and Japanese yen transactions

are recognized in equity. The effect on 2023 compared to 2022 for both US dollar and Japanese yen is mainly the

result of the change in outstanding cash flow hedges.

For a 10.0% weakening of the foreign currencies against the euro, there would be approximately an equal but

opposite effect on net income and equity.

Foreign currency risk policy

It is our policy to hedge material transaction exposures, such as forecasted sales and purchase transactions. We

hedge these exposures through the use of forward foreign exchange contracts.

Foreign exchange contracts

The notional principal amounts of the outstanding forward foreign exchange contracts are mainly denominated in US

dollar, Japanese yen, Taiwanese dollar, South Korean won and Chinese yuan at December 31, 2023 are respectively

USD 0.8 billion, JPY 8.5 billion, TWD 26.4 billion, KRW 61.8 billion and CNY 1.1 billion (2022: USD 1.0 billion, JPY

43.9 billion, TWD 18.5 billion, KRW 99.0 billion and CNY 1.0 billion).

The hedged highly probable forecasted transactions denominated in foreign currency are expected to occur at

various dates during the coming 12 months. Gains and losses recognized in OCI on forward foreign exchange

contracts included in a hedge relationship will be recognized in the Consolidated Statements of Operations in the

period during which the hedged forecasted transactions affect the Consolidated Statements of Operations.

In 2023, we recognized a transfer to net income of €0.6 million loss (2022: €66.5 million gain; 2021: €22.2 million

loss) in the Consolidated Statements of Operations resulting from effective cash flow hedges for forecasted sales and

purchase transactions that occurred in the year. Furthermore, we recognized a net amount of €52.4 million loss in the

Consolidated Statements of Operations resulting from derivative financial instruments measured at fair value through

profit or loss (2022: €3.6 million gain; 2021: €7.9 million loss), which is mainly offset by the revaluation of the hedged

monetary items.

OCI balance unrealized gains and losses on financial instruments from foreign exchange contracts

Outstanding accumulated OCI balances unrealized gains and losses on financial instruments consist of:

•Outstanding anticipated gains and losses of foreign currency denominated forecasted purchase transactions. As of

December 31, 2023, outstanding accumulated OCI includes €8.9 million representing the total anticipated loss to

be charged to cost of sales (2022: gain €5.5 million and 2021: gain €20.8 million), (net of taxes: 2023: loss €7.6

million; 2022: gain €4.7 million; 2021: gain €17.7 million), which will offset the euro equivalent of foreign currency

denominated forecasted purchase transactions. All amounts are expected to be released over the next 12 months.

•Outstanding anticipated loss to be realized to sales. As of December 31, 2023, the total anticipated accumulated

OCI to be released to sales is nil (2022: gain €3.4 million; 2021: loss €1.2 million), (net of taxes: 2023: nil, 2022:

gain €2.9 million; 2021: loss €1.0 million).

The effectiveness of all contracts for which we apply hedge accounting is monitored on a quarterly basis throughout

the life of the hedges. During 2023, 2022 and 2021, no ineffective hedge relationships were recognized.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 289
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)

Interest rate risk management

We have interest-bearing assets and liabilities that expose us to fluctuations in market interest rates, managed

through interest rate swaps.

Interest rate sensitivity

The sensitivity analysis below has been determined based on the exposure to interest rates for both derivative

financial and non-derivative financial instruments at the balance sheet date with the stipulated change taking place at

the beginning of the financial year and held constant throughout the reporting period. The table below shows the

effect of a 1.0% increase in interest rates on our net income and equity. A positive amount indicates an increase in

net income and equity.

Year ended December 31 (€, in millions) 2022 2023
Impact on net<br><br>income Impact on<br><br>equity Impact on net<br><br>income Impact on<br><br>equity
Effect of a 1.0% increase in interest rates 43.8 37.6

The positive effect on net income mainly relates to our total amount of cash and cash equivalents and short-term

investments being higher than our total floating debt position, which is excluding the Eurobonds issued in 2020.

For a 1.0% decrease in interest rates there would be approximately an equal but opposite effect on net income and

equity.

Hedging policy interest rates

We use interest rate swaps to minimize the net interest exposure for the group by aligning the interest terms of the

available cash and the interest-bearing debt. There may be residual interest rate risk to the extent the asset and

liability positions do not fully offset.

Interest rate swaps

The notional principal amount of the outstanding interest rate swap contracts as of December 31, 2023 was €3.3

billion (2022: €3.0 billion). During 2023, these outstanding hedges were highly effective in hedging the fair value

exposure to interest rate movements. The changes in fair value of the Eurobonds were included in the Consolidated

Statements of Operations in the same period as the changes in the fair value of the interest rate swaps. We did not

enter into interest rate swaps in connection with the Eurobonds issued in

2020

.

Credit risk management

Financial instruments that potentially subject us to significant concentration of credit risk consist principally of Cash

and cash equivalents, Short-term investments, Derivative financial instruments used for hedging activities, Accounts

receivable and Finance receivables and prepayments to suppliers.

Cash and cash equivalents, Short-term investments and Derivative financial instruments contain an element of risk of

the counterparties being unable to meet their obligations. Our risk management program focuses appropriately on

the current environment of uncertainty in the financial markets. We invest our Cash and cash equivalents and Short-

term investments in short-term deposits with financial institutions that have investment-grade credit ratings and in

government and or government-related bodies that have investment grade credit ratings and in money market and

other investment funds that invest in high-rated debt securities. To mitigate the risk that our counterparties in hedging

transactions are unable to meet their obligations, we enter into transactions with a limited number of major financial

institutions that have investment-grade credit ratings and closely monitor their creditworthiness. All credit ratings are

rated by credit rating institutions like Standard & Poor's, Moody’s or Fitch. Concentration risk is mitigated by limiting

the exposure to each of the individual counterparties.

Our customers consist of integrated circuit manufacturers located throughout the world. We perform ongoing credit

evaluations of our customers’ financial condition. We mitigate credit risk through additional measures, including the

use of down payments, letters of credit, and contractual ownership retention provisions. Retention of ownership

enables us to recover the systems in the event a customer defaults on payment.

Liquidity risk management

Our principal sources of liquidity consist of Cash and cash equivalents, Short-term investments and available credit

facilities with the objective to maintain sufficient liquidity to ensure continued business growth and to provide buffer

for cash flow volatility. In addition, we may from time to time raise additional funding in debt and equity markets. We

seek to ensure that our principal sources of liquidity will be sufficient to satisfy our liquidity requirements at all times.

Our liquidity needs are affected by many factors, some of which are based on the normal ongoing operations of the

business, and others relate to uncertainties of the global economy and the semiconductor industry. Although our

cash requirements fluctuate based on the timing and extent of these factors, we believe that cash generated from

operations, together with our other sources of liquidity are sufficient to satisfy our requirements, including our

expected capital expenditures, R&D expenses and debt servicing.

We intend to return cash to our shareholders on a regular basis in the form of dividend payments and, subject to our

actual and anticipated liquidity requirements and other relevant factors, share buybacks or capital repayment.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 290
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)

Capital risk management

Our objectives when managing our capital structure are to safeguard our ability to satisfy our capital providers by

maintaining a capital structure that ensures liquidity and supports a solid investment-grade credit rating. The capital

structure includes both debt and the components of equity, in accordance with both US GAAP and EU-IFRS. The

capital structure is mainly altered by, among other things, our financial results, adjusting the amount of dividends paid

to shareholders, the amount of share buybacks or capital repayment, and any changes in the level of debt. Our

capital structure is formally reviewed with the Supervisory Board each year in connection with our updated long-term

financial plan and relevant scenarios. The outcome of this year’s review confirmed to maintain our existing financing

policy in relation to our capital structure.

Our current credit rating from Moody’s is A2 (Stable) and from Fitch is A (Stable), which is consistent with the ratings

on December 31, 2022.

Supplier finance program

We have a supplier finance program in place. We pay the full invoice amount on the original maturity date (for the vast

majority 60 days after end of month) to a third party. Suppliers can choose to request early payment from the third

party. The program can be terminated by the third party or by us with a 30 business days’ notice period.

The amount of the obligations outstanding that we have confirmed as valid to the third party as of December 31,

2023 was €0.4 billion (2022: €0.4 billion) and are included in Accounts payable.

Financial instruments

Accounting Policy – Derivative financial instruments and hedging activities

We measure all derivative financial instruments based on fair values derived from level 2 input criteria. We adopt

hedge accounting for hedges that are highly effective in offsetting the identified hedged risks taking into account

required effectiveness criteria.

Derivatives are initially recognized at fair value on the date a derivative contract is entered into and subsequently

remeasured. The method of recognizing the resulting gain or loss depends on whether the derivative is designated as

a hedging instrument, and if so, the nature of the item being hedged. We designate derivatives as one of the

following:

•A hedge of an exposure relating to changes in the fair value of a recognized asset or liability, that is attributable to a

particular risk (fair value hedge);

•A hedge of an exposure relating to the variability in the cash flows of a recognized asset or liability, or of a

forecasted transaction, that is attributable to a particular risk (cash flow hedge);

•A hedge of the foreign currency exposure relating to a net investment in a foreign operation (net investment

hedge).

We assess at the inception of the transaction the relationship between hedging instruments and hedged items, as

well as our risk management objectives and strategy for undertaking various hedging transactions. We also assess,

both at hedge inception and on an ongoing basis, whether derivatives that are used in hedging transactions are

highly effective in offsetting changes in fair values or cash flows of hedged items. The cash flows resulting from the

derivative financial instruments are classified in the Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows according to the nature

of the hedged item.

Fair value hedge

Changes in the fair value of a derivative financial instrument, that is designated and qualified as a fair value hedge,

along with the gain or loss on the hedged asset or liability that is attributable to the hedged risk, are recorded in the

Consolidated Statements of Operations.

Hedge accounting is discontinued when we revoke the hedging relationship, the hedging instrument expires or is

sold, terminated or exercised, or no longer qualifies for hedge accounting. The adjustment to the carrying amount of

the hedged item arising from the hedged risk is amortized to the Consolidated Statements of Operations from that

date.

Interest rate swaps that are being used to hedge the fair value of fixed loan coupons payable are designated as fair

value hedges. The change in fair value is intended to offset the change in the fair value of the underlying fixed loan

coupons, which is recorded accordingly. The gain or loss relating to the ineffective portion of interest rate swaps

hedging fixed loan coupons payable is recognized in the Consolidated Statements of Operations as Interest and

other, net.

Cash flow hedge

Changes in the fair value of a derivative that is designated and qualified as a cash flow hedge are recorded in OCI, net

of taxes, until the underlying hedged transaction is recognized in the Consolidated Statements of Operations. In the

event that the underlying hedge transaction will not occur within the specified time period, the gain or loss on the

related cash flow hedge is released from OCI and included in the Consolidated Statements of Operations, unless

extenuating circumstances exist that are related to the nature of the forecasted transaction and are outside our

control or influence and which cause the forecasted transaction to be probable of occurring on a date that is beyond

the specified time period.

Foreign currency hedging instruments that are being used to hedge cash flows related to forecasted sales or

purchase transactions in non-functional currencies are designated as cash flow hedges. The gain or loss relating to

the ineffective portion of the foreign currency hedging instruments is recognized in the Consolidated Statements of

Operations in Net sales or Cost of sales.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 291
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)

Fair values of the derivatives

The following table summarizes the notional amounts and estimated fair values of our derivative financial instruments:

Year ended December 31 (€, in millions) 2022 2023
Notional<br><br>amount Fair Value Notional<br><br>amount Fair Value
Forward foreign exchange contracts 158.5 (18.8) 281.1 (6.8)
Interest rate swaps 3,000.0 (225.1) 3,250.0 (118.8)

The following table summarizes our derivative financial instruments per category:

Year ended December 31 (€, in millions) 2022 2023
Assets Liabilities Assets Liabilities
Interest rate swaps — fair value hedges 1.7 226.8 11.3 130.1
Forward foreign exchange contracts — cash flow<br><br>hedges 3.0 18.1 2.9 10.4
Forward foreign exchange contracts — no hedge<br><br>accounting 12.6 16.3 16.9 16.2
Total 17.3 261.2 31.1 156.7
Less non-current portion:
Interest rate swaps — fair value hedges 179.0 11.3 62.7
Total non-current portion 179.0 11.3 62.7
Total current portion 17.3 82.2 19.8 94.0

The fair value part of a hedging derivative financial instrument that has a remaining term of 12 months or less after

balance sheet date is classified as current asset or liability. When the fair value part of a hedging derivative has a term

of more than 12 months after balance sheet date, it is classified as non-current asset or liability. Derivative financial

instruments are included in Other assets and Accrued and other liabilities in the Consolidated Balance Sheets, split

between current and non-current.

Fair value measurements

Fair value is the price that would be received to sell an asset or paid to transfer a liability in an orderly transaction

between market participants at the measurement date. The fair value measurement hierarchy prioritizes the inputs to

valuation techniques used to measure fair value as follows:

•Level 1: Valuations based on inputs such as quoted prices for identical assets or liabilities in active markets that the

entity has the ability to access.

•Level 2: Valuations based on inputs other than level 1 inputs such as quoted prices for similar assets or liabilities,

quoted prices in markets that are not active, or other inputs that are observable or can be corroborated by

observable data for substantially the full term of the assets or liabilities.

•Level 3: Valuations based on inputs that are supported by little or no market activity and that are significant to the

fair value of the assets or liabilities.

The fair value hierarchy gives the highest priority to quoted prices (unadjusted) in active markets for identical assets or

liabilities (Level 1) and the lowest priority to unobservable inputs (Level 3). A financial instrument’s fair value

classification is based on the lowest level of any input that is significant in the fair value measurement hierarchy.

Financial assets and financial liabilities measured at fair value on a recurring basis

Investments in money market funds (included in our Cash and cash equivalents) have fair value measurements which

are all based on quoted prices for identical assets or liabilities.

Our Short-term investments consist of deposits with original maturities to the entity holding the investments longer

than three months and one year or less at the date of acquisition with financial institutions that have investment-grade

credit ratings. The fair value of the deposits is determined with reference to quoted market prices in an active market

for similar assets or discounted cash flow analysis.

The principal market in which we execute our derivative contracts is the institutional market in an over-the-counter

environment with a high level of price transparency. The market participants usually are large commercial banks. The

valuation inputs for our derivative contracts are based on quoted prices and quoting pricing intervals from public data

sources; they do not involve management judgment.

The valuation technique used to determine the fair value of forward foreign exchange contracts (used for hedging

purposes) approximates the net present value technique which is the estimated amount that a bank would receive or

pay to terminate the forward foreign exchange contracts at the reporting date, taking into account current interest

rates and current exchange rates.

The valuation technique used to determine the fair value of interest rate swaps (used for hedging purposes) is the net

present value technique, which is the estimated amount that a bank would receive or pay to terminate the swap

agreements at the reporting date, taking into account current interest rates.

Four out of six of our outstanding Eurobonds, with a combined principal amount of €3.25 billion, serve as hedged

items in fair value hedge relationships in which we hedge the variability of changes in the fair value of our Eurobonds

due to changes in market interest rates with interest rate swaps. For two out of six of our outstanding Eurobonds,

with a combined principal amount of €1.5 billion, no hedging is applied. The fair value changes of the interest rate

swaps are recorded on the Consolidated Balance Sheets under derivative financial instruments and the carrying

amounts of the Eurobonds are adjusted for the effective portion of these fair value changes only. For the actual

aggregate carrying amount and the fair value of our Eurobonds, see Note 16 Long-term debt and interest and other

costs.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 292
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)

The following tables present our financial assets and financial liabilities that are measured at fair value on a recurring

basis:

Year ended December 31, 2023 (€, in millions) Level 1 Level 2 Level 3 Total
Assets measured at fair value
Derivative financial instruments1 31.1 31.1
Money market funds2 3,167.4 3,167.4
Short-term investments3 5.4 5.4
Total 3,167.4 36.5 3,203.9
Liabilities measured at fair value
Derivative financial instruments1 156.7 156.7
Assets and Liabilities for which fair values are disclosed
Loan receivable 776.1 776.1
Long-term debt4 4,496.2 4,496.2 Year ended December 31, 2022 (€, in millions) Level 1 Level 2 Level 3 Total
--- --- --- --- ---
Assets measured at fair value
Derivative financial instruments1 17.3 17.3
Money market funds2 3,196.7 3,196.7
Short-term investments3 107.7 107.7
Total 3,196.7 125.0 3,321.7
Liabilities measured at fair value
Derivative financial instruments1 261.2 261.2
Assets and Liabilities for which fair values are disclosed
Loan receivable 307.9 307.9
Long-term debt4 4,072.8 4,072.8

1.Derivative financial instruments consist of forward foreign exchange contracts and interest rate swaps.

2.Money market funds are part of our cash and cash equivalents.

3.Short-term investments consist of deposits with original maturities to the entity holding the investments longer than three months, but one year

or less at the date of acquisition. These deposits are valued at amortized costs which is close to their fair value. Their fair value is determined

with reference to quoted market prices in an active market for similar assets or discounted cash flow analysis.

4.Long-term debt mainly relates to Eurobonds.

There were no transfers between levels during the years ended December 31, 2023 and December 31, 2022.

Financial assets and financial liabilities that are not measured at fair value

The carrying amount of Cash and cash equivalents, Accounts payable, and Other current financial assets and

liabilities approximate their fair value because of the short-term nature of these instruments.

Money market and investment funds measurement

Money market and investment funds qualify as available for sale securities. Due to the short-term nature and

investment-grade credit ratings, the fair value is close to the carrying value. These money market funds can be called

on a daily basis. Investments and redemptions in money market funds are managed on a daily basis based triggered

through actual cash balances. ASML does not have trading securities as of December 31, 2023.

Deposits measurement

The deposits as part of the Cash and cash equivalents and Short-term investments qualify as securities held to

maturity. The amortized cost value is close to the fair value and carrying value due to short-term nature and since

related to investment with investment-grade credit ratings. Maturities are one year or less. No held to maturity

securities were sold before expiration date.

Assets and liabilities measured at fair value on a non-recurring basis

In 2022 and 2023, we had no significant fair value measurements on a non-recurring basis from regular business

activities. We did not recognize any impairment charges for goodwill and other intangible assets during 2022 and

2023.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 293
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)

26. Related parties and variable interest entities

Carl Zeiss SMT GmbH is our single supplier, and we are their single customer, of optical columns for lithography

systems. Carl Zeiss SMT GmbH is capable of developing and producing these items only in limited numbers and only

through the use of manufacturing and testing facilities in Oberkochen and Wetzlar, Germany. Our relationship with

Carl Zeiss SMT GmbH is structured as a strategic alliance that is run under the principle of ‘two companies, one

business’ and is focused on continuous innovation and improvement of operational excellence in the lithography

business.

We have a 24.9% interest in Carl Zeiss SMT Holding GmbH & Co. KG (ultimate parent is Carl Zeiss AG), which owns

100% of the shares in Carl Zeiss SMT GmbH. Based on the 24.9% investment, Carl Zeiss SMT Holding GmbH & Co.

KG and its subsidiaries are considered related parties. Additionally, we have determined that Carl Zeiss SMT Holding

GmbH & Co. KG is a variable interest entity because the entity was established without substantive voting rights

since there is disparity between our voting rights and our economics, as well as substantially all of Carl Zeiss SMT

Holding GmbH & Co. KG’s activities involve us or are conducted on our behalf. However, we are not the primary

beneficiary of the variable interest entity, because we lack the power to direct the activities that most significantly

impact Carl Zeiss SMT Holding GmbH & Co. KG’s economic performance.

We have had several framework agreements in place with Carl Zeiss SMT GmbH since 1997.

2021 Framework Agreement

We entered into a new framework agreement in September 2021 with Carl Zeiss SMT GmbH, with effect as of the

beginning of 2021. This agreement, which we refer to as the 2021 framework agreement, replaced our key existing

framework agreements and continues our strategic alliance to meet end customer demand. The key components to

the framework agreement are:

•A behavior and interaction model that fosters mutual respect and understanding

•A governance model that enables both companies to become more effective and aligned in their decision-making

and the execution of the strategy in the business via mutual approval on (i) certain investment decisions affecting

the lithography business, and (ii) the requirements of all products supplied by Carl Zeiss SMT GmbH

•New variable pricing model for purchases of products and services determined by the relevant annual financial

performance of both ASML and Carl Zeiss SMT GmbH in the lithography business

•Cash support via additional prepayments on product deliveries to ensure Carl Zeiss SMT GmbH a minimum

adjusted free cash flow floor in an annual period, if certain criteria are met

•A commitment from ASML to finance the capital expenditures of Carl Zeiss SMT GmbH up to €1 billion if Carl Zeiss

SMT GmbH's investments required to execute on the lithography business roadmap exceed certain thresholds,

measured annually

The financing takes place through loan agreements, with the key terms being:

•Ten years term loans with linear annual repayment after a three-year grace period

•Interest rate subject to a floor of 0.01% and a cap of 1%

•Voluntary repayment option without penalty

•The loan is secured by a parental guarantee from Zeiss AG

As of December 31, 2023, we have financed a total amount of €912.4 million (December 31, 2022: €364.4 million)

through this loan agreement. This loan to Carl Zeiss SMT GmbH is valued at amortized cost and presented within the

Consolidated Balance Sheets as Loan receivable.

Transition from previous agreements

In 2016, we agreed with Carl Zeiss SMT GmbH to support their R&D costs, capital expenditures and supply chain

investments, in respect of EUV 0.55 NA (High NA). With our new framework agreement, these payments will no

longer be made starting in 2021. We paid €969.1 million prior to the effective amendment date of the new framework

agreement, of which €305.5 million relating to R&D costs, which was not to be repaid, and €663.6 million relating to

capital expenditures and supply chain investments. The method of repayment for the capital expenditure and supply

chain investment support has been converted to be repaid annually to ASML between 2021 and 2032. This amount

is presented within Other assets as Advanced payments to Carl Zeiss SMT GmbH. The new framework agreement

does not change the risk associated with these assets.

The cash outflows from ASML in the new variable pricing model for purchases of products and services was

determined to currently have two elements. The first is cash outflows for purchasing products and services reflected

in our inventory valuation and cost of sales. The second consists of R&D funding for High NA to Carl Zeiss SMT

GmbH, for which these costs are presented within Research and development costs. For 2023, the related R&D

funding amounted to €67.6 million (2022: €76.6 million; 2021: €61.2 million).

In addition to the High NA support, we make non-interest bearing advance payments to support Carl Zeiss SMT

GmbH’s work-in-process. These payments are made to secure optical column deliveries and these advance

payments are settled through future lens or optical column deliveries, and are also presented in Other Assets. The

new framework agreement does not change our right to settle the previously paid amounts and does not change the

risk associated with these assets. We will continue to support Carl Zeiss SMT GmbH’s work-in-process under the

new framework agreement through prepayments on product deliveries.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 294
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)

The below table shows the outstanding balances with Carl Zeiss SMT Holding GmbH & Co. KG and its subsidiaries in

our Consolidated Balance Sheets, as well as our maximum exposure to losses:

Year ended December 31 (€, in millions) 2022 2023 Maximum<br><br>exposure to loss
Advance payments included in Other assets 1,100.3 1,182.7 1,182.7
Advance payments included in Property, plant and equipment 70.0
Loan receivable 364.4 912.4 912.4
Investment agreement for 24.9% equity 923.6 919.6 919.6
Accounts receivable 7.8 7.8
Accounts payable 269.2 4.0
Cost to be paid included in Accrued and other liabilities 111.2 199.9

Our maximum exposure to loss related to our involvement in Carl Zeiss SMT Holding GmbH & Co. KG as a variable

interest entity includes the carrying value of each of the assets, as well as the risk of any future operating losses of

Carl Zeiss SMT Holding GmbH & Co. KG, which cannot be quantified.

The total purchases from Carl Zeiss SMT Holding GmbH & Co. KG and its subsidiaries are as follows:

Year ended December 31 (€, in millions) 2021 2022 2023
Total purchases 2,070.3 2,693.6 3,325.9

Other related party considerations

Except as described above, there have been no transactions between ASML or any of its subsidiaries, any other

significant shareholder, any director or officer, or any relative or spouse thereof, other than arrangements in the

ordinary course of business. During our most recent fiscal year, there has been no, and at present there is no,

outstanding indebtedness to ASML owed by or owing to any director or officer of ASML or any associate thereof.

Furthermore, ASML has not granted any personal loans, guarantees, or the like to members of the Board of

Management or Supervisory Board.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 295
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)

27. Subsequent events

Subsequent events were evaluated up to February 14, 2024, which is the date the Consolidated Financial

Statements included in this Annual Report were approved.

On January 24, 2024 a total dividend for the year 2023 of €6.10 per ordinary share was announced. Subsequently,

an interim dividend of €1.45 per ordinary share will be made payable on February 14, 2024. Recognizing this interim

dividend and the two interim dividends of €1.45 per ordinary share paid in 2023, this leads to a final dividend

proposal to the General Meeting of €1.75 per ordinary share.

Veldhoven, the Netherlands

February 14, 2024

/s/ Peter T.F.M. Wennink

Peter T.F.M. Wennink

President, CEO and member of the Board of Management

/s/ Roger J.M. Dassen

Roger J.M. Dassen

Executive Vice President, CFO and member of the Board of Management

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NOTES TO THE CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 296
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)

New_Finanicals_Divider_310123.jpg

Non-financial<br><br>statements
IN THIS SECTION
298 Assurance Report of the Independent Auditor
300 About the Non-financial information
307 Non-financial indicators
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 297
--- --- --- --- ---

To: the General Meeting of Shareholders and the Supervisory Board of ASML Holding NV

Our conclusion

We have reviewed the non-financial information of ASML Holding NV (hereafter:’ the Company’) for the year ended 31

December 2023 (hereafter: the non-financial information) included in the Annual Report 2023 of ASML Holding NV

(hereafter: the Annual Report). A review is aimed at obtaining a limited level of assurance.

Based on the procedures performed and the assurance information obtained nothing has come to our attention that

causes us to believe that the non-financial information included in the Annual Report does not present fairly, in all

material respects:

•          the policy with regard to sustainability matters; and

•          the business operations, events and achievements in that area in 2023

in accordance with the reporting criteria as described in the ‘Reporting criteria’ section of our report.

The non-financial information is included in the Strategic Report section (pages 4-176 ) as well as the Non-financial

statements (pages 297-326) of the Annual Report. The following specific paragraphs are out of scope for the

assurance engagement: Forward-looking statements (page 4), Q&A with the CTO (pages 20-21), Q&A with the CFO

(pages 40-42), Financial performance (pages 43-49), Risk (pages 50-67), Q&A with the CBO (pages 68-69), Our

stories (pages 9,10,18,19,35,36,89,90,105,106,124,125,135,136,144,145).

Basis for our conclusion

We performed our review of the non-financial information in accordance with Dutch law, including Dutch Standard

3810N: "Assurance engagements relating to sustainability reports", which is a specified Dutch standard that is based

on the International Standard on Assurance Engagements (ISAE) 3000: "Assurance Engagements other than audits

or reviews of historical financial information (Attestation engagements)". This engagement is aimed to obtain limited

assurance.

Our responsibilities in this regard are further described in the ‘Auditor’s responsibilities’ section of our report.

We are independent of ASML Holding NV in accordance with the ‘Verordening inzake de onafhankelijkheid van

accountants bij assurance-opdrachten’ (ViO, Code of Ethics for Professional Accountants, a regulation with respect

to independence). This includes that we do not perform any activities that could result in a conflict of interest with our

independent assurance engagement. Furthermore, we have complied with the ‘Verordening gedrags- en

beroepsregels accountants’ (VGBA, Dutch Code of Ethics).

We believe the assurance evidence we have obtained is sufficient and appropriate to provide a basis for our

conclusion.

Reporting Criteria

The non-financial information needs to be read and understood together with the reporting criteria. ASML Holding NV

is solely responsible for selecting and applying these reporting criteria, taking into account applicable law and

regulations related to reporting.

The reporting criteria used for the preparation of the non-financial information are the Universal Standards of the

Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) and the applied supplemental reporting criteria as disclosed in section ‘About the

non-financial information’ of the Annual Report.

The sustainability information is prepared in accordance with the GRI Standards. The GRI Standards used are listed

in the GRI Content Index which is available on the ASML website (page 300).

The comparability of sustainability information between entities and over time may be affected by the absence of a

uniform practice on which to draw, to evaluate and measure this information. This allows for the application of

different, but acceptable, measurement techniques.

Materiality

Based on our professional judgement, we determined materiality levels for each relevant part of the non-financial

information and for the non-financial information as a whole. When evaluating our materiality levels, we have taken

into account quantitative and qualitative considerations as well as the relevance of information for both stakeholders

and the Company.

We agreed with the Supervisory Board that misstatements which are identified during the review and which in our

view must be reported on quantitative or qualitative grounds, would be reported to them.

Scope of the group review

ASML Holding NV is the parent company of a group of entities. The non-financial information incorporates the

consolidated information of this group of entities to the extent as specified in ‘About the non-financial information’ of

the Annual Report.

Our group review procedures consisted of both review procedures at corporate (consolidated) level and at group

component level.

We have determined the scope of our assurance procedures in such a way that we perform sufficient procedures

enabling us to provide a conclusion on the non-financial information. We considered, among other things, the

management structure of the group, the nature of the activities of the group components, the business processes

and controls and the industry in which the entity operates.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NON-FINANCIAL STATEMENTS STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 298
Assurance Report of the Independent Auditor

Limitations to the scope of our review

The non-financial information includes prospective information such as ambitions, strategy, plans, expectations and

estimates. Prospective information relates to events and actions that have not yet occurred and may never occur. We

do not provide any assurance on the assumptions and achievability of prospective information in the non-financial

information.

References to external sources or websites in the non-financial information are not part of the non-financial

information itself as reviewed by us. Therefore, we do not provide assurance on this information.

Board of Management and Supervisory Board's responsibilities

The Board of Management is responsible for the preparation of the non-financial information in accordance with the

applicable criteria as described in the ‘Reporting criteria’ section of our report, including the identification of

stakeholders and the definition of material matters. The  Board of Management is also responsible for selecting and

applying the criteria and for determining that these criteria are suitable for the legitimate information needs of

stakeholders, considering applicable law and regulations related to reporting. The choices made by the Board of

Management regarding the scope of the non-financial information and the reporting methodology are summarized

within the section “About the non-financial information”(pages 300-306) of the Annual Report.

Furthermore, the Board of Management is responsible for such internal control as it determines is necessary to

enable the preparation of the non-financial information that is free from material misstatement, whether due to fraud

or error.

The Supervisory Board is, among other things, responsible for overseeing the Company’s reporting process.

Auditor’s responsibilities

Our responsibility is to plan and perform our review in a manner that allows us to obtain sufficient and appropriate

assurance evidence for our conclusion.

Procedures performed to obtain a limited level of assurance are aimed to determine the plausibility of information and

vary in nature and timing, and are less in extent, compared to a reasonable assurance engagement. The level of

assurance obtained in a limited assurance engagement is substantially lower than the assurance that would have

been obtained had a reasonable assurance engagement been performed.

We apply the ‘Nadere Voorschriften Kwaliteitssystemen’ (NVKS, Regulations for Quality management systems) and

accordingly maintain a comprehensive system of quality control including documented policies and procedures

regarding compliance with ethical requirements, professional standards and applicable legal and regulatory

requirements.

We have exercised professional judgement and have maintained professional scepticism throughout the review, in

accordance with the Dutch Standard 3810N, ethical requirements and independence requirements.

Our review included among others:

–Performing an analysis of the external environment and obtaining an understanding of relevant societal themes and

issues, and the characteristics of the Company;

–Evaluating the appropriateness of the reporting criteria used, their consistent application and related disclosures in

the non-financial information. This includes the evaluation of the results of stakeholder dialogue and the

reasonableness of estimates made by the Board of Management;

–Obtaining an understanding of the reporting processes for the non-financial information, including obtaining a

general understanding of internal control relevant to our review;

–Obtaining through inquiries a general understanding of the internal control environment, the reporting processes,

the information systems and the entity’s risk assessment process relevant to the preparation of the sustainability

information, without testing the operating effectiveness of controls;

–Identifying areas of the non-financial information where misleading or unbalanced information or a material

misstatement, whether due to fraud or error, is most likely to occur. Designing and performing further assurance

procedures aimed at determining the plausibility of the sustainability information responsive to this risk analysis. Our

procedures included, among others:

–Interviewing management and relevant staff responsible for the strategy, policy and results;

–Interviewing relevant staff responsible for providing the information for, carrying out internal control procedures

over, and consolidating the data in the non-financial information;

–Obtaining assurance information that the non-financial information reconciles with underlying records of the

Company;

–Reviewing, on a limited test basis, relevant internal and external documentation;

–Performing an analytical review of the data and trends;

–Evaluating the consistency of the non-financial information with the information in the report which is not included in

the scope of our review;

–Evaluating the presentation, structure and content of the non-financial information;

–Considering whether the non-financial information as a whole, including sustainability matters and disclosures, is

clearly and adequately disclosed in accordance with the applicable reporting criteria;

–Reconciling the relevant financial information with the financial statements;

–Considering the overall presentation and balanced content of the sustainability information.

We have communicated with the Board of Management and the Supervisory Board regarding, among other matters,

the planned scope and timing of the review and significant findings that we identified during our review.

Amstelveen, 14 February 2024

KPMG Accountants N.V.

P.J. Groenland - van der Linden RA

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NON-FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 299
Assurance Report of the Independent Auditor (continued)

Reporting scope

The content disclosed in this Annual Report1 is based on the material topics identified for both ASML and our

stakeholders through the 2023 materiality assessment. As part of the materiality assessment, we asked internal and

external stakeholders to identify where in the value chain the theme has an impact. This process was conducted

within the boundaries required by the 2021 GRI Universal Standards.

Read more in Our material ESG sustainability topics

The scope of the information and indicators reported for each material topic is consistent with the financial reporting

scope. Relevant exceptions and specifications can be found in the reporting scope table at the end of this section.

This Annual Report generally covers the performance of ASML from January 1, 2023, to December 31, 2023, and will

be published on February 14, 2024.

The financial information in this report is derived from our Financial Statements that are in conformity with US GAAP.

The reporting basis for the information in this report on the performance of our ESG sustainability strategy is prepared

in accordance with the 2021 GRI Universal Standards.

The 2021 GRI Universal Standards became effective as of FY22. The revised approach to materiality and the use of

topic standards resulted in a significant increase in GRI indicators considered to be relevant to be reported by ASML.

Details of our compliance with the 2021 GRI Universal Standards (GRI content index) can be found in a separate

reporting supplement available in the annual report section of the website (www.asml.com/en/investors/annual-

report).

1.We publish two annual reports. One version of the annual report is prepared in conformity with SEC regulations (Form 20-F) and includes

financial information prepared in accordance with US GAAP. The other version of the annual report is prepared in conformity with article 362.9 of

Book 2 of the Dutch Civil Code and includes financial information prepared in accordance with EU-IFRS. For internal and external reporting

purposes, we use US GAAP. US GAAP is our primary accounting standard for setting financial and operational performance targets.

Annual reporting process

Each theme has an owner who is responsible for the theme ambition, strategy and relevant performance indicators

(PIs), as well as the timely delivery of content and relevant data for reporting and monitoring the execution of the

strategy. The data is reviewed and consolidated by the Finance department. The Annual & ESG reporting team is in

charge of tracking compliance with relevant standards.

Reporting methodology

The non-financial data disclosed in this report is derived from various sources, and the way data is processed differs

across our operating subsidiaries and departments. This causes a degree of uncertainty, because of limitations in

measuring and estimating data. We continue to work on improving our ESG sustainability data control environment

and data collection processes. Please refer to the next sections where we elaborate on the methodology and

assumptions used in the reporting of our indicators.

Emissions

General remarks on methodology

The CO2e emissions reported are in line with the greenhouse gas (GHG) Protocol. The base year for calculating

scope 1 and 2 emissions (including GHG reductions from energy savings in projects) is 2021, when a new master

plan was started. For scope 1 and scope 2 emissions, an operational control consolidation approach is applied to

determine the locations included in the calculation. ASML manufacturing locations considered include Veldhoven

(including Oirschot), Wilton, San Diego and Linkou, ASML Tainan and Silicon Valley. Other locations include China

(Beijing and Shanghai), South Korea (Hwasung, Icheon and Pyeongtaek), Taiwan (Hsinchu, Tainan office), US

(Chandler and Hillsboro) and the Netherlands (Delft). This scope encompassed 95% of company GHG emissions

from manufacturing locations as well as office locations with more than 250 FTEs.

The base year for calculating GHG emissions related to scope 3 is 2019 (based on 2018 data), as this was the first

year in the 2019-2025 sustainability strategy planning period.

During 2023, no significant changes in emissions occurred that triggered recalculations of base year emissions. The

DEFRA (UK Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs) 2022 emission factors are applied to convert the

specified amount of energy or activity factor to kg CO2. For scope 3, additional sources are used for conversion, with

details provided in the section on scope 3.

Direct (scope 1) GHG emissions

Scope 1 emissions are expressed in kt. The CO2 footprint consists mainly of the combustion of fossil fuels (of which

only natural gas is relevant for ASML) and a small portion of CO2 process gas from immersion systems. The natural

gas part is calculated by multiplying the specific consumption by local conversion factors (x kg CO2 per m3 natural

gas). In our previous annual reports, we reported on gross and net emissions, but as ASML does not compensate

any emissions, there is no difference between gross and net emissions.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NON-FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 300
About the non-financial information

Energy indirect (scope 2) GHG emissions

Scope 2 emissions are also expressed in kt and the CO2 footprint is calculated by multiplying electricity consumption by the

market or local emission factors (x kg CO2 per kWh). Market-based emission factors are based on supplier emission rates.

Location-based emission factors are based on information from the national, sub-national and grid level. All emission factors

are stored and checked annually by the Corporate Real Estate team within the Sustainability Performance Indicator system

(in myEHS) and calculations are done automatically in this system. Market-based and location-based emission factors are

updated annually, where applicable.

In our previous annual reports (prior to 2022), we reported as 'gross' our emissions before purchase of energy

attribute certificates (EACs) via the market-based method. We also included the market-based emissions (after

purchase of EACs) as 'net'. As ASML currently does not compensate any emissions, there is no difference between

our gross and net emissions and we only report the market-based emissions (after purchase of EACs). We started

reporting location-based emission factors from the 2022 financial year.

Other indirect (scope 3) GHG emissions

We measure and report the indirect emissions from our activities in the value chain – scope 3 emissions. This

category includes emissions resulting from our operations as well as the emissions from upstream supply chain and

downstream use of our products by customers. According to the GHG Protocol Corporate Value Chain (Scope 3)

Accounting and Reporting Standard, scope 3 emissions include 15 categories, of which nine are material for ASML.

The CO2 emissions for each category are calculated by multiplying the energy consumption of activities or activity

factors by specific emission factors (e.g. x kg CO2 per kWh or per euro spend).

When using the reported information, the following methodology, assumptions and data reliability need to be

considered:

•Due to its nature, the scope 3 emissions data includes a time lag. As a result, the emissions reported in the reporting year

are calculated by use of the actual data sources for nine months with three months' estimate. In prior years (before 2022),

emissions reported were calculated by use of the actual data sources from one year earlier.

•Cat.1 Purchased goods and services, Cat.2 Capital goods: Using the spend-based method, we estimate emissions for

goods, services and capital goods by collecting data on the economic value of goods and services purchased and

multiplying it by relevant secondary (e.g. industry average) emission factors (e.g. average emissions per monetary value of

goods). The DEFRA emission database is used.

•Cat.3 Fuel- and energy-related activities: Using the average-data method, we estimate emissions by using secondary

emission factors. The International Energy Agency (IEA) and the National Renewable Energy Laboratory emission

databases are used.

•Cat.4 Upstream transportation and distribution: In general, around 90% of the emissions are calculated with the

distance-based method, for which we directly receive emissions reports from major logistics suppliers. The

remaining emissions are from smaller logistics suppliers and are estimated by taking the average ASML road freight

emission factor.

•Cat.5 Waste generated in operations: Using the waste-type-specific method, we use emission factors per waste

type and treatment method. The emission factors of Ecoinvent are used.

•Cat.6 Business travel: The DEFRA emission database is used and the following methods are applied:

◦Air travel: Gross emissions are estimated by using two calculation methods. Around 50% of our flights’ emissions

are report directly from our suppliers. The rest are estimated using the distance-based method, which involves

determining the distance and travel class of the flight, and then applying the appropriate emission factor

considering direct climate change effects only.

Final level of air travel emissions are calculated by subtracting the emissions saved due to the use of sustainable

aviation fuel (SAF) from the gross emissions. Indirect climate change effects (non-CO2 emissions – radiative

forcing) are reported separately using the distance-based method from all our flights and the corresponding travel

class.

◦Hotel stay: Using the fuel-based method, we take hotel nights stayed and apply emission factors for the average

energy use per night in different countries.

◦Car rental: We use the fuel-based and distance-based method, for which we directly receive emissions reports

from car rental companies.

◦Taxi and public transportation: We apply the spend-based method, which involves determining the amount of

money spent on transport and applying secondary (environmentally-extended input-output or EEIO) emission

factors.

•Cat.7 Employee commuting: We take the badge swipe numbers to count the average number of employees that

come to the office. We use the distance-based method, which involves collecting data on commuting patterns from

employees in the Netherlands (distance traveled and mode of transportation) and applying the appropriate emission

factors for the modes used. For employees outside of the Netherlands, mode of transportation data is not yet

available, so we assume they all drive by car with the same driving distances as in the Netherlands. The DEFRA

emission database is used.

•Cat.11 Use of sold products: We count the direct use-phase emissions by measuring the energy use of our

products. We estimate common production and idle time percentages by discussing customer survey data with

Development and Engineering and the Marketing team. On this basis, we calculate the annual energy consumption

of each product and multiply this by the products sold in the reporting year. The figure obtained is then multiplied

by a lifetime of 20 years. Lastly, we apply the country-based emission factors from the IEA database to convert

energy consumption into emissions.

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About the non-financial information (continued)

•Cat.12 End-of-life treatment of sold products: We apply the waste-type-specific method. On the basis of a high-

level estimation of the material composition of our products, we apply emission factors for specific waste types and

waste treatment methods. The Ecoinvent database is used.

GHG emissions intensity

GHG emission intensity is calculated as the total of net scope 1, 2 and 3 emissions in CO2 equivalent divided by total

ASML revenue. The only gas included is CO2, since direct emissions of other GHGs are negligible.

Reduction of GHG emissions

We measure and report on reductions in GHG emissions resulting from energy savings. For details of the process

used to estimate energy savings, see the section Energy savings worldwide through projects in this section. In order

to calculate the CO2 reduction, the estimated energy savings are multiplied by local emission factors for electricity

and by gas emission factors for gas usage.

Nitrogen oxides (NOX), sulfur oxides (SOX) and other significant air emissions

We currently measure and report on volatile organic compounds (VOCs) for the Netherlands and Wilton. The data is

reported in myEHS. For VOCs we calculate the air emissions to be the difference between what we have purchased

and what we have disposed of to the waste vendor. For Veldhoven, the purchase value comes from our SAP system

and the disposal figures are confirmed by the waste vendor. For Wilton, the usage is monitored manually. We have

performed a materiality assessment in 2023 to reassess the relevance of significant air emissions for all of our

locations and concluded that only NOx, H2 and VOC are relevant. We will begin to report from 2024.

Energy

Energy savings worldwide through projects

We report on the cumulative savings for ASML manufacturing locations through improved technical installations over

the five-year energy savings master plan period. The current master plan runs from 2021 to 2025. The energy

savings presented in the report represent the measured or estimated savings. We measure our energy savings

compared to the energy we estimate we would have used in a business-as-usual scenario without the efficiency

improvements realized through dedicated energy-saving projects. Energy savings include reductions in the

consumption of natural gas and electricity. The reported energy savings are annualized savings from projects finalized

in the reporting year and earlier in the master plan period and are reported in TJ.

Energy consumption within the organization

Energy consumption inside the organization is expressed in TJ and includes fossil fuel and electricity consumption,

for energy purposes in the reporting period. The scope encompasses 95% of company GHG emissions from

manufacturing locations as well as office locations with more than 250 FTEs. The unit in which the energy consumed

is expressed is then converted to TJ using standard conversion factors.

Energy consumption outside of the organization

Energy consumption outside the organization is expressed in TJ and is defined as the energy use throughout ASML’s

upstream and downstream activities associated with its operations. The scope is aligned with the categories reported

in our scope 3 emissions according to the GHG Protocol.

The calculations will be according to the categories reported in the scope 3 emissions. For each category the

following methodology is applied:

•Cat.1 Purchased goods and services, Cat.2 Capital goods: Using the spend-based method, we estimate emissions for

goods and services, and capital goods, by collecting data on the economic value of goods and services purchased and

multiplying its economic value by relevant secondary (e.g. industry average) emission factors (e.g. average emissions per

monetary value of goods [gCO2/euro]). The emission factors from the DEFRA database are used. Total emissions are

divided by the average world emission factor for electricity and heat generation from the IEA [gCO2/kWh] to obtain the total

energy. This amount is then adjusted to the correct unit [TJ] using energy conversion factors.

•Cat.3 Fuel- and energy-related activities: Activities in this category are reported in MWh and TJ. In the case of

electricity, the energy consumption is adjusted by 5% due to the transmission and distribution losses (World Bank),

and the total energy is calculated based on the average energy needed to produce electricity from natural gas from

EIA. Then the value is converted to TJ using the corresponding energy conversion factor. In the case of natural gas,

transmission and distribution losses are assumed to be minimal and are disregarded. Then the energy calculated is

based on the cumulative energy demand, i.e. the sum of the primary energy demand to obtain the natural gas.

Finally the value is converted to TJ using the corresponding energy conversion factor.

•Cat.4 Upstream transportation and distribution: Emissions are reported in five categories: air, other, rail, road and

sea. These emissions are then divided by the corresponding fuel emission factor [kg CO2e/ kWh (Net CV)] from

DEFRA. For air, it is assumed that all planes consume aviation spirit from fossil fuels. For sea, it is assumed that the

ships consume marine gas oil (MGO) due to the restrictions in the emission control areas (ECA) zones.  For rail, it is

assumed that electricity is used to power the trains. For road and others, it is assumed that transportation is done

using diesel. Finally, the value is converted to TJ using the corresponding energy conversion factor.

•Cat.5 Waste generated in operations: The emissions are reported according to the method of processing. The

methods are incineration without energy recovery and landfill. The emissions are divided by the average waste

factor emissions per tonne from DEFRA, and then multiplied by the energy consumed for the method of processing

used (factor for landfill is obtained from DEFRA and for incineration from the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency).

Recycling and incineration with energy recovery are disregarded. Finally, the value is converted to TJ using the

corresponding energy conversion factor.

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About the non-financial information (continued)

•Cat.6 Business travel: The DEFRA emission database is used and the following methods are applied:

◦Air travel: The gross emissions reported from direct climate change effects for air travel are divided by the

emissions per kWh of the fuel used, assuming that all planes consume aviation spirit from fossil fuels. The value

obtained is then adjusted to the correct unit [TJ].

◦Hotel stay: The hotel nights stayed are multiplied by the average hotel energy consumption per night by hotels

around the world (source: Cornell hotel sustainability benchmarking index). Then the value is adjusted to the

correct unit [TJ].

◦Car rental, taxi and public transport: A similar approach to air travel is used, but instead of aviation spirit it is

considered that the fuel is gasoline (DEFRA, petrol 100% mineral).

•Cat.7 Employee commuting: The emissions are reported based on the mode of transportation used. It is assumed

that transportation by car causes 100% of these emissions; other modes are disregarded due to their low

contribution. These emissions are divided by the emissions per kWh of the fuel, assuming that all cars consume

gasoline (DEFRA, petrol 100% mineral). Finally, the value obtained is adjusted to the correct unit [TJ].

•Cat.11 Use of sold products: The energy use of our products is known. This energy usage is multiplied by the

number of systems sold, and a lifetime of 20 years (following the GHG Protocol). The value is then adjusted to the

correct unit [TJ].

•Cat.12 End-of-life treatment of sold products:  Only landfill activities are considered; others are disregarded. The

total amount of waste is calculated from the emissions over the emission per tonne of metal waste from DEFRA

and then the energy consumed is estimated per tonne of waste treated.

Some of the conversion factors used may have low accuracy or represent a particular case, instead of an average.

The energy conversion factors will need to be reassessed each year to improve the accuracy and reduce estimation

uncertainty.

Energy intensity

Energy intensity is the total energy consumption within the organization normalized to revenue (TJ/million EUR). Total

energy consumption includes fossil fuels (natural gas) consumed for energy purposes and total purchased electricity.

Diesel is considered immaterial and not included in this calculation.

Reductions in energy requirements of products and services

We measure and report on our machines’ energy efficiency. To do so, we measure power consumption based on

SEMI S23 standards for our latest system generations, during full production. For NXE, we include source, scanner,

laser, PVAC and abatement, and relevant cabinets. For NXT, we include scanner, laser, and all gas and water

supplies. Energy is reflected in kWh per wafer pass.

To calculate our machines’ energy efficiency (i.e. energy consumption per wafer pass), we divide Annual TEE (Total

Energy Equivalent) consumption by wafers used per year (assuming 100% availability of the system).

We report on the percentage reduction of energy consumption from a 2018 baseline, which is the year we started to

work on energy savings for EUV systems.

Circular economy

Percentage of systems sold in the past 30 years still active in the field

We monitor the number of active systems in our installed base. This includes our EUV, DUV and PAS5500 systems.

We have calculated the percentage of all systems ever sold that are still in use. Some systems in the field may not be

serviced by ASML, but are operational. For the indicator '% of active systems' we apply assumptions for the portion

of systems active but not serviced by ASML. Based on historical information and experience, we determine that 33%

of non-ASML-serviced systems are still active in the field.

Attractive workplace for all

Ratio of base salary and total cash female/male

We report on the ratio of base salary and total cash between female and male employees. For this indicator,

significant locations of operations are Asia, the US and Europe. With some exceptions, this mirrors most of our other

Human resources (HR) reporting in this report.

Since the 2022 reporting year, we have reported this indicator more comprehensively. We report per employee

category per region, as opposed to reporting per employee category and per region separately.

Occupational health and safety

Workers covered by an occupational health and safety management system

The indicator is calculated by summing the number of employees and contractors who are covered by the reporting

system and dividing the total of this sum by the total number of employees and contractors, including those not

covered in the system. No workers have been excluded. The number of total visitors is out of scope. The definition of

workers covered includes:

•Employees, permanent and temporary

•Contractors: Workers who are not employees but whose work and/or workplace is controlled by the organization,

including consultants, interns and outsourcing

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NON-FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 303
About the non-financial information (continued)

The environment, health and safety (EHS) reporting system is assessed against the ISO 14001 standard as part of

the internal audit program. It is not certified by an external party. The outsourced contractors that work offsite are out

of the scope of the ASML EHS management system according to the GRI definition, since ASML doesn't control their

work or workplace.

Work-related injuries

We measure and report on the recordable incident rate and the number and rate of recordable injuries and high-

consequence injuries. The indicators relate to all employees and contractors working under supervision of ASML and

are split by worker type (with no workers excluded).

Definitions

•A recordable incident is a work-related incident of personal injury and/or illness from events or exposures occurring

in the work environment in the reporting period for all ASML locations worldwide, which require medical treatment

beyond first aid, or cause death, or days away from work, restricted work or transfer to another job. A recordable

injury has the same definition as a work-related incident but excludes illness.

•High-consequence work-related injuries are the number of work-related incidents of personal injury from events or

exposures occurring in the work environment in the reporting period for all ASML locations worldwide, which result

in days away from work or job transfer equal to or longer than 180 days.

•An injury or illness is considered work-related if an event or exposure in the work environment caused or

contributed to the condition or significantly aggravated a pre-existing condition. Work-relatedness is presumed for

injuries and illnesses resulting from events or exposures occurring in the workplace, unless an exception specifically

applies. The work environment includes the establishment and other locations where one or more employees are

working or are present as a condition of their employment.

•For incidents, injuries and high-consequence work-related injuries, the rate is calculated following OSHA guidelines:

◦The number of recordable incidents or injuries or high-consequence work-related injuries is multiplied by 200,000

and divided by the number of employee labor hours worked. The result is then multiplied by 100%.

•Rate indicators are calculated for employees only. For contractors, no incident rate can be calculated because of a lack of

baseline HR data regarding the number of hours worked. For this category, only the absolute value is reported.

Work-related ill health

This indicator is defined as the number of work-related ill health events reported within reporting period, split by

worker types (employees and contractors), with no workers excluded.

Work-related ill health encompasses acute, recurring and chronic health problems caused or aggravated by work

conditions or practices. These include musculoskeletal disorders, skin and respiratory diseases, malignant cancers

and diseases caused by physical agents. This disclosure covers, but is not limited to, the diseases included in the ILO

List of Occupational Diseases.

Cases of ill health are reported as the:

•Number of cases of recordable work-related ill health

•Main types (hazard groups) of work-related ill health

We apply the following definitions of worker types:

•Employees, permanent and temporary

•Contractors: Workers who are not employees but whose work and/or workplace is controlled by the organization

MyEHS incident data is used to extract ill health related incidents. Mental illnesses are out of the scope of the EHS

management system.

Local communities

Operations with local community engagement, impact assessments and development programs

We measure and report on the percentage of operations with implemented local community engagement, impact

assessments and development programs. In order to determine the percentage of total operations that each of our

locations represents, we look at the employee headcount in that location divided by the total employee headcount.

The employee headcount was chosen because it is assumed that the number of employees in a location is a strong

determinant of the impact on the local community. The calculation for this indicator entails summing the employee

counts for applicable locations and then dividing this sum by the total employee count. Currently, we have five

applicable locations with community engagement initiatives (Veldhoven (NL); Wilton, Connecticut (USA); Silicon Valley,

California (USA); San Diego, California (USA); Hsinchu (TW)). Other ASML locations with smaller community

engagement initiatives but no dedicated community engagement FTEs and programs are excluded.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NON-FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 304
About the non-financial information (continued)

Reporting scope table

The below table clarifies the scope of the data reported per theme and explains where the scope of the data provided

differs from the scope of the report’s content. Companies excluded in the scope below do not have data available for

certain subsections.

(Sub)section Annual Report Scope
Supporting our customers ASML worldwide, excluding Cymer and Berliner Glas (ASML Berlin<br><br>GmbH)<br><br>NOTE: Techinsights ASML only
How we innovate ASML worldwide
Financial performance
Financial PIs ASML worldwide
Energy efficiency and climate action
Scope 1 and 2 emissions from our own<br><br>operations – Manufacturing and buildings ASML locations above 250 FTE (based on assessment 2019/2020)
Scope 3 emissions from our own operations –<br><br>Business travel and commuting and supply<br><br>chain (including logistics) ASML worldwide: except categories 8, 9, 10, 13, 14 and 15
Scope 3 emissions from product use at our<br><br>customers ASML products that reached a certain stage of maturity and have been<br><br>measured (excluding Cymer lasers sold with non-ASML lithography<br><br>systems)
Circular economy
Prevent waste ASML locations above 250 FTE (based on assessment 2019/2020)
Extend the lifetime of our products ASML products, excluding YieldStar and SBI/MBI metrology tools
Reuse parts ASML worldwide, excluding Cymer, HMI and Berliner Glas (ASML Berlin<br><br>GmbH)
Recycle materials ASML locations above 250 FTE (based on assessment 2019/2020)
Water management ASML locations above 250 FTE (based on assessment 2019/2020),<br><br>except for Total ultrapure water consumption and Total water recycled<br><br>and reused, which is Veldhoven (NL), Linkou (TW) and HMI Tainan (TW)<br><br>only Attractive workplace for all
--- ---
Inspiring a unified culture ASML worldwide, excluding Berliner Glas (ASML Berlin GmbH), except<br><br>for we@ASML results, which include ASML Berlin GmbH
Providing the best employee experience ASML worldwide, excluding Berliner Glas (ASML Berlin GmbH)<br><br>NOTE: The scope for indicator Open positions filled by internal<br><br>candidates (in %) includes only open positions for which a formal<br><br>vacancy has been created. The scope for we@ASML survey results<br><br>includes ASML Berlin GmbH, except for male/female split
Enabling strong leadership ASML worldwide, excluding Berliner Glas (ASML Berlin GmbH) except<br><br>for the we@ASML survey results, which includes ASML Berlin GmbH
Ensuring employee health and safety ASML worldwide, excluding Berliner Glas (ASML Berlin GmbH)
Responsible supply chain
Responsible supply chain ASML worldwide, excluding Berliner Glas (ASML Berlin GmbH) except<br><br>for Responsible Business Alliance (RBA) risk assessment, where Cymer<br><br>and HMI is also excluded
Innovation ecosystem
Public-private partnerships ASML worldwide
Partnerships with academia and research<br><br>institutes ASML worldwide
Supporting startups and scaleups ASML Netherlands
Valued partner in our communities
Community engagement program ASML worldwide<br><br>-Volunteering hours for technology promotion (ASML Netherlands only)<br><br>-Volunteering hours for community engagement (excludes Berliner Glas<br><br>(ASML Berlin GmbH) and HMI)
ESG integrated governance
Business ethics and Code of Conduct ASML worldwide
Product safety ASML worldwide, excluding HMI
Rest ASML worldwide
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NON-FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 305
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About the non-financial information (continued)

Scope changes and restatements

Compared to the 2022 Annual Report, the following changes have occurred:

•Since 2023, a new weighting methodology has been applied in our overall loyalty score (customer feedback

survey). If we applied the same methodology for the 2022 survey, the score would have been 78.8%.

•As of 2022, our scope 3 emissions and the 'energy consumption outside the organization' indicator consist of nine

months of actual data and three months of estimated data. In the 2023 reporting year, we have adjusted the 2022

reported figure with full-year actual 2022 data. The 2021 scope 3 emissions figure has been adjusted to report the

exact figure instead of a rounded figure.

•As of 2023, we report indirect climate change effects of air travel (radiative forcing, non-CO2 emissions) separately,

and not as part of our scope 3 emissions. This is to align with current reporting practices of airlines and in line with

recommendations of SBTi. This has resulted in comparative figures being updated, and our reported total scope 3

emissions have reduced by 9.4 kt in 2021, 46.3 kt in 2022 and 52.0 kt in 2023.

•In 2023, we updated the 'energy consumption outside the organization' indicator to only include direct climate

change effects of air travel. Therefore, indirect climate change effects of air travel (radiative forcing, non-CO2

emissions) are excluded, resulting in an updated comparative figure. This leads to a reduction in our reported

numbers of 641 TJ in 2022 and 720 TJ in 2023.

•As of 2023, when we measure the energy efficiency of our DUV immersion and DUV dry systems, the laser is

included within the measurement. The comparative figures have been revised.

•The baseline figure of the NXE:3400B energy use per exposed wafer pass has been corrected, from 13.08 kWh to

12.8 kWh, due to an incorrect rounding being used in the past.

•The indicator 'Value of scrapped parts' does not include packaging, whereas in 2022 annual report we disclosed

parts and packaging. This is now aligned with the other two related KPIs. The 2022 comparative figure has been

restated from €232 million to €146 million.

•From 2023 onward, the indicator 'Savings from re-used parts' includes factory parts which explains the significant

increase compared to prior years.

•From 2023 onwards, Berliner Glas (ASML Berlin GmbH) is included in the we@ASML survey results except for the

male/female split related to the engagement score.

•In our 2022 Annual Report, we reported for our we@ASML survey a delta of (4.3)% instead of (2.9)% in comparison

to our benchmark. This was due to the fact that the latest update of the benchmark numbers of our external vendor

were not yet loaded into our systems when reporting on our employee engagement scores. This led to a

restatement of the external benchmark of the top 25% performing companies score in 2022 from 82.2% (reported

last year) to 80.8%.

•In 2023, a new categorization of learning hours took place to divide between technical training hours and non-

product-related training hours. The categorization is now based on the academy structure instead of the audience

structure, and therefore the fluctuation between 2022 and 2023 reflects this change, as comparative numbers have

not been updated for this new categorization.

•In 2023, the scope of the learning hours is increased by adding additional training methods. In previous years, only

online lessons and sessions were taken into account. For 2023, external training, material, tests and videos have

also been taken into account.

•For our indicator 'Male/female split by sector (in FTE)', we have changed our mapping rationale to be a more

accurate reflection of the FTE split by sector.

Review of this report

The Consolidated Financial Statements included in this report are audited.

Read more in Consolidated Financial Statements - Report of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

As requested by our Board of Management, our non-financial information has been independently reviewed. Our

external auditor (KPMG) was asked to review this non-financial information.

Read more about KPMG’s assurance report, including details of the work they carried out, in Non-financial statements - Assurance

Report of the Independent Auditor

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NON-FINANCIAL STATEMENTS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 306
About the non-financial information (continued)

The non-financial Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) are reported in the different sections of our sustainability reporting within ESG. The other non-financial PIs are reported in the tables below.

Supporting customers
Description 2021 2022 2023 Comments
Overall loyalty score (customer feedback survey) n/a 78.3% 86.0% The survey takes place every year since 2023. A new weighting methodology has been applied in 2023. If<br><br>we apply the same methodology for the 2022 survey, the score would have been 78.8%.
TechInsights The yearly overall customer satisfaction rate compared to competitors and industry peers.
Large suppliers of chipmaking equipment – score (scale 0 to 10) 9.2 9.4 9.4
Suppliers of fab equipment – score (scale 0 to 10) 9.2 9.4 9.4
Technical leadership for lithography equipment – score (scale 0 to 10) 9.5 9.8 9.7
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NON-FINANCIAL INDICATORS STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 307
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Non-financial indicators
Energy efficiency and climate action – Energy
--- --- --- --- ---
Description 2021 2022 2023 Comments
Energy consumption (in TJ) 1,689 1,633 1,729
Energy savings worldwide through projects (in TJ) 13 32 47 We started a new master plan period for 2021-2025 with a target to achieve 100 TJ annual energy savings by<br><br>the end of 2025. The savings are realized by projects resulting in improved technical installation or by projects<br><br>resulting in an improved production process. Types of energy included in savings: fuel and electricity.<br><br>The savings reported are cumulated compared with the base year; therefore, they are not comparable<br><br>between years.
Energy intensity (TJ per €m revenue) n/a 0.08 0.06 The denominator is revenue and the numerator represents total energy consumption within the organization<br><br>made up of total electricity consumption (in TJ) and fossil fuels (natural gas) consumption (in TJ).
Energy consumption outside of the organization (in TJ) n/a 94,053 115,420 The 2023 figure includes nine months of actual data and three months of estimates. The 2022 figure has<br><br>been adjusted with data for the entire year (93,962 TJ best estimate in the 2022 Annual Report) and excludes<br><br>indirect climate change effects of air travel (radiative forcing).
Electricity purchased per location (in TJ)
Veldhoven 881 837 899
Wilton 120 130 140
Linkou 34 34 35
San Diego 176 188 187
San Jose 28 25 27
Tainan 36 43 44
Other 47 50 53 Other includes the locations with more than 250 FTE combined (based on assessment 2019/2020).
Total 1,322 1,307 1,385
Fossil fuels consumed from non-renewable sources (in TJ)1 Fossil fuels consumed consists of only natural gas.
Veldhoven 184 149 160
Wilton 127 121 125
Linkou No natural gas is used by this manufacturing location.
San Diego 43 43 44
San Jose 5 6 8
Tainan No natural gas is used by this manufacturing location.
Other 8 7 7 Other includes the locations with more than 250 FTE combined (based on assessment 2019/2020).
Total 367 326 344
Fuels consumed from renewable sources (in TJ)

1.The sources of the conversion factors used are the Dutch Emissions Authority and the US Energy Information Administration.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NON-FINANCIAL INDICATORS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 308
Non-financial indicators (continued)
Energy efficiency and climate action – CO2e emissions
--- --- --- --- ---
Description 2021 2022 2023 Comments
Scope 1 CO2 emissions (in kt) 19.3 17.3 19.2
Scope 2 CO2 emissions (in kt) – Market-based 20.1 20.8 15.9
Scope 3 - Category 1 Purchased goods and services 3,305.0 3,928.0 4,459.9
Scope 3 - Category 2 Capital goods 463.0 482.0 621.1
Scope 3 - Category 3 Fuel- and energy related activities 8.0 8.0 8.8
Scope 3 - Category 4 Upstream transportation and distribution 254.0 354.0 367.3
Scope 3 - Category 5 Waste generated in operations 1.0 1.0 1.3
Scope 3 - Category 6 Business travel 20.0 69.0 69.8 Excluding indirect climate change effects of air travel (radiative forcing) and taking into account purchases of<br><br>SAF.
Scope 3 - Category 7 Employee commuting 20.0 41.0 54.4
Scope 3 - Category 11 Use of sold products 7,355.0 7,053.1 9,442.4
Scope 3 - Category 12 End-of-life treatment of sold products 0.2 0.2 0.2
Scope 3 CO2 emissions (in kt) 11,426.2 11,936.3 15,025.2 The 2023 figure includes nine months of actual data and three months of estimates. The 2022 figure has<br><br>been adjusted with data for the entire year (11,900 kt best estimate in the 2022 Annual Report). ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NON-FINANCIAL INDICATORS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 309
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Non-financial indicators (continued)
Energy efficiency and climate action – CO2e emissions
--- --- --- --- ---
Description 2021 2022 2023 Comments
Indirect climate change effects of air travel (radiative forcing) 9.4 46.3 52.0 In previous years, this was reported as part of our scope 3 emissions.
Reduction due to purchase of SAF (kt CO2e) 0.0 0.0 10.2 SAF purchases reduce our total scope 3 emissions (from business travel).
Emission intensity net scope 1+2+3 (in kt/€m revenue) 0.62 0.57 0.55 The 2023 figure includes nine months of actual data and three months of estimates. Gases included is only<br><br>CO2, as the other gases are negligible. The 2022 figure has been adjusted with data for the entire year.
Net emission footprint change in % (scope 1+2) – Market-based 156% (3)% (8)%
Scope 2 CO2e emissions (in kt) – Location-based n/a 192.9 168.1
Type of energy attribute certificates (in TJ)
Guarantees of Origin (GOs) 883 840 901
Renewable energy certificates (RECs) 331 351 361
International renewable energy certificates (I-RECs) 3 3
Total 1,214 1,194 1,265
Reduction in GHG emissions split by (in kt)
Scope 1 - Savings worldwide through projects n/a 0.16 0.39
Scope 2 - Savings worldwide through projects n/a 2.41 3.79
Total n/a 2.57 4.18 The savings reported are cumulated compared with the base year; therefore, they are not comparable<br><br>between years.
Significant air emissions - VOC (kg) n/a 13,289 16,299
Number of significant fines and non-monetary sanctions
The monetary value of significant fines for non-compliance with environmental<br><br>laws and regulations (in € thousands) ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NON-FINANCIAL INDICATORS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 310
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Non-financial indicators (continued)
Circular economy – Waste management
--- --- --- --- ---
Description 2021 2022 2023 Comments
Total waste generated (in 1,000 kg)1 & 2
Total non-hazardous waste 5,284 6,295 7,821
Total hazardous waste 395 380 458
Total construction waste 199 238 653
Total 5,878 6,913 8,932 Total waste is treated offsite, no waste treatment onsite.
Total waste by disposal (in 1,000 kg)1
Waste diverted from disposal 4,544 5,186 5,125
Waste directed to disposal 1,334 1,727 3,807 Total waste has grown as the company has grown. This bucket has increased due to lower recycling rates<br><br>reported by our waste treatment suppliers who have used different definitions in the past, and due to the<br><br>improved quality of data shared with ASML. We are working with vendors and suppliers to improve the<br><br>recycling rate.
Total 5,878 6,913 8,932
Waste diverted from disposal: Recycling (in 1,000 kg)1 We apply recycling of waste. Other categories like preparation for reuse and composting are not applicable to<br><br>ASML.
Total non-hazardous waste 4,028 4,719 4,171
Total hazardous waste 346 309 381
Total construction waste 170 158 573
Total 4,544 5,186 5,125
Waste directed to disposal: Incineration (with energy recovery)<br><br>(in 1,000 kg)1
Total non-hazardous waste 938 1,246 2,542 Total waste has grown as the company has grown. This bucket has increased due to lower recycling rates<br><br>reported by our waste treatment suppliers who have used different definitions in the past, and due to the<br><br>improved quality of data shared with ASML. We are working with vendors and suppliers to improve the<br><br>recycling rate.
Total hazardous waste 16 37 33
Total construction waste 17 74 1
Total 971 1,357 2,576
Waste directed to disposal: Incineration (without energy recovery)<br><br>(in 1,000 kg)1
Total non-hazardous waste 51 66 316
Total hazardous waste 27 24 32
Total construction waste 0 0 0
Total 78 90 348
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NON-FINANCIAL INDICATORS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 311
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Non-financial indicators (continued)
Circular economy – Waste management
--- --- --- --- ---
Description 2021 2022 2023 Comments
Waste directed to disposal: Landfill (in 1,000 kg)1
Total non-hazardous waste 267 264 792
Total hazardous waste 6 10 12
Total construction waste 12 6 79
Total 285 280 883
Total waste disposed of (% of total waste from operations)1
Incineration (with energy recovery) 17% 19% 31%
Incineration (without energy recovery) 1% 2% 4%
Landfill 5% 4% 10%
Total 23% 25% 45%

1.The waste disposal methods are determined by information provided by the waste disposal contractor. We split total waste into waste directed to disposal and waste diverted from disposal, as required by the GRI.

2.During the dismantling of the Combined Heat and Power (CHP) system in Wilton, a spill of glycol onto the soil surface occurred in 2022. Because of this spill, we disposed of 12.7 tonnes of glycol-impacted soil and 3.6 tonnes of glycol-impacted water to ensure minimum impact to the

environment. This soil and water removal is included in our waste figures of 2022.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NON-FINANCIAL INDICATORS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 312
Non-financial indicators (continued)
Water management
--- --- --- --- ---
Description 2021 2022 2023 Comments
Water consumption (in 1000 m3), split by:
Veldhoven 728 834 856
San Diego 105 115 90
Wilton 95 90 101
Linkou 26 22 23
San Jose 21 32 28
Tainan 30 33 34
Other 36 36 42 Other includes the locations with more than 250 FTE combined (based on assessment 2019/2020).
Total 1,041 1,162 1,174 Municipal water supply.
Total ultrapure water consumption (in 1000 m3) 84 86 99 Only Veldhoven, Linkou and HMI Tainan are in scope for this indicator. The other locations are excluded from<br><br>the scope because the data to report on the indicator is not yet available.
Total water recycled and reused (in %) 1.2% 1.6% 1.5% Only Veldhoven, Linkou and HMI Tainan are in scope for this indicator. The other locations are excluded from<br><br>the scope because the data to report on the indicator is not yet available.
Water intensity (in 1000m3/€m revenue) 56 55 43 Water intensity is calculated as total water consumption (in m3) divided by total revenue (in millions).
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NON-FINANCIAL INDICATORS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 313
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Non-financial indicators (continued)
Attractive workplace for all – Workforce indicators1
--- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---
Number of FTEs (payroll and temporary) Total ASML Asia EMEA US
2021 2022 2023 2021 2022 2023 2021 2022 2023 2021 2022 2023
Payroll employees (in FTE) 28,747 34,719 38,656 7,404 8,840 9,083 15,444 18,660 21,512 5,899 7,219 8,061
Female (in %) 18 19 20 17 18 18 18 20 21 17 19 19
Male (in %) 82 81 80 83 82 82 82 80 79 83 81 81
Unknown (in %) n/a n/a n/a n/a
Temporary employees (in FTE) 2,095 2,924 2,091 26 31 28 1,786 2,607 1,901 283 286 162
Female (in %) 18 19 20 19 23 14 20 20 22 8 2 2
Male (in %) 82 73 73 81 71 86 80 80 78 92 18 8
Unknown (in %) n/a 8 7 n/a 6 n/a n/a 80 90
Total 30,842 37,643 40,747 7,430 8,871 9,111 17,230 21,267 23,413 6,182 7,505 8,223
Total number of FTEs (by age group)
<30 6,344 8,837 8,669 2,191 2,736 2,367 3,041 4,449 4,531 1,112 1,652 1,771
30-50 19,058 22,736 25,488 4,933 5,778 6,316 11,007 13,170 14,801 3,118 3,788 4,371
>50 5,158 5,792 6,430 305 355 425 3,182 3,647 4,074 1,671 1,790 1,931
Unknown 282 278 160 1 2 3 1 7 281 275 150
Total 30,842 37,643 40,747 7,430 8,871 9,111 17,230 21,267 23,413 6,182 7,505 8,223
Total number of FTEs (payroll and temporary)
Female (in %) 18 19 20 n/a 18 18 n/a 20 21 n/a 18 19
Male (in %) 82 80 80 n/a 82 82 n/a 80 79 n/a 79 79
Unknown (in %) n/a 1 n/a n/a n/a 3 2
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NON-FINANCIAL INDICATORS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 314
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Non-financial indicators (continued)
Attractive workplace for all – Workforce indicators1
--- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---
Number of payroll FTEs (split into full-time and part-time) Total ASML Asia EMEA US
2021 2022 2023 2021 2022 2023 2021 2022 2023 2021 2022 2023
Full-time payroll FTEs
Female (in %) 16 18 19 17 18 18 15 17 18 17 19 19
Male (in %) 84 82 81 83 82 82 85 83 82 83 81 81
Unknown (in %) n/a n/a n/a n/a
Total 26,847 32,635 36,292 7,401 8,835 9,078 13,560 16,594 19,166 5,886 7,206 8,048
Number of payroll FTEs (split into full-time and part-time)
Part-time payroll FTEs
Female (in %) 37 38 39 28 12 37 38 39 27 30 28
Male (in %) 63 62 61 100 72 88 63 62 61 73 70 72
Unknown (in %) n/a n/a n/a n/a
Total 1,900 2,084 2,364 3 5 5 1,884 2,066 2,346 13 13 13

1.There are no non-guaranteed hour employees. FTEs are reported at the end of the reporting period and excludes Berliner Glas (ASML Berlin GmbH).

Attractive workplace for all – Workforce indicators
Number of new hires payroll employees (in FTE) Total ASML Asia EMEA US
2021 2022 2023 2021 2022 2023 2021 2022 2023 2021 2022 2023
Number of new hires 4,373 7,130 4,129 1,848 2,057 648 1,737 3,306 2,556 788 1,767 925
New hires as a % of the total payroll employees 15 21 11 25 23 7 11 18 12 13 25 12
Gender
Female 896 1,724 1,105 313 415 179 432 903 711 151 406 215
Male 3,477 5,400 3,023 1,535 1,641 469 1,305 2,402 1,844 637 1,357 710
Unknown n/a 6 1 n/a 1 n/a 1 1 n/a 4
Total 4,373 7,130 4,129 1,848 2,057 648 1,737 3,306 2,556 788 1,767 925
Age group
<30 2,392 3,581 1,684 1,213 1,321 308 783 1,457 995 396 803 381
30-50 1,789 3,241 2,185 627 730 333 848 1,708 1,395 314 803 457
>50 190 308 260 6 6 7 106 141 166 78 161 87
Unknown 2 2
Total 4,373 7,130 4,129 1,848 2,057 648 1,737 3,306 2,556 788 1,767 925
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NON-FINANCIAL INDICATORS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 315
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Non-financial indicators (continued)
Attractive workplace for all – Workforce indicators
--- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---
Employee attrition (in FTE) Total ASML Asia EMEA US
2021 2022 2023 2021 2022 2023 2021 2022 2023 2021 2022 2023
Number of involuntary employee attrition1 199 226 352 41 34 59 101 119 202 57 73 91
Number of voluntary employee attrition 1,234 1,678 981 421 530 249 341 503 429 472 645 303
Total 1,433 1,904 1,333 462 564 308 442 622 631 529 718 394
Gender
Female 258 372 320 78 107 87 89 129 159 91 136 74
Male 1,175 1,532 1,013 384 457 221 353 493 472 438 582 320
Unknown n/a n/a n/a n/a
Total 1,433 1,904 1,333 462 564 308 442 622 631 529 718 394
Age group
<30 337 516 343 143 220 98 69 121 141 125 175 104
30-50 806 1,063 718 292 326 193 257 383 353 257 354 172
>50 290 325 272 27 18 17 116 118 137 147 189 118
Total 1,433 1,904 1,333 462 564 308 442 622 631 529 718 394

1.The number of payroll employees (in FTE) that involuntarily left ASML during the reporting period. Involuntary employee attrition cases are immigration, failure to return from leave, reduction in force, dismissal and deceased.

Attractive workplace for all – Workforce indicators
Description 2021 2022 2023 Comments
Workers who are not employees (in FTE)1 n/a 1,682 1,591
  1. Included in this category are consultants that are hired to perform a specific time-bound assignment based on a specific area of expertise needed, students who follow a work/learning program within ASML and students doing an internship at ASML. FTEs are reported at the end of the reporting

period.

Attractive workplace for all – Employee engagement
Engagement score we@ASML by gender 2021 2022 2023 Comments
Female 78.0% 77.3% 79.5% This figure excludes Berliner Glas (ASML Berlin GmbH)
Male 78.0% 78.1% 80.7% This figure excludes Berliner Glas (ASML Berlin GmbH)
Benchmark 76.0% 74.0% 75.2%
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NON-FINANCIAL INDICATORS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 316
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Non-financial indicators (continued)
Attractive workplace for all – Employee engagement
--- --- --- --- ---
Description 2021 2022 2023 Comments
Employee attrition (in %) 5.4 6.0 3.6
Open positions filled by internal candidates (in %) 29 27 29
Attractive workplace for all – Employee engagement
--- --- --- --- ---
Description 2021 2022 2023 Comments
Total training expenses (in € millions) 27 47 64 Out-of-pocket expenses for technical and non-product-related classroom trainings as recorded in MyLearning<br><br>(learning management system).
Average spend on training and development per FTE (€) 1,020 1,491 1,724
Total number of training hours per FTE Includes technical and non-product-related training hours (including nomination courses).
Female 25 41 53
Male 30 52 62
Unknown n/a 304 455
Weighted average 29 50 60
Number of technical training hours per technical FTE The number of technical training hours per FTE is calculated as the total technical training hours divided by<br><br>the total payroll FTEs working in technical departments within Operations and R&D.<br><br>In 2023, a new categorization took place based on the academy structure, causing a shift between technical<br><br>training hours and non-product-related training hours.
Female 22 41 34
Male 29 50 44
Unknown n/a 347 343
Weighted average 28 49 43
Number of non-product-related training hours per FTE Excluding nomination courses (leadership development programs).<br><br>In 2023, a new categorization took place based on the academy structure, causing a shift between technical<br><br>training hours and non-product-related training hours.
Female 8 11 25
Male 5 8 20
Unknown n/a 27 198
Weighted average 5 8 21
Nomination courses: Leadership development programs
Number of training hours 6,264 47,454 143,960 In 2023, we saw an increase in the number of types of leadership development training.
Number of employees attending (unique) 48 322 2,517
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NON-FINANCIAL INDICATORS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 317
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Non-financial indicators (continued)
Attractive workplace for all – Diversity and inclusion
--- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---
Description Gender Gender ratio Age group Comments
Male/female in managerial positions and on Supervisory<br><br>Board (in headcount)1 Female Male Unknown Total Female Male Unknown <30 30-50 >50 Unknown Total
Supervisory Board 4 5 9 44% 56% —% 9 9
Board of Management 6 6 —% 100% —% 1 5 6
Senior management 96 712 808 12% 88% —% 332 476 808
Middle management 607 3,318 3,925 15% 85% —% 3 2,328 1,594 3,925
Junior management 387 1,785 2,172 18% 82% —% 71 1,770 331 2,172
Other 6,781 25,489 3 32,273 21% 79% —% 8,024 20,344 3,905 32,273
Total 7,875 31,315 3 39,193 20% 80% —% 8,098 24,775 6,320 39,193
Gender Gender ratio
Male/female split by sector (in FTE) Female Male Unknown Total Female Male Unknown
Customer support 1,434 8,304 8 9,746 15% 85% —%
Manufacturing and supply chain management 1,602 7,140 58 8,800 18% 81% 1%
Research and development 2,544 12,682 74 15,300 17% 83% —%
General and administrative 1,686 2,332 9 4,027 42% 58% —%
Sales and mature product services 166 675 841 20% 80% —%
Strategic supply management 640 1,390 3 2,033 31% 68% —%
Total 8,072 32,523 152 40,747 20% 80% —%

1.Temporary employees are not included in the headcount numbers.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NON-FINANCIAL INDICATORS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 318
Non-financial indicators (continued)
Attractive workplace for all – Diversity and inclusion
--- --- --- --- ---
Description 2021 2022 2023 Comments
Number of nationalities working for ASML
Asia 33 40 40
EMEA 108 124 126
US 90 101 103
Worldwide total 122 143 144
Foreign nationals working for ASML (in %) Foreign nationals working for ASML (in %) is the percentage of payroll and temporary employees with a<br><br>nationality other than the country in which the employee is working.
Asia 5 5 4
EMEA 33 38 39
US 28 25 29
Worldwide total 26 28 29 Attractive workplace for all – Labor relations
--- --- --- --- ---
Description 2021 2022 2023 Comments
Percentage of employees covered by collective bargaining agreements 52% 53% 60% Korea was added to the collective bargaining agreements in 2023, resulting in an increase in the %.
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NON-FINANCIAL INDICATORS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 319
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Non-financial indicators (continued)
Attractive workplace for all – Fair remuneration2
--- --- --- --- ---
Description 2021 2022 2023 Comments
Ratio of base salary of women to men total1
Senior management 99% 100% 100%
Middle management 99% 99% 98%
Non-management 98% 98% 97%
Ratio of base salary of women to men Asia1
Senior management n/a 102% 95%
Middle management n/a 98% 96%
Non-management n/a 95% 95%
Ratio of base salary of women to men EMEA1
Senior management n/a 99% 100%
Middle management n/a 98% 98%
Non-management n/a 98% 98%
Ratio of base salary of women to men US1
Senior management n/a 100% 102%
Middle management n/a 100% 98%
Non-management n/a 100% 99%
Ratio of total cash of women to men total1
Senior management 99% 102% 100%
Middle management 99% 98% 98%
Non-management 98% 97% 98%
Ratio of total cash of women to men Asia1
Senior management n/a 110% 100%
Middle management n/a 92% 98%
Non-management n/a 96% 97%
Ratio of total cash of women to men EMEA1
Senior management n/a 101% 100%
Middle management n/a 98% 98%
Non-management n/a 98% 98% ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NON-FINANCIAL INDICATORS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 320
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Non-financial indicators (continued)
Attractive workplace for all – Fair remuneration2
--- --- --- --- ---
Description 2021 2022 2023 Comments
Ratio of total cash of women to men US1
Senior management n/a 96% 100%
Middle management n/a 100% 98%
Non-management n/a 100% 99%
Internal pay ratio (CEO versus employee remuneration)3 40 34 43 For more information, see Remuneration Report.

1.The base salary and total cash used for the calculation in the reporting year consists of the actual base salaries and total cash paid in the previous reporting year. Total cash is base salary plus short-term incentive.

2.From 2022, we disclose the fair remuneration per employee group split by region.

3.The calculation approach of the internal pay ratio is disclosed in the section Relationship between CEO and average remuneration (pay ratio). In the calculation, we have taken into account the payroll employees only, since this ensures consistency with the figures disclosed in the Consolidated

Financial Statements. The ratio would be lower if we were to incorporate the temporary employees, as they earn on average a higher remuneration.

Attractive workplace for all – Benefits which are standard for full-time and part-time employees of the<br><br>organization but are not provided to temporary employees1
Type of employee benefit Type of employee
Full-time employees Part-time employees Temporary employees2
i. Life insurance3 yes yes no
ii. Healthcare3 yes yes no
iii. Disability and invalidity coverage3 yes yes no
iv. Parental leave3 yes yes no
v. Retirement provision yes yes no
vi. Stock ownership yes yes no
  1. This table includes the significant locations of operations: Taiwan, Netherlands, China, South Korea and the US. There are no part-time employees in Taiwan.

  2. Generally temporary employees are not entitled to the same benefits as full-time and part-time employees because their benefits are covered by the benefit plans of their formal employer.

  3. In the US, part-time employees are not entitled to life insurance, healthcare, disability and invalidity coverage, or parental leave benefits.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NON-FINANCIAL INDICATORS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 321
Non-financial indicators (continued)
Attractive workplace for all – Employee health and safety
--- --- --- --- ---
Description 2021 2022 2023 Comments
ASML recordable incident rate1 0.17 0.18 0.21 Includes illness and injuries.
Number of recordable incidents (employees) 48 63 83
Number of recordable incidents (contractors) n/a 9 6
Number of fatalities This relates to both employees and workers who are not employees.
Employees with work-related injuries split by:
Rate of fatalities n/a
Number of recordable injuries n/a 48 70
Rate of recordable injuries n/a 0.14 0.18
Number of high-consequence injuries n/a 2 4
Rate of high-consequence injuries n/a 0.006 0.010
Main types of work-related injuries by employees (split by hazard group)
Electrical n/a 1 3
Ergonomics n/a 17 25
Facilities n/a 88 107
Hazardous gases n/a 11
Hazardous substances & materials n/a 9 21
Hoisting & lifting n/a 10 10
Mechanical n/a 147 189
Pressure systems n/a 1 3
Radiation n/a 2
Thermal n/a 2 10
Travel n/a 10 15
Working at height n/a n/a 1
# hours worked n/a 68,746,820 79,658,141
Workers who are not employees with work-related injuries split by:
Number of recordable injuries n/a 8 6 ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NON-FINANCIAL INDICATORS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 322
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Non-financial indicators (continued)
Attractive workplace for all – Employee health and safety
--- --- --- --- ---
Description 2021 2022 2023 Comments
Number of high-consequence injuries n/a
Main types of work-related injuries by workers who are not employees<br><br>(split by hazard group)
Electrical n/a 1 1
Ergonomics n/a 3 1
Facilities n/a 18 19
Hazardous gases n/a 2
Hazardous substances & materials n/a 1 4
Hoisting & lifting n/a 5 1
Mechanical n/a 29 41
Pressure systems n/a 2
Thermal n/a 3
Travel n/a 1 2
Working at height n/a n/a 1
Employees with work-related ill health split by:
Number of fatalities n/a
Number of recordable ill-health n/a 15 13
Main types of work-related ill health by employees (split by hazard group)
Electrical n/a
Ergonomics n/a 22 33
Facilities n/a 4 6
Hazardous substances & materials n/a 4
Hoisting & lifting n/a 2
Mechanical n/a 1
Pressure systems n/a 1
Radiation n/a 1
Workers who are not employees with work-related ill health split by:
Number of fatalities n/a
Number of recordable ill-health n/a 1 ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NON-FINANCIAL INDICATORS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 323
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Non-financial indicators (continued)
Attractive workplace for all – Employee health and safety
--- --- --- --- ---
Description 2021 2022 2023 Comments
Main types of work-related ill health by workers who are not employees<br><br>(split by hazard group)
Ergonomics n/a 2 3
Facilities n/a 1
Hazardous gases n/a 1
Hoisting & lifting n/a 1
Mechanical n/a 1
Travel n/a 1
Working at height n/a n/a 1

1.The 2021 recordable incident rates include recordable incidents related to workers who are not employees. From 2022, and in line with the GRI 403 standard, we separate incidents related to employees and workers who are not employees, so the 2022 and 2023 recordable incident rate only

includes recordable incidents related to employees.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NON-FINANCIAL INDICATORS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 324
Non-financial indicators (continued)
Responsible supply chain
--- --- --- --- ---
Description 2021 2022 2023 Comments
Suppliers assessed on sustainability (in #), split by:
Audits 2 16 In 2021, the audits were put on hold due to the COVID-19 restrictions.<br><br>Since October 2023, sustainability has become a full mature section in the supplier audits.
RBA self-assessment questionnaire (SAQ) 56 59 128 Total number of suppliers 4,657 4,984 5,126
--- --- --- --- ---
Number of suppliers per region
Asia 1,319 1,348 1,375
EMEA (excl. Netherlands) 702 745 758
Netherlands 1,459 1,584 1,638
North America 1,177 1,307 1,355
Total 4,657 4,984 5,126
Number of suppliers, split by:
Product-related 772 789 813
Non-product-related 3,885 4,195 4,313
Total 4,657 4,984 5,126 The majority are Tier 1 suppliers.
Number of suppliers, split by:
Critical 229 245 278 Critical suppliers are Tier 1 suppliers of strategic importance.
Non-critical 4,428 4,739 4,848
Total 4,657 4,984 5,126
Number of critical suppliers, split by:
Product-related 197 216 249
Non-product-related 32 29 29
Total 229 245 278
Number of suppliers in scope for risk management 243 264 278 This includes 26 critical Tier 2 suppliers.
Total sourcing spend (in million EUR) 9,045 12,402 15,461
Sourcing spend per supplier group (in %)
Product-related 70% 69% 69%
Non-product-related 30% 31% 31%
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NON-FINANCIAL INDICATORS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 325
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Non-financial indicators (continued)
Responsible supply chain
--- --- --- --- ---
Description 2021 2022 2023 Comments
Proportion of spending on local suppliers (in %) We define ‘local’ as the country in which a significant location of operation is located. The significant locations<br><br>of operations are the main manufacturing sites of ASML, which are located in Veldhoven, the Netherlands;<br><br>Linkou, Taiwan; San Diego and Wilton, both in the US. The manufacturing location in Tainan is immaterial for<br><br>this indicator.
Veldhoven 45% 45% 47% A relatively large amount of the total supplier spend for Veldhoven relates to Carl Zeiss (non-local).
Linkou 50% 53% 64%
San Diego 92% 92% 94%
Wilton 64% 71% 70%
ESG integrated governance – Business ethics
--- --- --- --- ---
Description 2021 2022 2023 Comments
Total number of Speak Up messages, split by: 396 414 631
Anti-bribery & Anti-corruption Speak Up messages 37 31 121 One of the Speak Up messages indicated led to an indication of violation of anti-corruption laws. The matter<br><br>was reviewed and appropriate actions taken.
Human rights Speak Up messages 187 165 244 The 244 reports include all the following topics: (i) discrimination (ii) harassment (iii) diversity (iv) freedom of<br><br>association (v) privacy (vi) work life balance (vii) forced and bonded labor (viii) health and safety (ix) other<br><br>human rights.
-  of which discrimination and harassment n/a 106 117 This covers different categories, including religious discrimination, age, gender, pregnancy and sexual<br><br>orientation. ESG integrated governance – Product safety
--- --- --- --- ---
Description 2021 2022 2023 Comments
Number of (significant) fines for non-compliance with product design related laws<br><br>and regulations
Monetary value of significant fines for non-compliance with product design related<br><br>laws and regulations
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 NON-FINANCIAL INDICATORS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 326
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Non-financial indicators (continued)

New_Finanicals_Divider_310123.jpg

Other<br><br>appendices
IN THIS SECTION
327 Other appendices
347 Definitions
355 Exhibit index
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 327
--- --- --- --- ---

KPMG has served as our independent registered public accounting firm for the years ended December 31, 2023 and

  1. The following table sets out the aggregate fees for professional audit services and other services rendered by

KPMG and their member firms and affiliates in 2023 and 2022:

Year ended December 31 2022 2023
(€, in thousands) KPMG<br><br>Accountants<br><br>NV KPMG Network Total KPMG<br><br>Accountants<br><br>NV KPMG<br><br>Network Total
Audit fees 3,203 1,064 4,267 3,509 1,152 4,661
Audit-related fees 150 150 196 196
Tax fees
All other fees 47 9 56 28 11 39
Principal accountant fees 3,400 1,073 4,473 3,733 1,163 4,896

Audit fees and audit-related fees

Our independent registered public accounting firm is KPMG Accountants NV (KPMG), Amstelveen, The Netherlands,

Auditor Firm ID: 1012. Audit fees relate to the audit of the Financial Statements as set out in this Annual

Report, certain quarterly procedures, services related to offering memoranda, as well as our statutory and regulatory

filings of our subsidiaries. These fees relate to the audit of the respective Financial Statements, regardless of whether

the work was performed during the financial year. Other audit-related fees are related to assurance services on non-

financial information.

All other fees relate to certain agreed-upon procedures that are requested by the Supervisory Board or external

parties.

All audit fees, audit-related fees and permitted services that the independent auditor provides are subject to pre-

approval by the Audit Committee. The Audit Committee pre-approved all audit and non-audit services and 100% of

the external audit plan and audit fees for the years 2023 and 2022.

The Audit Committee monitors compliance with the Dutch, EU regulation and SEC rules on non-audit services

provided by an independent registered public accounting firm, which outlines strict separation of audit and advisory

services for Dutch public interest entities.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 OTHER APPENDICES STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 328
Appendix - Principal accountant fees and services

We lease a number of our facilities under operating leases. We also own a number of buildings, mainly consisting of

production facilities in Veldhoven, the Netherlands, in Wilton, Connecticut, and San Diego, California, both in the US,

in Linkou and Tainan, both in Taiwan and in Pyeongtaek, South Korea. The book value of land and buildings owned

amounts to €3,080.3 million as of December 31, 2023, compared with €2,223.4 million as of December 31, 2022.

See Consolidated Financial Statements - Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements - Note 13 Property, plant

and equipment, net.

Our capital expenditures (purchases of property, plant and equipment, see the Consolidated Statements of Cash

Flows as recorded in the Consolidated Financial Statements) for 2023, 2022 and 2021, amounted to

€2,155.6

million, €1,281.8 million and €900.7 million, respectively. Capital expenditures in 2023 increased compared to 2022

and relates to the expansion and upgrades of facilities, prototypes, evaluation and training systems.

We expect that our capital expenditures (purchases of property, plant and equipment) in 2024, will be approximately

€2.1 billion. These expenditures are expected to mainly consist of further expansion and upgrades of facilities. We

expect to finance these capital expenditures through cash generated by operations and existing cash and cash

equivalents.

Facilities in EMEA

Our headquarters, mainly manufacturing and R&D facilities are located in Veldhoven, the Netherlands. This state-of-

the-art campus includes 204 thousand square meters of office space, 59 thousand square meters of clean room

used for manufacturing and R&D activities, 12 thousand square meters of labs, and 63 thousand square meters of

warehouse/storage space. Our main facilities in Veldhoven (and other buildings in the greater Eindhoven area) in the

Netherlands are partly owned and partly leased office and industrial buildings. From 2021, we have added a

manufacturing site in Berlin to our portfolio. Our Berlin campus consists of 10 buildings and are mainly owned

properties with a total floor area of 53 thousand square meters. We also lease several sales and service/field offices

across Europe consisting of 4 thousand square meters.

Facilities in the US

Our US head office is located in a 3 thousand square meters office building in Chandler, Arizona. We maintain R&D

and manufacturing operations in a 57 thousand square meters campus which consists of 5 buildings in Wilton,

Connecticut. In December 2022, we acquired an additional building of 31 thousand square meters to be utilized as

office and lab space in Wilton. Our campus in San Jose, California consists of 2 buildings totaling 18 thousand

square meters mainly for office and R&D activities. Furthermore, our campus in San Diego, California comprises 45

thousand square meters for office, R&D, manufacturing and warehouse purposes. We also lease several sales and

service/field offices across the US consisting of 19 thousand square meters.

Facilities in Asia

Our key locations in Asia are Taiwan, South Korea, and China, where we have local service, sales, training centers,

and manufacturing activities. Our facility in Linkou, Taiwan is comprised of a manufacturing area that is approximately

3 thousand square meters and office space that is approximately 6 thousand square meters. Our facility in Tainan,

Taiwan consists of 20 thousand square meters utilized for manufacturing and office space. Our campus in Hwasung,

South Korea is comprised of 11 thousand square meters spread over 6 buildings for mainly office use and a small

portion of clean room and lab space. Our Cymer facility in Pyeongtaek, South Korea is a manufacturing site mainly

used for refurbishment activities of light sources. In Beijing, China, we have an HMI facility and a local repair center

with a combined floor area of 4 thousand square meters for manufacturing and office space. We also lease several

sales and service/field offices across Taiwan, South Korea, China, Japan, Singapore, and Malaysia consisting of 49

thousand square meters.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 OTHER APPENDICES CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 329
Appendix - Property, plant and equipment

The statements below represent a summary of current Dutch tax laws, regulations and judicial interpretations thereof.

The description is limited to the material tax implications for a holder of ordinary shares who is not, and/or is not

deemed to be, a resident of the Netherlands for Dutch tax purposes (‘Non-Resident Holder’). This summary does not

address special rules that may apply to special classes of holders of ordinary shares and should not be read as

extending by implication to matters not specifically referred to herein. Moreover, this summary does not discuss the

Dutch tax treatment of individual Non-Resident Holders who receive income or derive capital gains from the ordinary

shares and the income received or capital gains derived are attributable to the past, present or future employment

activities of such holder. As to individual tax consequences, each investor in our ordinary shares should consult his or

her tax counsel.

General

The acquisition of ordinary shares by a non-resident of the Netherlands should in itself not be treated as a taxable

event for Dutch tax purposes. The material tax consequences in connection with owning and disposing of our

ordinary shares are discussed below.

Substantial interest

A person that, (inter alia) directly or indirectly, and either independently or jointly with his or her partner (as defined in

the Dutch Personal Income Tax Act 2001), owns 5.0% or more of our subscribed share capital, owns profit

participating rights that correspond to at least 5.0% of the annual profits of a Dutch company or to at least 5.0% of

the liquidation proceeds of such company or holds options to purchase 5.0% or more of our subscribed share

capital, is deemed to have a substantial interest in our shares, or our options, as applicable. In addition, a shareholder

has a substantial shareholding if he or she directly or indirectly owns at least 5% of the voting rights in the General

Meeting of shareholders. Specific rules apply in case certain family members of the Non-Resident Holder hold a

substantial interest. A deemed substantial interest also exists if (part of) a substantial interest has been disposed of,

or is deemed to be disposed of, in a transaction where no taxable gain has been recognized. Specific attribution rules

exist in determining the presence of a substantial interest.

Please note, substantial shareholders who emigrate, and non-residents who inherit a substantial shareholding are

provisionally subject to an exit tax on capital gains on a deemed alienation of the shareholding. The exit tax is

imposed on the difference between the fair market value at the time of emigration and the acquisition price of the

substantial shareholding. The tax is levied by imposing a preservative tax assessment. If certain conditions are met,

interest-free deferral of the payment of the taxable amount applies. No immediate tax has to be paid, but the tax will

be due on the moment of the actual disposal of the shares at any point following the emigration.

Income tax consequences for individual non-resident holders on owning and disposing of the

ordinary shares

Capital gains on shares are only taxable in the Netherlands if the shareholding constitutes a substantial shareholding.

An individual who is a Non-Resident Holder will therefore not be subject to Dutch income tax on received income in

respect of our ordinary shares or capital gains derived from the sale, exchange or other disposition of our ordinary

shares, provided that such holder:

•Does not hold and has not held a (deemed) substantial interest in our share capital or, in the event the Non-

Resident Holder holds or has held a (deemed) substantial interest in our share capital, such interest is, or was,

a business asset in the hands of the holder;

•Does not carry on and has not carried on a business in the Netherlands through a (deemed) permanent

establishment or a permanent representative to which the ordinary shares are attributable;

•Does not share and has not shared directly (through the beneficial ownership of ordinary shares or similar

securities) in the profits of an enterprise managed and controlled in the Netherlands which (is deemed to) own(s),

or (is deemed to have) has owned, our ordinary shares; and

•Does not carry out and has not carried out any activities which generate taxable profit in the Netherlands or taxable

income in the Netherlands to which the holding of our ordinary shares was connected.

Corporate income tax consequences for corporate non-resident holders

Income derived from ordinary shares or capital gains derived from the sale, exchange or disposition of ordinary

shares by a corporate Non-Resident Holder is taxable if:

•The holder carries on a business in the Netherlands through a permanent establishment or a permanent

representative in the Netherlands (Dutch enterprise) and the ordinary shares are attributable to this permanent

establishment or permanent representative, unless the participation exemption (discussed below) applies; or

•The holder has a substantial interest in our share capital, which is held with the primary aim or one of the primary

aims to avoid the levy of income tax at the level of another person and which is not put into place with valid

commercial reasons that reflect economic reality; or

•The holder is a resident of Aruba, Curacao or Saint Martin with a permanent establishment or permanent

representative in Bonaire, Eustatius or Saba to which our ordinary shares are attributable and certain conditions are

met; or

•Certain assets of the holder are deemed to be treated as a Dutch enterprise under Dutch tax law and the ordinary

shares are attributable to this Dutch enterprise.

To qualify for the Dutch participation exemption, the holder must generally hold at least 5.0% of our nominal paid-in

capital and meet certain other requirements.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 OTHER APPENDICES CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 330
Appendix - Dutch and US taxation

Dividend withholding tax

In general, a dividend distributed by us in respect of our ordinary shares will be subject to a withholding tax imposed

by the Netherlands at the statutory rate of 15.0%.

Dividends include:

•Dividends in cash and in kind;

•Deemed and constructive dividends;

•Consideration for the repurchase or redemption of ordinary shares (including a purchase by a direct or indirect

ASML subsidiary) in excess of qualifying average paid-in capital unless such repurchase is made for temporary

investment purposes or is exempt by law;

•Stock dividends up to their nominal value (unless distributed out of qualifying paid-in capital);

•Any (partial) repayment of paid-in capital not qualifying as capital for Dutch dividend withholding tax purposes; and

•Liquidation proceeds in excess of qualifying average paid-in capital for Dutch dividend withholding tax purposes.

Under certain circumstances, a reduction of Dutch dividend withholding tax can be obtained:

•In case the shareholder is considered a tax resident in the Netherlands, an exemption at source is available if (i) the

participation exemption applies (or participation settlement is applicable) or (ii) the distributing entity and recipient

are included in a Dutch fiscal unity for CIT purposes, both under the condition that the ordinary shares are

attributable to a business carried out in the Netherlands and the shareholder is considered the beneficial owner of

the distributed dividend;

•An exemption at source is available for dividend distributions to certain qualifying EU/EEA tax resident corporate

holders, that own an interest that would qualify for the Dutch participation exemption (i.e. interest of > 5%), unless

such holder holds our ordinary shares with the primary aim or one of the primary aims to avoid the levy of Dutch

dividend withholding tax at the level of another person and our ordinary shares are not held for valid commercial

reasons that reflect economic reality. This is under the condition that the shareholder is considered the beneficial

owner of the distributed dividend;

•An exemption at source is available for dividend distributions to certain qualifying corporate holders that are tax

resident in a non-EU/EEA jurisdiction with which the Netherlands has concluded a tax treaty that includes a

qualifying dividend article and that own an interest that would qualify for the Dutch participation exemption (i.e.

interest of >5%), unless such holder holds our ordinary shares with the primary aim or one of the primary aims to

avoid the levy of Dutch dividend withholding tax at the level of another person and our ordinary shares are not held

for valid commercial reasons that reflect economic reality; This under the condition that the shareholder is

considered the beneficial owner of the distributed dividend.

•Certain tax exempt organizations (e.g. pension funds and excluding collective investment vehicles) resident in EU/

EEA member states or in qualifying non-EU/EEA states may be eligible for a refund of Dutch dividend withholding

tax upon their request. Based on domestic law not yet entered into force, in those circumstances, an exemption at

source may also become available upon request; and

•Upon request and under certain conditions, certain qualifying Non-Resident Individual and Corporate Holders of

ordinary shares resident in EU/EEA member states or in a qualifying non-EU/EEA state may be eligible for a refund

of Dutch dividend withholding tax insofar the withholding tax levied is higher than the personal and CIT which would

have been due if they were resident of the Netherlands.

If the Dutch dividend withholding tax exemption is not applicable, a Non-Resident Holder of ordinary shares can still

be eligible for a partial or complete exemption or refund of all or a portion of the above withholding tax under a tax

treaty that is in effect between the Netherlands and the Non-Resident Holder’s country of residence. The Netherlands

has concluded such treaties with the US, Canada, Switzerland, Japan, most EU member states, as well as many

other countries.

In case an anti-abuse rule (amongst which a limitation of benefits rule) is included in the relevant tax treaty or opted in

by both the Netherlands and the Non-Resident Holder’s country of residence via the OECD Multilateral instrument,

benefits under a tax treaty will only be granted if it can be demonstrated that the Non-Resident Holder complies with

the anti-abuse rule requirements. In general, the decisive criterion is the principle purpose test (although the anti-

abuse rule could vary per tax treaty), based on which it should be determined whether obtaining a treaty benefit is not

one of the principal purposes of the arrangement or transaction.

Under the treaty between the US and the Netherlands for the Avoidance of Double Taxation and the Prevention of

Fiscal Evasion with Respect to Taxes on Income (the ‘US Tax Treaty’), dividends paid by us to a Non-Resident Holder

that is a resident of the US as defined in the US Tax Treaty (other than an exempt organization or exempt pension

trust, as discussed below) are generally liable to 15.0% Dutch withholding tax or, in the case of certain US corporate

shareholders owning directly at least 10.0% of our voting power, a reduction to 5.0% Dutch withholding tax, provided

that the Holder is the beneficial owner of the dividends received and does not have an enterprise or an interest in an

enterprise that is, in whole or in part, carried on through a permanent establishment or permanent representative in

the Netherlands to which the dividends are attributable. The US Tax Treaty also provides for a dividend withholding

tax exemption on dividends, but only for a shareholder owning directly at least 80.0% of our voting power and

meeting all other requirements. The US Tax Treaty provides for a complete exemption from tax on dividends received

by exempt pension trusts and exempt organizations, as defined therein. Except in the case of exempt organizations,

the reduced dividend withholding tax rate (or exemption from withholding) can be applied at the source upon

payment of the dividends, provided that the proper forms have been filed in advance of the payment. Exempt

organizations, in principle, remain subject to the statutory withholding rate of 15.0% and are required to file for a

refund of such withholding, however such organizations may become eligible for the exemption at source when the

domestic law as described above has entered into force. Please note, in case an anti-abuse rule is included in a tax

treaty (e.g. principle purpose test), benefits under a tax treaty will only be granted if obtaining a treaty benefit is not

one of the principal purposes of the arrangement or transaction.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 OTHER APPENDICES CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 331
Appendix - Dutch and US taxation (continued)

A Non-Resident Holder may not claim the benefits of the US Tax Treaty unless (i) he/she is a resident of the US as

defined therein, or (ii) he/she is deemed to be a resident on the basis of the provisions of article 24(4) of the US Tax

Treaty, and (iii) his or her entitlement to those benefits is not limited by the provisions of article 26 (limitation on

benefits) of the US Tax Treaty.

Dividend stripping rules

Under Dutch tax legislation regarding anti-dividend stripping, no exemption from, or refund of, Dutch dividend

withholding tax is granted if the recipient of dividends paid by us is not considered the beneficial owner of such

dividends.

Gift or inheritance taxes

Dutch gift or inheritance taxes will not be levied on the transfer of ordinary shares by way of gift or upon the death of

a Non-Resident Individual, unless the transfer is construed as an inheritance or as a gift made by or on behalf of a

person, who at the time of the gift or death, is deemed to be resident of the Netherlands.

Gift tax and inheritance tax are levied on the beneficiary. For purposes of Dutch gift and inheritance tax, an individual

of Dutch nationality is deemed to be a resident of the Netherlands if he/she has been a resident thereof at any time

during the 10 years preceding the time of the gift or death. For purposes of Dutch gift tax, a person not possessing

Dutch nationality is deemed to be a resident of the Netherlands if he/she has resided therein at any time in the 12

months preceding the gift.

Value added tax

No Dutch VAT is imposed on dividends in respect of our ordinary shares or on the transfer of our shares.

Residence

A Non-Resident Holder will not become resident, or be deemed to be resident, in the Netherlands solely as a result of

holding our ordinary shares or of the execution, performance, delivery and/or enforcement of rights in respect of our

ordinary shares.

A Non-Resident Holder could qualify as a foreign taxpayer for Dutch CIT purposes in relation to dividend income and

capital gains realized from holding our ordinary shares if the following conditions are cumulatively met:

•The Non-Resident Holder owns an interest that qualifies as a substantial interest (i.e. at least 5%);

•The Non-Resident Holder is used with the primary intention (or one of the primary intentions) of evading

Dutch personal income tax at the level of its (ultimate) shareholders (abusive case); and

•The structure is considered artificial i.e. not based on sound business reasons that reflect the economic reality.

Non-resident corporate shareholders/members subject to the non-resident taxation will be subject to Dutch CIT at

the statutory CIT rate of 25.8% on dividend income and (deemed) capital gains.

US taxation

The following is a discussion of the material US federal income tax consequences relating to the acquisition,

ownership and disposition of ordinary shares by a United States Holder (as defined below) acting in the capacity of a

beneficial owner who is not a tax resident of the Netherlands. This discussion deals only with ordinary shares held as

capital assets and does not deal with the tax consequences applicable to all categories of investors, some of which

(such as tax-exempt entities, financial institutions, regulated investment companies, dealers in securities/traders in

securities that elect a mark-to-market method of accounting for securities holdings, insurance companies, investors

owning directly, indirectly or constructively 10.0% or more of our outstanding voting shares, investors who hold

ordinary shares as part of hedging or conversion transactions and investors whose functional currency is not the US

dollar) may be subject to special rules. In addition, the discussion does not address any alternative minimum tax or

any state, local, Foreign Investment in Real Property Tax Act-related US federal income tax consequences, or non-

US tax consequences.

This discussion is based on the US-Netherlands Income tax treaty, the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended

to the date hereof, final, temporary and proposed Treasury Department regulations promulgated, and administrative

and judicial interpretations thereof, changes to any of which subsequent to the date hereof, possibly with retroactive

effect, may affect the tax consequences described herein. In addition, there can be no assurance that the IRS will not

challenge one or more of the tax consequences described herein, and we have not obtained, nor do we intend to

obtain, a ruling from the IRS or an opinion of counsel with respect to the US federal income tax consequences of

acquiring or holding shares. Prospective purchasers of ordinary shares are advised to consult their tax advisers with

respect to their particular circumstances and with respect to the effects of US federal, state, local or non-US tax laws

to which they may be subject.

As used herein, the term ‘United States Holder’ means a beneficial owner of ordinary shares for US federal income

tax purposes whose holding of such ordinary shares does not form part of the business property or assets of a

permanent establishment or fixed base in the Netherlands, who is fully entitled to the benefits of the treaty in respect

of such ordinary shares; and is:

•An individual citizen or tax resident of the US; or

•A corporation or other entity treated as a corporation for US federal income tax purposes created or organized in or

under the laws of the US or of any political subdivision thereof; or

•An estate of which the income is subject to US federal income taxation regardless of its source; or

•A trust whose administration is subject to the primary supervision of a court within the US and which has one or

more US persons who have the authority to control all of its substantial decisions.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 OTHER APPENDICES CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 332
Appendix - Dutch and US taxation (continued)

If an entity treated as a partnership for US federal income tax purposes owns ordinary shares, the US federal income

tax treatment of a partner in such partnership will generally depend upon the status and tax residency of the partner

and the activities of the partnership. A partnership that owns ordinary shares and the partners in such partnership

should consult their tax advisers about the US federal income tax consequences of holding and disposing of the

ordinary shares.

Passive Foreign Investment Company considerations

We believe we were not a passive foreign investment company for US federal income tax purposes in 2023 and that

we will not be a passive foreign investment company in 2024. However, as passive foreign investment company

status is a factual matter that must be determined annually at the close of each taxable year, there can be no

certainty as to our actual passive foreign investment company status in any particular year until the close of the

taxable year in question. We have not conducted a detailed study at this time to confirm our non-passive foreign

investment company status. If we were treated as a passive foreign investment company in any year during which a

United States Holder owned common shares, certain adverse tax consequences could apply. Investors should

consult their tax advisers with respect to any passive foreign investment company considerations.

Taxation of dividends

United States Holders should generally include in gross income, as foreign-source dividend income the gross amount

of any non-liquidating distribution (before reduction for Dutch withholding taxes) we make out of our current or

accumulated earnings and profits (as determined for US federal income tax purposes) when the distribution is actually

or constructively received by the United States Holder. Distributions will not be eligible for the dividends-received

deduction generally allowed to US corporations in respect of dividends received from other US corporations. The

amount of the dividend distribution included in income of a United States Holder should be the US dollar value of the

foreign currency (e.g. euros) paid, determined by the spot rate of exchange on the date of the distribution, regardless

of whether the payment is in fact converted into US dollars. Distributions in excess of current and accumulated

earnings and profits, as determined for US federal income tax purposes, will be treated as a non-taxable return of

capital to the extent of the United States Holder’s US tax basis in the ordinary shares and thereafter as taxable capital

gain. We presently do not maintain calculations of our earnings and profits under US federal income tax principles. If

we do not report to a United States Holder the portion of a distribution that exceeds earnings and profits, the

distribution will generally be taxable as a dividend even if that distribution would otherwise be treated as a non-

taxable return of capital or as capital gain under the rules described above.

Subject to limitations provided in the US Internal Revenue Code, a United States Holder may generally deduct from

its US federal taxable income, or credit against its US federal income tax liability, the amount of qualified Dutch

withholding taxes. However, Dutch withholding tax may be credited only if the United States Holder does not claim a

deduction for any Dutch or other non-US taxes paid or accrued in that year. In addition, Dutch dividend withholding

taxes will likely not be creditable against the United States Holder’s US tax liability to the extent we are not required to

pay over the amount withheld to the Dutch Tax Administration. Currently, a Dutch corporation that receives dividends

from qualifying non-Dutch subsidiaries may credit source country tax withheld from those dividends against Dutch

withholding tax imposed on a dividend paid by a Dutch corporation, up to a maximum of 3.0% of the dividend paid

by the Dutch corporation. The credit reduces the amount of dividend withholding that we are required to pay to the

Dutch Tax Administration but does not reduce the amount of tax we are required to withhold from dividends.

For US foreign tax credit purposes, dividends paid by us generally will be treated as foreign-source income and as

‘passive category income’ (or in the case of certain holders, as ‘general category income’). Gains or losses realized

by a United States Holder on the sale or exchange of ordinary shares generally will be treated as US-source gain or

loss. The rules governing the foreign tax credit are complex and we suggest that each United States Holder consult

his or her own tax adviser to determine whether, and to what extent, a foreign tax credit will be available.

Dividends received by a United States Holder will generally be taxed at ordinary income tax rates. However, the Jobs

and Growth Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2003, as amended by the Working Families Tax Relief Act of 2004, the

American Jobs Creation Act of 2004, the American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012, and most recently the 2017 tax

reform act (Public Law No. 115-97) reduces to 20.0% the maximum tax rate for certain dividends received by

individuals, so long as certain exclusions do not apply and the stock has been held for at least 60 days during the

121-day period beginning 60 days before the ex-dividend date. Dividends received from ‘qualified foreign

corporations’ generally qualify for the reduced rate. A non-US corporation (other than a passive foreign investment

company) generally will be considered to be a qualified foreign corporation if: (i) the shares of the non-US corporation

are readily tradable on an established securities market in the US or (ii) the non-US corporation is eligible for the

benefits of a comprehensive income tax treaty with the US that has been identified as a qualifying treaty and contains

an exchange of information program. In addition, subject to income limitations, dividends received by US individuals

and US residents, estates and trusts will be subject to a Net Investment Income Tax (NIIT) assessed at the rate of

3.8%. Individual United States Holders should consult their tax advisers regarding the impact of this provision on their

particular situations.

Dividends paid by us generally will constitute ‘portfolio income’ for purposes of the limitations on the use of passive

activity losses (and, therefore, generally may not be offset by passive activity losses) and as ‘investment income’ for

purposes of the limitation on the deduction of investment interest expense.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 OTHER APPENDICES CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 333
Appendix - Dutch and US taxation (continued)

Taxation on sale or other disposition of ordinary shares

Upon a sale or other disposition of ordinary shares, a United States Holder will generally recognize capital gain or loss

for US federal income tax purposes in an amount equal to the difference between the amount realized, if paid in US

dollars, or the US dollar value of the amount realized (determined at the spot rate on the settlement date of the sale) if

proceeds are paid in currency other than the US dollar, as the case may be, and the United States Holder’s US tax

basis (determined in US dollars) in such ordinary shares. Generally, the capital gain or loss will be long-term capital

gain or loss if the holding period of the United States Holder in the ordinary shares exceeds one year at the time of

the sale or other disposition. The deductibility of capital losses is subject to limitations for US federal income tax

purposes. Gain or loss from the sale or other disposition of ordinary shares generally will be treated as US source

income or loss for US foreign tax credit purposes. Generally, any gain or loss resulting from currency fluctuations

during the period between the date of the sale of the ordinary shares and the date the sale proceeds are converted

into US dollars will be treated as ordinary income or loss from sources within the US. Each United States Holder

should consult his or her tax adviser with regard to the translation rules applicable when computing its adjusted US

tax basis and the amount realized upon a sale or other disposition of its ordinary shares if purchased in, or sold or

disposed of for, a currency other than the US dollar.

Information reporting and backup withholding

Information returns may be filed with the IRS in connection with payments on the ordinary shares or proceeds from a

sale, redemption or other disposition of the ordinary shares. A ‘backup withholding’ tax may be applied to, and

withheld from, these payments if the beneficial owner fails to provide a correct taxpayer identification number to the

paying agent and to comply with certain certification procedures or otherwise establish an exemption from backup

withholding. Any amounts withheld under the backup withholding rules might be refunded (or credited against the

beneficial owner’s US federal income tax liability, if any) depending on the facts and provided that the required

information is furnished to the IRS.

The discussion set out above is included for general information only and may not be applicable depending upon a

holder’s particular situation. Holders should consult their tax advisers with respect to the tax consequences to them

of the purchase, ownership and disposition of shares including the tax consequences under state, local and other tax

laws and the possible effects of changes in US federal and other tax laws.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 OTHER APPENDICES CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 334
Appendix - Dutch and US taxation (continued)

Financing policy

We continue to hold on to our long-held prudent financing policy, which is based on three foundational elements:

•Liquidity: Maintain sufficient liquidity to ensure continued business growth and to provide buffer for cash flow

volatility

•Capital structure: Maintain a capital structure that targets a solid investment-grade credit rating

•Cash return: Provide a sustainable dividend per share that will grow over time, paid quarterly, while returning

excess cash to shareholders through share buybacks or capital repayment

Liquidity

Our principal sources of liquidity consist of cash and cash equivalents, short-term investments and available credit

facilities. In addition, we may from time to time raise additional funding in debt and equity markets. We seek to

ensure that our principal sources of liquidity will be sufficient to satisfy our liquidity requirements at all times.

Our liquidity needs are affected by many factors, some of which are based on the normal ongoing operations of

the business, and others relate to uncertainties of the global economy and the semiconductor industry. Although

our cash requirements fluctuate based on the timing and extent of these factors, we believe that cash generated

from operations, together with our other sources of liquidity are sufficient to satisfy our requirements, including our

expected capital expenditures, R&D expenses and debt servicing.

We invest our cash and cash equivalents and short-term investments in short-term deposits with financial

institutions, governments and government-related bodies that have investment-grade credit ratings and in money

market and other investment funds that invest in high-rated short- and medium-term debt securities. Our

investments are mainly denominated in euros and to some extent in US dollars, Taiwanese dollars and Chinese

yuan.

Year ended December 31 (€, in millions) 2022 2023
Deposits with financial institutions, governments and government-related bodies 2,548.1 1,348.7
Investments in money market funds 3,196.7 3,167.4
Bank accounts 1,523.5 2,488.6
Cash and cash equivalents 7,268.3 7,004.7
Deposits with financial institutions, governments and government-related bodies 107.7 5.4
Short-term investments 107.7 5.4

We maintain an available committed credit facility maturing in July 2026, with a group of banks, of €700.0 million,

under which no amounts were outstanding at the end of 2023 and 2022. This facility has a maturity date of July

2026.

Capital structure

Our objectives when managing our capital structure are to safeguard our ability to satisfy our capital providers by

maintaining a capital structure that ensures liquidity and supports a solid investment-grade credit rating. The

capital structure includes both debt and the components of equity, in accordance with both US GAAP and EU-

IFRS. The capital structure is mainly altered by, among other things, our financial results, adjusting the amount of

dividends paid to shareholders, the amount of share buybacks or capital repayment, and any changes in the level

of debt. Our capital structure is formally reviewed with the Supervisory Board each year in connection with our

updated long-term financial plan and relevant scenarios. The outcome of this year’s review confirmed to maintain

our existing financing policy in relation to our capital structure.

Our current credit rating from Moody’s is A2 (Stable) and from Fitch is A (Stable), which is consistent with the

ratings on December 31, 2022.

We have Eurobonds outstanding with an aggregate principal amount of €4.8 billion, having the following

maturities:

Outstanding Eurobond Maturity Amounts

(The 2032 bond of 500 million euros is a green bond)

22539988382671

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 OTHER APPENDICES CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 335
Appendix - Financing policy

Cash return policy

ASML aims to distribute a dividend that will be growing over time, paid quarterly. On an annual basis, the Board of

Management, upon prior approval from the Supervisory Board, submits a proposal to the AGM with respect to the

amount of dividend to be declared with respect to the prior year, taking into account any interim dividend

distributions. The dividend proposal in any given year will be subject to availability of distributable profits, retained

earnings and cash, and may be affected by, among other things, our view of potential future liquidity requirements

including for investments in production capacity, working capital requirements, the funding of our R&D programs

and acquisition opportunities that may arise from time to time and by future changes in applicable tax and

corporate laws (for example plans of Dutch government to tax share buybacks).

ASML intends to declare a total dividend in respect of 2023 of €6.10 per ordinary share. Recognizing the interim

dividends of €1.45 per ordinary share paid in August 2023, November 2023 and February 2024, this leads to a

final dividend proposal to the General Meeting of €1.75 per ordinary share. The total 2023 dividend is a 5.2%

increase compared to the 2022 total dividend of €5.80 per ordinary share.

In addition to dividend payments, we intend to return cash to our shareholders on a regular basis through share

buybacks or capital repayment, subject to our actual and anticipated level of liquidity requirements and other

relevant factors.

On November 10, 2022, we announced a new share buyback program to be executed by December 31, 2025.

As part of this program, ASML intends to repurchase shares up to an amount of €12 billion, of which we expect a

total of up to 2 million shares will be used to cover employee share plans. ASML intends to cancel the remainder

of the shares repurchased. The new program has replaced the previous €9 billion share buyback program

2021-2023 which was completed on October 18, 2022. The share buyback program may be suspended,

modified or discontinued at any time.

In 2023, we repurchased 1,620,128 shares (2022: 8,538,787 shares) for a total consideration of 1,000.0 million

(2022: 4,639.7 million), all of which were purchased under the new program. In 2023, we canceled 3,553,815

shares (2022: 3,337,825 shares canceled), all of which were purchased under the 2021-2023 program.

Dividend per share history

(Dividend for a year is paid in the subsequent year, except interim)

511

Cumulative cash returns<br><br>(Cash return is cumulative share buyback + dividend)

512

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 OTHER APPENDICES CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 336
Appendix - Financing policy (continued)

Our business is subject to direct and indirect regulations in each of the countries in which our customers or we do

business, and changes in various types of regulations can affect our business adversely. As our business has

expanded, we have become subject to increasing and increasingly complex regulation. Such regulations include

environmental regulation, workplace safety regulation, regulation under securities laws and stock exchange rules,

anti-corruption regulation, anti-trust regulation, national security regulations, trade restrictions, export controls

including licensing or authorization requirements, requirements to obtain authorizations for use of US technology and

for employees producing and developing such technology. The implementation of new, and changes in enforcement

of, safety, environmental or other legal requirements, including export controls and required permits and licenses or

changes in interpretation, implementation or enforcement of such regulations and requirements, could impact our

products, our manufacturing or distribution processes or location of sales and where we can deliver our products and

services, and could affect the timing of product introductions, the cost of our production, and products as well as

their commercial success in each market in which we operate. The impact of these regulations and enforcement

thereof could adversely affect our business, financial condition and our results of operations even where the specific

regulations do not directly apply to us or to our products.

Read more in Risk - Risk factors - 6. Legal and compliance.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 OTHER APPENDICES CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 337
Appendix - Government regulation

Our ordinary shares are listed for trading in the form of registered ASML Nasdaq shares and in the form of registered

ASML Euronext Amsterdam shares. The principal trading market of our ordinary shares is Euronext Amsterdam

(trading symbol: ASML). Our ordinary shares also trade on Nasdaq (trading symbol: ASML).

Our shares listed on Nasdaq are registered with JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A., our New York Transfer Agent, pursuant

to the terms of the Transfer Agent Agreement between ASML and JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A. Our shares listed on

Euronext Amsterdam are held in dematerialized form through the facilities of Euroclear Nederland, the Dutch

centralized securities custody and administration system. The New York Transfer Agent charges shareholders a fee

of up to USD 5.00 per 100 shares for the exchange of our shares listed at Nasdaq for our shares listed at Euronext

Amsterdam and vice versa.

Dividends payable on our shares listed at Nasdaq are declared in euro and converted to US dollars at the rate of

exchange at the close of business on the date determined by the Board of Management. The resulting amounts are

distributed through the New York Transfer Agent and no charge is payable by holders of our shares listed at Nasdaq

in connection with this conversion or distribution.

Pursuant to the terms of the Transfer Agent Agreement, we have agreed to reimburse the New York Transfer Agent

for certain out of pocket expenses, including in connection with any mailing of notices, reports or other

communications made generally available by ASML to holders of ordinary shares. The New York Transfer Agent has

waived its fees associated with routine services to ASML associated with our shares listed at Nasdaq. In addition, the

New York Transfer Agent in consideration of its acting as Transfer Agent has agreed to make a contribution towards

covering certain expenses incurred by ASML in connection with the issuance and transfer of our shares listed on

Nasdaq. In the year ended December 31, 2023, the Transfer Agent contributed USD 0.6 million towards coverage of

expenses incurred by ASML (which mainly comprised of audit, advisory, legal and listing fees incurred due to the

existence of our share listing on Nasdaq).

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 OTHER APPENDICES CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 338
Appendix - Offer and listing details

Cash distributions, if any, payable in euros on our shares listed at Euronext Amsterdam may be officially transferred

by a bank from the Netherlands and converted into any other currency without being subject to any Dutch legal

restrictions. However, for statistical purposes, such payments and transactions must be reported by ASML to the

Dutch Central Bank. Furthermore, no payments, including dividend payments, may be made to jurisdictions subject

to certain sanctions, adopted by the government of the Netherlands, implementing resolutions of the Security Council

of the United Nations. Cash distributions, if any, on our shares listed at Nasdaq shall be declared in euros but paid in

US dollars, converted at the rate of exchange at the close of business on the date fixed for that purpose by the Board

of Management in accordance with the Articles of Association.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 OTHER APPENDICES CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 339
Appendix - Exchange controls

We are subject to certain reporting requirements of the Exchange Act. As a “foreign private issuer”, we are exempt

from the rules under the Exchange Act prescribing certain disclosure and procedural requirements for proxy

solicitations, and our officers, directors and principal shareholders are exempt from the reporting and “short-swing”

profit recovery provisions contained in Section 16 of the Exchange Act, with respect to their purchases and sales of

shares. In addition, we are not required to file reports and financial statements with the SEC as frequently or as

promptly as companies whose securities are registered under the Exchange Act that are not foreign private issuers.

However, we are required to file with the SEC, within four months after the end of each fiscal year, an Annual Report

on Form 20-F containing financial statements audited by an independent accounting firm and interactive data

comprising financial statements in extensible business reporting language. We publish unaudited interim financial

information in accordance with US GAAP after the end of each quarter. We furnish this quarterly financial information

to the SEC under cover of a Form 6-K.

Documents we file with the SEC are publicly available on the SEC’s website, which contains reports and other

information regarding registrants that are required to file electronically with the SEC. The address of this website is

http://www.sec.gov.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 OTHER APPENDICES CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 340
Appendix - Documents on display

Disclosure controls and procedures

As of December 31, 2023, ASML’s senior management conducted an evaluation, under the supervision and with the

participation of ASML’s CEO and CFO, of the effectiveness of the design and operation of ASML’s disclosure

controls and procedures (as defined in Rule 13a-15(e) under the Exchange Act). Based on such evaluation, ASML’s

CEO and CFO have concluded that, as of December 31, 2023, ASML’s disclosure controls and procedures are

effective in recording, processing, summarizing and reporting, on a timely basis, information required to be disclosed

by ASML in the reports that it files or submits under the Exchange Act and are effective in ensuring that information

required to be disclosed by ASML is accumulated and communicated to ASML’s management, including ASML’s

CEO and CFO, as appropriate to allow timely decisions regarding required disclosure.

Management’s report on internal control over financial reporting

ASML’s management is responsible for establishing and maintaining adequate internal control over financial

reporting, as defined in Rule 13a-15(f) under the Exchange Act. Under the supervision and with the participation of

ASML’s CEO and CFO, ASML’s management conducted an evaluation of the effectiveness of ASML’s internal

control over financial reporting as of December 31, 2023, based upon the framework in “Internal Control – Integrated

Framework” (2013) issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission. Based on

that evaluation, management has concluded that ASML’s internal control over financial reporting was effective as of

December 31, 2023, at providing reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the

preparation of the Financial Statements for external purposes in conformity with US GAAP.

KPMG Accountants NV, an independent registered public accounting firm, have audited the Financial Statements as

included in this Annual Report and, have also audited and issued a report, included herein, on the effectiveness of

ASML’s internal control over financial reporting.

Changes in internal control over financial reporting

During the year ended December 31, 2023, there have been no changes in our internal control over financial

reporting that have materially affected, or are reasonably likely to materially affect, our internal control over financial

reporting.

Inherent limitations of disclosure controls and procedures in internal control over

financial reporting

It should be noted that any system of controls, however well-designed and operated, can provide only reasonable,

and not absolute, assurance that the objectives of the system will be met. In addition, the design of any control

system is based in part upon certain assumptions about the likelihood of future events.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 OTHER APPENDICES CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 341
Appendix - Controls and procedures

Financial Calendar

April 17, 2024

Announcement of First Quarter results for

2024

April 24, 2024

Annual General Meeting

July 17, 2024

Announcement of Second Quarter results for

2024

October 16, 2024

Announcement of Third Quarter results for 2024

Fiscal Year

ASML’s fiscal year ends on December 31, 2024

Investor Relations

ASML Investor Relations supplies information regarding the company and its business opportunities to investors and

financial analysts. Our annual reports, quarterly releases and other information are also available on our website.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 OTHER APPENDICES CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 342
Appendix - Financial calendar and investor relations

Corporate Headquarters

De Run 6501

5504 DR Veldhoven

The Netherlands

Mailing Address

P.O. Box 324

5500 AH Veldhoven

The Netherlands

Investor Relations

phone: +31 40 268 3938

email: investor.relations@asml.com

For additional contact information please visit asml.com

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 OTHER APPENDICES CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 343
Appendix - ASML contact information
Item Form 20-F Caption Location in this document Page
--- --- --- ---
Part I
1 Identity of Directors, Senior Management<br><br>and Advisors Not applicable
2 Offer Statistics and Expected Timetable Not applicable
3 Key Information
B.  Capitalization and Indebtedness Not applicable
C.  Reasons for the Offer and Use of Proceeds Not applicable
D.  Risk Factors Risk - Risk factors 55
4 Information on the Company
A.  History and Development of the Company Cover Page 1
At a glance 8
Appendix - Property, plant and equipment 329
Appendix - Documents on display 340
Appendix - ASML contact information 343
B.  Business Overview At a glance 8
Marketplace 24
Note 2 Revenue from contracts with customers 254
Note 3 Segment disclosure 259
Appendix - Government regulation 337
C.  Organizational Structure Corporate Governance - Compliance with<br><br>Corporate Governance requirements -<br><br>Corporate Information 195
D.  Property, Plant and Equipment Note 13 Property, plant and equipment, net 267
Appendix - Property, plant and equipment 329
4A Unresolved Staff Comments Not applicable
5 Operating and Financial<br><br>Review and Prospects
A.  Operating Results Financial performance - Performance KPIs 43
B.  Liquidity and Capital Resources Financial performance - Performance KPIs 43
Financing policy 335
Consolidated Statements of Cash Flows 253
Note 4 Cash and cash equivalents and<br><br>short-term investments 260
Note 16 Long-term debt and interest and<br><br>other costs 271 Item Form 20-F Caption Location in this document Page
--- --- --- ---
Note 17 Commitments and contingencies 273
Note 25 Financial risk management 288
C.  Research and Development, Patents and Licenses, etc. Q&A with the CTO 20
How we innovate 22
Financial performance - Research and<br><br>development costs 45
Innovation ecosystem 137
Information Security - Intellectual Property<br><br>protection 170
D.  Trend Information Long-term growth opportunities 48
Risk - Risk factors 55
E.  Critical Accounting Estimates Consolidated Financial Statements - Notes<br><br>to the Consolidated Financial Statements -<br><br>Note 1 General information / summary of<br><br>general accounting policies 254
6 Directors, Senior Management and Employees
A.  Directors and Senior Management Corporate Governance 179
B.  Compensation Remuneration Report 217
C.  Board Practices Corporate Governance 179
Corporate Governance – Supervisory Board<br><br>Report – Supervisory Board committees 206
D.  Employees Social - Attractive workplace for all 107
E.  Share Ownership Corporate Governance - AGM and share<br><br>capital - Major shareholders 192
Remuneration Report - Board of<br><br>Management remuneration 224
Note 20 Share-based compensation 276
F. Disclosure of a Registrant’s Action to Recover<br><br>Erroneously Awarded Compensation Not applicable
7 Major Shareholders and Related Party Transactions
A.  Major Shareholders Corporate Governance - AGM and share<br><br>capital - Major shareholders 192
B.  Related Party Transactions Note 26 Related parties and variable<br><br>interest entities 294
C.  Interests of Experts & Counsel Not applicable
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 OTHER APPENDICES CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 344
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Appendix - Reference table 20-F
Item Form 20-F Caption Location in this document Page
--- --- --- ---
8 Financial Information
A.  Consolidated Statements and Other Financial Information Consolidated Financial Statements 245
B.  Significant Changes Long-term growth opportunities 48
Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements 254
9 The Offer and Listing
A.  Offer and Listing Details Appendix - Offer and listing details 338
B.  Plan of Distribution Not applicable
C.  Markets Appendix - Offer and listing details 338
D.  Selling Shareholders Not applicable
E.  Dilution Not applicable
F.  Expenses of the Issue Not applicable
10 Additional Information
A.  Share Capital Not applicable
B.  Memorandum and Articles of Association Corporate Governance 179
C.  Material Contracts None
D.  Exchange Controls Appendix - Exchange controls 339
E.  Taxation Appendix - Dutch and US taxation 330
F.  Dividends and Paying Agents Not applicable
G.  Statement by Experts Not applicable
H.  Documents on Display Appendix - Documents on display 340
I.    Subsidiary Information Not applicable
J.  Annual Report to Security Holders Not applicable
11 Quantitative and Qualitative Disclosures About<br><br>Market Risk Note 16 Long-term debt and interest and<br><br>other costs 271
Note 25 Financial risk management 288
12 Description of Securities Other Than Equity Securities Appendix - Offer and listing details 338
Part II
13 Defaults, Dividend Arrearages and Delinquencies None
14 Material Modifications to the Rights of Security<br><br>Holders and Use of Proceeds None
15 Controls and Procedures Appendix - Controls and procedures 341 Item Form 20-F Caption Location in this document Page
--- --- --- ---
16A Audit Committee Financial Expert Supervisory Board Report - Supervisory<br><br>Board committees - Audit Committee 207
16B Code of Ethics Governance - ESG integrated governance -<br><br>Business ethics and Code of Conduct 158
16C Principal Accountant Fees and Services Appendix - Principal accountant fees and<br><br>services 328
16D Exemptions from the Listing Standards for Audit<br><br>Committees Not applicable
16E Purchases of Equity Securities by the Issuer and<br><br>Affiliated Purchasers Note 22 Shareholders’ equity 285
16F Change in Registrant’s Certifying Accountant None
16G Corporate Governance Corporate Governance – Compliance with<br><br>Corporate Governance requirements – US<br><br>listing requirements 195
16H Mine Safety Disclosure Not applicable
16I Disclosure Regarding Foreign Jurisdictions that<br><br>Prevent Inspections Not applicable
16J Insider Trading Policies Not applicable
16K Cybersecurity Risk - Risk factors 55
Governance - ESG integrated governance -<br><br>Information security 165
Part III
17 Financial Statements Not applicable
18 Financial Statements Consolidated Financial Statements 245
19 Exhibits Exhibit index 355

This document contains information required for the Annual Report on Form 20-F for the year ended December 31, 2023, of

ASML Holding NV. Reference is made to the Form 20-F cross reference table above. Only the information in this document

that is referenced in the Form 20-F cross reference table and this paragraph, this cross-reference table itself, the section

entitled Special note regarding forward looking statements and the Exhibits themselves shall be deemed to be filed with the

Securities and Exchange Commission for any purpose. Any additional information in this document which is not referenced

in the Form 20-F cross reference table, this paragraph, the section entitled Special note regarding forward looking

statements or the Exhibits themselves shall not be deemed to be incorporated by reference, shall not be part of the 2023

Annual Report on Form 20-F and is furnished to the Securities and Exchange Commission for information only.

This document also includes references to certain information contained on ASML's website: the information

contained on ASML's website is not incorporated by reference and does not form part of this document.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 OTHER APPENDICES CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 345
Appendix - Reference table 20-F (continued)

This Annual Report contains statements

relating to our approach to and interim

progress on achieving certain energy

efficiency and greenhouse gas emissions

reduction targets, including  our ambition to

achieve net zero emissions. References to

“net zero emissions” throughout this Annual

Report means reducing scope 1, 2 and 3

emissions to zero or to a residual level that is

consistent with reaching net zero emissions

at the global or sector level in eligible 1.5° C

scenarios or sector pathways and

neutralizing (or offsetting including through

carbon offsets) any residual emissions at the

net zero target date.

Unless otherwise indicated, information

contained in this Annual Report concerning

net zero emissions is based on our internal

Environmental Management System (EMS)

implemented to monitor energy use and

emissions, as well as publicly available

information, including the guidance from the

Greenhouse Gas Protocol for the calculation

of the emissions scope, the assessment

guidelines of the Task Force on Climate-

related Financial Disclosures (TCFD) and

certain market-based conversion factors.

Given such non-financial data is derived from

various sources and the way data is

processed differs across our operating

subsidiaries and departments, there is an

inherent degree of uncertainty in the

estimations of such data. You are cautioned

not to give undue weight to such data.

We appointed KPMG to provide limited

assurance over selected sustainability

metrics included in this Annual Report,

including our data and claims related to

carbon emissions, greenhouse gas

emissions reduction targets and energy

efficiency to the extent discussed in the

Assurance Report of the Independent

Auditor. Forward-looking information

concerning greenhouse gas emissions and

net zero emissions is subject to qualifications

and the uncertainties as set forth under –

Special note regarding forward looking

statements in this Annual Report.

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 OTHER APPENDICES CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 346
Appendix - Special note regarding emission targets
Name Description
--- ---
0-9
3TG Tin, tantalum, tungsten and gold
3D NAND A type of non-volatile flash memory in which the memory cells are stacked vertically in multiple<br><br>layers.
A
A&M Access & Mobility
ABC compliance review Anti-bribery and corruption compliance review
ADAS Advanced driver-assistance systems
ADI After development inspection
AFM The Dutch Authority for the Financial Markets (Autoriteit Financiële Markten)
AGM Annual General Meeting
AI Artificial intelligence
AIoT Artificial intelligence of things
Applied Materials Inc. Semiconductor equipment company
ARCNL Advanced Research Center for Nanolithography
ArF Argon fluoride
ArFi Argon fluoride immersion
ASC Accounting Standards Codification
ASC 606 Accounting Standards Codification revenue recognition
ASC 740 Accounting Standards Codification provision for income taxes
ASML ASML Holding NV and/or any of its subsidiaries and associates
ASML Foundation An independent charity with strong ties to ASML that supports educational initiatives for<br><br>disadvantaged 4- to 18-year-olds in regions where ASML operates.
ATP throughput Throughput of the measured system (in wph) according to the acceptance test protocol
B
BAPA Bilateral advance pricing agreements
Big data Extremely large data sets that may be analyzed computationally to reveal patterns, trends and<br><br>associations.
Big Four accounting<br><br>firms Deloitte, Ernst & Young, KPMG and PricewaterhouseCoopers
BoM Board of Management
BOM Brabantse Ontwikkelings Maatschappij Name Description
--- ---
Bradley Curve Illustrates the relationship between accidents and corporate culture
Brainport Eindhoven A technology region in the south of the Netherlands comprising companies, educational<br><br>institutions and governmental organizations.
BREEAM Building Research Establishment Environmental Assessment Method
Brion Brion Technologies, Inc.
C
CAGR Compound annual growth rate
Canon Canon Kabushiki Kaisha
CAPEX Capital expenditures, defined as additions in property, plant and equipment plus additions in<br><br>intangible assets plus additions in right-of-use assets (operating and finance).
Capital resources Financial, manufactured, intellectual, human, social and relationship, and natural elements<br><br>employed to produce goods and services.
Carl Zeiss SMT Carl Zeiss SMT GmbH
Cash conversion rate An economic statistic in controlling that represents the relationship between cash flow and net<br><br>profit.
CBO Chief Business Officer
CCIP Customer Co-investment Program
CCPA California Consumer Privacy Act (US)
CCR % Cash conversion rate percentage
CD Critical dimension
CDP The Carbon Disclosure Project
CEO Chief Executive Officer
CERN The European Organization for Nuclear Research
CFO Chief Financial Officer
CGU Cash-generating unit
CGU ASML ASML excluding CGU Cymer Light Sources
CHIPS and Science Act The Creating Helpful Incentives to Produce Semiconductors and Science Act of 2022 (CHIPS<br><br>Act), signed into law in August 2022, designed to boost US competitiveness, innovation and<br><br>national security.
CISO Chief Information Security Officer
CIT Corporate income tax
CLA Collective labor agreement
Cleanroom The central part of a wafer fab where wafers are processed and the environment is carefully<br><br>controlled to eliminate dust and other contaminants.
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 DEFINITIONS STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 347
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Definitions
Name Description
--- ---
CMD Capital Markets Day
CMO Chief Marketing Officer
CMOS Complementary metal–oxide semiconductor
CO2(e) Carbon dioxide (equivalent)
Code The Dutch Corporate Governance Code
Code of Conduct Code of ethics and conduct
Company ASML Holding NV
Computational<br><br>lithography The use of powerful algorithms and computer modeling of the manufacturing process to optimize<br><br>reticle patterns by intentionally deforming them to compensate for physical and chemical effects<br><br>that occur during lithography and patterning.
COO Chief Operations Officer
COSO Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission
COVID-19 Coronavirus disease 2019
CRC ASML’s corporate risk committee
CRE Corporate Real Estate department of ASML
CRMC Capital Research & Management Company
CSPO Chief Strategic Sourcing & Procurement Officer
CSRD Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive
CTO Chief Technology Officer
Cyber<br><br>Weerbaarheidscentrum<br><br>Brainport Foundation in the Brainport Eindhoven region that offers companies in the high-tech and<br><br>manufacturing industry the opportunity to enhance their protection against cybercrime.
Cymer Cymer Inc., Cymer LLC and its subsidiaries
D
D&E Development and engineering
DEFRA Department for Environment, Food & Rural Affairs
Deloitte Deloitte Accountants BV
D&I Diversity and inclusion
DJSI Dow Jones Sustainability Index
DRAM Dynamic random-access memory
DUV Deep ultraviolet Name Description
--- ---
DUV immersion fast<br><br>shipment A process that reduces some of the testing in our factory. Customer acceptance after the<br><br>reduced factory acceptance test (FAT) is considered to be proven for established technologies<br><br>with a history of successful customer acceptances after the site acceptance test (SAT). Transfer<br><br>of control for these systems and recognition of revenue related to these systems has occurred<br><br>upon delivery of the systems.
E
EAC Energy attribute certificates
EBIT Earnings before interest and taxes
EHS Environment, health and safety
EHS Competence<br><br>Center A group within ASML that defines EHS standards, gathers best practices and helps managers<br><br>implement them.
EIM External interface module
EMEA Europe, the Middle East and Africa
EMS Environmental management system
EPE Edge placement error
EPS Earnings per share
ERM Enterprise risk management
ERP Enterprise resource planning system
ESA European Space Agency
eScan ASML’s e-beam wafer inspection system family for targeted in-line defect detection.
ESG Environmental, social and governance
ESG score An integrated scoring system for environmental, social and governance (ESG) factors used in<br><br>credit rating decisions.
ETR Effective tax rate
EU European Union
EU-IFRS International Financial Reporting Standards as adopted by the European Union
EXE - EUV 0.55 NA High numerical aperture, specifically a next-generation EUV lithography platform, also referred to<br><br>as EUV 0.55 NA.
Euribor Euro Interbank Offered Rate
Eurobond A bond denominated in euros
Euroclear Nederland The Dutch Central Securities Depository (Nederlands Centraal Instituut voor Giraal<br><br>Effectenverkeer BV)
Euronext Amsterdam Euronext Amsterdam NV
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 DEFINITIONS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 348
--- --- --- --- --- ---
Definitions (continued)
Name Description
--- ---
EUV A lithography technology that uses extreme ultraviolet (EUV) light with a wavelength of 13.5 nm –<br><br>this is currently the cutting edge of lithography, enabling technology nodes of 16 nm and beyond.
EVP Executive Vice President
EVP HR&O Executive Vice President Human Resources & Organization
Exchange Act US Securities Exchange Act of 1934
F
Fab Semiconductor fabrication plant
FAQ Frequently asked questions
Farmout suppliers Our suppliers that we work with as co-investors
Fast shipment A fast shipment process skips some of the testing in our factory and provides our customers with<br><br>earlier access to wafer output capacity. When customer acceptance at FAT is not proven, this<br><br>leads to a deferral of revenue recognition until SAT
FAT Factory acceptance test
FDII Foreign-derived intangible income
Feature The elements that make up the pattern for a given layer of a microchip.
FFHA Foundation for Hospital Art
Fitch A leading provider of credit ratings, commentary and research for global capital markets.
Flash A type of non-volatile memory used for storing and transferring information
Foundry A contract manufacturer of logic chips
Fraunhofer Applied research organization in Germany
FTEs Full-time equivalents
FTSE4Good Series of ethical investment stock market indices launched in 2001 by the FTSE Group.
G
G-SEED Green Standard for Energy and Environmental Design
GAAP Generally accepted accounting principles
GDP Gross domestic product
GDPR General data protection regulation
Gemba Walk The Gemba Walk is an opportunity for staff to stand back from their day-to-day tasks to walk the<br><br>floor of their workplace to identify wasteful activities.
GeSI Global e-Sustainability Initiative
GHG Greenhouse gas
GPU Graphics processing unit Name Description
--- ---
GQLTCS General, quality, logistics, technology, cost and sustainability
GRI Global Reporting Initiative
GRI standards GRI sustainability reporting standards
H
H2 Molecular hydrogen
HDD Hard disk drive
HMI The brand name for ASML’s range of electron beam (e-beam) wafer inspection and metrology<br><br>systems
Holistic lithography Our approach to optimizing the entire microchip printing process and enabling affordable scaling<br><br>in chip technology by integrating lithography systems with computational modeling and wafer<br><br>metrology and inspection solutions to analyze and control the manufacturing process in real time
Horizon Europe<br><br>Program A public-private partnership that facilitates collaboration and strengthens the impact of research<br><br>and innovation in developing, supporting and implementing EU policies while tackling global<br><br>challenges
HR&O Human Resources & Organization
HTSC High Tech Systems Center
Huisman Huisman Equipment BV
HVAC Heating, ventilation and air conditioning
I
IAS International accounting standards
IBM Installed base management
IC Integrated circuit
ICT Information and communication technology
ID2PPAC Integration of processes and modules for the 2 nm node meeting Power Performance Area and<br><br>Cost requirements
IDM Integrated device manufacturer
IEA International Energy Agency
IFRS International financial reporting standards
IIRC International Integrated Reporting Council
i-line Light with a wavelength of 365 nm, generated by mercury vapor lamps and used in some<br><br>lithography systems.
ILO International Labor Organization
Imaging The transfer of a pattern onto the photoresist on a wafer using light.
imec Interuniversitair Micro-Elektronica Centrum
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 DEFINITIONS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 349
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Definitions (continued)
Name Description
--- ---
Immersion lithography A lithography technique that uses a pool of ultrapure water between the lens and the wafer to<br><br>increase the lenses numerical aperture (ability to collect and focus light). This improves both the<br><br>resolution and depth of focus for the lithography system.
Inclusion Index The overall score related to the questions included in the we@ASML survey that specifically relate<br><br>to ‘inclusion'.
Industrial site Industrial buildings and offices combined at one location
Intel Intel Corporation
Internal Control -<br><br>Integrated Framework<br><br>2013 Criteria issued by the Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission.
Internet of Things (IoT) A network of physical objects embedded with sensors, actuators, electronics and software that<br><br>allow the objects to collect and exchange data.
IP Intellectual property
IPR Intellectual property rights
IRA Inflation Reduction Act of 2022
I-REC International renewable energy certificate
IRS Internal Revenue Service of the United States
ISO International Organization for Standardization
IT2 IC Technology for the 2 nm Node (EU project)
J
JG13+ Job grade 13 and higher
JP Morgan Chase US-based holder of our New York share register
K
KLA-Tencor KLA-Tencor Corporation
KPI Key performance indicator
KPMG KPMG Accountants NV
K-Reach Act on the Registration and Evaluation of Chemicals in South Korea
KrF Krypton fluoride
kt Kilotonne or 1,000 tonnes (1 tonne = unit of mass equal to 1,000 kilograms)
kWh Kilowatt-hour
L
LED Light-emitting diode Name Description
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LEED Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design
LGBTQIA+ Lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, intersex, asexual and other identities
LIBOR London Interbank Offered Rate
Lithography Lithography, or photolithography, is the process in microchip manufacturing that uses light to<br><br>pattern parts on a silicon wafer.
Logic Integrated devices such as microprocessors, microcontrollers and GPUs. Also refers to<br><br>companies that manufacture such devices.
LTI Long-term incentive
LXP Learning eXperience Platform
M
MBA Master of Business Administration
Memory Microchips, such as NAND Flash and DRAM, that store information. Also refers to companies<br><br>that manufacture such chips.
Metalektro Multi-employer union plan is managed by PME (Stichting Pensioenfonds van de Metalektro).
Metrology The science of weights and measures or of measurement.
mm Millimeter (one thousandth of a meter)
MNP Make Next Platform
Moody's An American credit rating agency that provides corporate ratings.
MPS Mature Products and Services
MSCI Morgan Stanley Capital International
Mt Megatonne, a metric unit equivalent to 1 million (106) tonnes, or 1 billion (109) kilograms
MW Megawatt, a metric unit equivalent to one million (106) watt
N
NA Numerical aperture
NAND A binary logical operator that gives an output when it receives one or no input; a composite of<br><br>‘NOT AND’.
Nanoscale The nanoscopic scale (or nanoscale) usually refers to structures with a length scale applicable to<br><br>nanotechnology, usually cited as 1–100 nanometers.
Nasdaq Nasdaq Stock Market LLC
Net bookings Net bookings include all system sales orders and inflation related adjustments, for which written<br><br>authorizations have been accepted.
Net zero emissions Reaching a state of net zero emissions involves: (a) reducing scope 1, 2 and 3 emissions to zero<br><br>or to a residual level that is consistent with reaching net-zero emissions at the global or sector<br><br>level in eligible 1.5°C scenarios or sector pathways and; (b) neutralizing any residual emissions at<br><br>the net zero target date and any GHG emissions released into the atmosphere thereafter.
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 DEFINITIONS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 350
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Definitions (continued)
Name Description
--- ---
NGO Nongovernmental organization
NIIT Net investment income tax
Nikon Nikon Corporation
NL The Netherlands
nm Nanometer (one billionth of a meter)
Node A stepping stone in the chipmaking industry’s roadmap for smaller features and more advanced<br><br>microchips, describes and differentiates generations of semiconductor manufacturing<br><br>technologies and the chips made with them. Nodes with 'smaller sizes' refer to more advanced<br><br>technologies.
Non-GAAP A measure of a company’s historical or future financial performance, financial position or cash<br><br>flows that are not calculated or presented in accordance with the GAAP.
NPR Non-product-related
NRE Non-recurring engineering
NV Naamloze vennootschap, referred to as NV
NXE - EUV 0.33 NA A dual-stage stepper based on the NXT platform powered by an extreme UV-based light source<br><br>at 13.5 nm wavelength to enable resolution of 13 nm half pitch and beyond, also referred to as<br><br>EUV 0.33 NA.
NXE fast shipment A process that reduces some of the testing in our factory. Final testing and formal acceptance<br><br>then takes place at the customer site. This leads to a deferral of revenue recognition for those<br><br>shipments until formal customer acceptance, but does provide our customers with earlier access<br><br>to wafer output capacity.
NXT An enhanced version of the original TWINSCAN system platform offering significantly improved<br><br>overlay and productivity.
O
OCI Other comprehensive income
ODM Original design manufacturer
OECD Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development
OEM Original equipment manufacturer
ONE ASML’s Our New Enterprise program, which aims to improve our business processes and IT<br><br>enterprise management system.
Operations employees Customer support and Manufacturing and Supply Chain Management employees
Overlay The layer-to-layer alignment of chip structures
P
P&L Statement of profit and loss
PAS Philips Automatic Stepper Name Description
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Pattern fidelity A holistic measure of how well the desired pattern is reproduced on the wafer.
Pattern fidelity control A holistic approach to controlling the whole process of manufacturing advanced microchips in<br><br>high volumes that aims to improve overall yields. It draws data from production equipment and<br><br>computational lithography tools, analyzing it with techniques such as machine learning to provide<br><br>real-time feedback.
Patterning The process of creating a pattern in a surface to build microchips.
PCAOB Public Company Accounting Oversight Board
PFAS Perfluoroalkyl chemicals
PGP Product generation process
Philips Health technology company, headquartered in the Netherlands
PHLX Index Semiconductor sector index
PIN3S Pilot Integration of 3 nm Semiconductor Technology
PIs Performance indicators
PME Bedrijfstakpensioenfonds Metalektro
Preference shares<br><br>foundation Stichting Preferente Aandelen ASML
Preference share option An option to acquire cumulative preference shares in our capital.
Q
Q&As Questions and answers
R
R&D Research and development
RBA Responsible Business Alliance
RC ASML’s Remuneration Committee
REACH Registration, evaluation, authorization and restriction of chemicals
Recoverable amount The greater out of an asset’s fair value less costs to sell and its value in use.
REMA EUV reticle masking module
Remuneration Policy The remuneration policy applicable to the Board of Management of ASML Holding NV
Reticle A plate containing the pattern of features to be transferred to the wafer for each exposure.
ROAIC Return on average invested capital
RoHS Restriction of hazardous substances
S
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 DEFINITIONS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 351
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Definitions (continued)
Name Description
--- ---
Standard & Poor's A stock index of the United States that, due to its broad composition, gives a reliable picture of<br><br>developments in the American stock market.
Samsung Samsung Electronics Corporation
SAQ Self-assessment questionnaire
Sarbanes-Oxley Act The Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
SAT Site acceptance test
SB ASML’s Supervisory Board
SBTi Science-Based Targets initiative
Scope 1 CO2e<br><br>emissions Direct carbon dioxide emissions from resources an organization owns or controls
Scope 2 CO2e<br><br>emissions Indirect carbon dioxide emissions due to the energy an organization consumes
Scope 3 CO2e<br><br>emissions All other indirect carbon dioxide emissions that occur in an organization’s value chain
Scope 3 CO2e<br><br>emissions intensity All other indirect carbon dioxide emissions that occur in an organization’s value chain expressed<br><br>as a percentage of revenue or gross profit.
SDGs United Nations' Sustainable Development Goals
SEC The United States Securities and Exchange Commission
SEMI Semiconductor Equipment and Materials International
SEMI S2 SEMI S2 – Safety Guideline, Environmental, Health and Safety Guideline for Semiconductor<br><br>Manufacturing Equipment, a set of performance-based EHS considerations for semiconductor<br><br>manufacturing equipment.
SEMI S23 SEMI S23 – Guide for Conservation of Energy, Utilities and Materials Used by Semiconductor<br><br>Manufacturing Equipment, guidelines for collecting, analyzing, and reporting energy-consuming<br><br>semiconductor manufacturing equipment utility data.
SG&A Selling, general and administrative expenses
Shrink The process of developing smaller transistors for more advanced chips.
SMART Photonics Foundry for integrated photonic circuits
SoC System on a chip
SPE Shareholders A syndicate of three banks for the purpose of leasing ASML’s headquarters in Veldhoven.
SPIE International society for optics and photonics
S&P Sourcing and procurement
SSD Solid-state drive
Springplank 040 Social care organization in Eindhoven offering support and guidance to homeless people.
SSRA Safety risk assessment Name Description
--- ---
Star level Startups accelerated by Eindhoven Startup alliance / HighTechXL that show a multiple of<br><br>investment of above 10 times.
STEM Science, technology, engineering and mathematics
STI Short-term incentive
STR Stichting Technology Rating, a non-profit organization
Sub fab Located under the cleanroom floor, the sub fab contains auxiliary equipment such as the drive<br><br>laser.
SWOT Strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats
T
TAPES3 Technology Advances for Pilot line of Enhanced Semiconductors for 3 nm
TC ASML’s Technology Committee
TCC Total Cash Compensation
TCFD Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures
TCJA Tax Cuts and Jobs Act
Technical competence The capabilities and spread of technical expertise among our people, and the extent to which<br><br>they are embedded in our processes and operations.
Thales NL Dutch branch of the international Thales Group
Throughput The number of wafers a system can process per hour
Tier 1 (2, 3) supplier Tier 1 suppliers are direct suppliers, whereas Tier 2, 3 and beyond refer to suppliers of our<br><br>suppliers.
TJ Terajoule (one trillion joules)
TNO Nederlandse Organisatie voor Toegepast Natuurwetenschappelijk Onderzoek (Netherlands<br><br>Organisation for Applied Scientific Research)
Transistor A semiconductor device that is the fundamental building block of microchips
TSCA Toxic Substances Control Act
TSMC Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Ltd.
TSR Total shareholder return
TWINSCAN ASML’s unique lithography system platform, with two complete wafer stages to allow one wafer<br><br>to be mapped while another is being exposed, thereby enabling higher accuracy and throughput.
U
UNGP United Nations guiding principles
US United States
US GAAP Generally accepted accounting principles in the United States of America
US ITC United States International Trade Commission
ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 DEFINITIONS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 352
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Definitions (continued)
Name Description
--- ---
V
Vanderlande A material handling and logistics automation company based in the Netherlands
VAT Value-added tax
VIE Variable interest entity
VLSI VLSI Research Inc.
VNO-NCW The Confederation of Netherlands Industry and Employers
VOC Volatile organic compound
VP Vice president
VPA Volume purchase agreement
VPC Volume parts contract
VR Virtual reality
W
WACC Weighted average cost of capital
Wafer inspection The process of locating and analyzing individual chip defects on a wafer
Wafer metrology The process of measuring the quality of patterns on a wafer
Waste intensity The total waste in millions of kilograms (excluding construction waste) divided by revenue (in<br><br>millions of euros).
Wavelength The distance between two peaks of a wave such as light. The shorter the wavelength of light<br><br>used in a lithography system, the smaller the features the system can resolve.
Website www.asml.com
WHT Withholding tax
Works Council Works Council of ASML Netherlands BV
wph Wafers per hour
X
XTAL XTAL, Inc.
Y
YieldStar ASML’s diffraction-based wafer metrology platform
Z
ZEISS Carl Zeiss AG ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 DEFINITIONS CONTINUED STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 353
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Definitions (continued)

ASML Holding NV hereby certifies that it meets all of the requirements for filing on Form 20-F and that it has duly

caused and authorized the undersigned to sign this Annual Report on Form 20-F on its behalf.

ASML Holding NV (Registrant)

/s/ Peter T.F.M. Wennink

Name: Peter T.F.M. Wennink

Title: President, CEO and member of the Board of Management

Dated: February 14, 2024

/s/ Roger J.M. Dassen

Name: Roger J.M. Dassen

Title: Executive Vice President, CFO and member of the Board of Management

Dated: February 14, 2024

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 SIGNATURES STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 354
Signatures
Exhibit No. Description
--- ---
1.1 Articles of Association of ASML Holding NV (English translation) (dated May 12, 2022)
2.1 Description of Securities registered under Section 12 of the Exchange Act (Incorporated by reference to the<br><br>Registrant's Annual Report on Form 20-F for the year ended December 31, 2021)
4.1 Form of Indemnity Agreement between ASML Holding NV and members of its Board of Management<br><br>(Incorporated by reference to the Registrant’s Annual Report on Form 20-F for the year ended December<br><br>31, 2003)
4.2 Form of Indemnity Agreement between ASML Holding NV and members of its Supervisory Board<br><br>(Incorporated by reference to the Registrant’s Annual Report on Form 20-F for the year ended December<br><br>31, 2003)
4.3 Form of Employment Agreement for members of the Board of Management (Incorporated by reference to<br><br>the Registrant’s Annual Report on Form 20-F for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2003)
4.4 Nikon-ASML Patent Cross-License Agreement, dated December 10, 2004, between ASML Holding NV and<br><br>Nikon Corporation (Incorporated by reference to the Registrant’s Annual Report on Form 20-F for the fiscal<br><br>year ended December 31, 2014)1
4.5 ASML/Carl Zeiss Sublicense Agreement, 2004, dated December 10, 2004, between Carl Zeiss SMT AG<br><br>and ASML Holding NV (Incorporated by reference to the Registrant’s Annual Report on Form 20-F for the<br><br>fiscal year ended December 31, 2004)1
4.6 ASML Performance Stock Plan for Members of the Board of Management (Version 1) (Incorporated by<br><br>reference to the Registrant’s Registration Statement on Form S-8 filed with the SEC on July 5, 2007 (file No.<br><br>333-144356))
4.7 ASML Performance Stock Option Plan for Members of the Board of Management (Version 2) (Incorporated<br><br>by reference to the Registrant’s Registration Statement on Form S-8 filed with the Commission on July 5,<br><br>2007 (file No. 333-144356))
4.8 ASML Board of Management Umbrella Share Plan (Incorporated by reference to the Registrant’s<br><br>Registration Statement on Form S-8 filed with the SEC on April 13, 2015 (file No. 333-203390))
4.9 Partnership and Joint Venture Agreement, among Carl Zeiss AG, ASML Holding NV and Carl Zeiss SMT<br><br>Holding Management GmbH, dated 29 June 2017 (Incorporated by reference to the Registrant’s Annual<br><br>Report on Form 20-F for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2017)
4.10 Settlement and Cross License Agreement, dated February 18, 2019, among Nikon Corporation, ASML<br><br>Holding NV and Carl Zeiss SMT GmbH and, with regards to Sections 3(b) 2.2.1, 3.8, 6.3.3, 6.6, 10.6, 10.8,<br><br>10.14 and 10.15, Carl Zeiss AG  (Incorporated by reference to the Registrant’s Annual Report on Form 20-F<br><br>for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2019)3
4.11 ASML – SMT Business Agreement, dated July 21, 2021 between ASML Netherlands BV and Carl Zeiss<br><br>SMT GmbH3 Exhibit No. Description
--- ---
8.1 List of Main Subsidiaries2
12.1 Certification of CEO and CFO Pursuant to Rule 13a-14(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 19342
13.1 Certification of CEO and CFO Pursuant to Rule 13a-14(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 19342
15.1 Consent of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm2
19.1 ASML Insider Trading Rules
97.1 Clawback Policy
101.INS XBRL Instance Document2
101.SCH XBRL Taxonomy Extension Schema Document2
101.CAL XBRL Taxonomy Extension Calculation Linkbase Document2
101.DEF XBRL Taxonomy Extension Definition Linkbase Document2
101.LAB XBRL Taxonomy Extension Label Linkbase Document2
101.PRE XBRL Taxonomy Extension Presentation Linkbase Document2
104 Cover Page Interactive Data File (formatted as inline XBRL and contained in Exhibit 101)2

1.Certain information omitted pursuant to a request for confidential treatment filed separately with the SEC.

2.Filed at the SEC herewith.

3.Portions of this exhibit have been omitted because (i) they are not material and (ii) the registrant customarily and actually treats the information as

private or confidential.

As of December 31, 2023, ASML is party to six outstanding debt instruments (senior notes) under which the total

amount of securities under each individual debt instrument does not exceed 10% of the total assets of ASML and its

subsidiaries on a consolidated basis. Pursuant to paragraph 2(b) (i) of the instructions to the exhibits to Form 20-F,

ASML agrees to furnish a copy of such instruments to the SEC upon request. ASML's senior notes are:

•3.500% ASML Holding NV Fixed Rate Senior Notes due 2025 (XS2631416950);

•1.375% ASML Holding NV Fixed Rate Senior Notes due 2026 (XS1405780963);

•1.625% ASML Holding NV Fixed Rate Senior Notes due 2027 (XS1527556192);

•0.625% ASML Holding NV Fixed Rate Senior Notes due 2029 (XS2166219720);

•0.250% ASML Holding NV Fixed Rate Senior Notes due 2030 (XS2010032378); and

•2.250% ASML Holding NV Fixed Rate Senior Notes due 2032 (XS2473687106).

ASML ANNUAL REPORT 2023 EXHIBIT INDEX STRATEGIC REPORT CORPORATE GOVERNANCE FINANCIALS 355
Exhibit index

articlesofassociation

SOP/GDJ M38905627/1/74702998 UNOFFICIAL TRANSLATION ARTICLES OF ASSOCIATION of: ASML Holding N.V. with corporate seat in Veldhoven dated 12 May 2022 Name and seat. Article 1. 1.1. The name of the company is: ASML Holding N.V. 1.2. It has its corporate seat in Veldhoven. 1.3. The provisions of sections 2:158 to 2:162 inclusive and 2:164 of the Dutch Civil Code shall apply to the company. Objects. Article 2. The objects of the company are to establish, participate in, administer and finance companies and enterprises including, in particular, companies and enterprises engaged in the development, manufacture and trading of products which are used for the production of semi-conductors, especially lithographic products and systems, and the development and exploitation of technical and other expertise in the field of or in connection with the products and systems referred to above, and to do everything pertaining thereto or connected therewith, including to perform or have performed industrial, commercial and financial activities, to perform or have performed services in general, all this in the widest sense. Share capital and shares. Article 3. 3.1. The authorized share capital of the company amounts to one hundred twenty-six million euro (EUR 126,000,000), divided into seven hundred million (700,000,000) ordinary shares ("ordinary shares") with a par value of nine eurocent (EUR 0.09) each and seven hundred million (700,000,000) cumulative preference shares ("preference shares") with a par value of nine eurocents (EUR 0.09) each. 3.2. Where in these articles of association reference is made to shares and shareholders, this shall include the shares of each class as well as the holders of shares of each class respectively, unless explicitly provided otherwise. Issuance of shares. Article 4. 4.1. The board of management shall have the power to issue shares if and insofar as the board of management has been designated by the general meeting as the authorized body for this purpose. The board of management requires the approval of the supervisory board for a resolution with respect to such issuance. A designation as referred to above shall only be effective for a specific period not exceeding five years and may be extended for no longer than five years on each occasion. Exhibit 1.1


2 4.2. If and insofar as a designation as referred to in the first paragraph is not in force, the general meeting shall have the power, upon the proposal of the board of management - which proposal must be approved by the supervisory board - to resolve to issue shares. 4.3. In the event of an issuance of ordinary shares against payment in cash, holders of ordinary shares shall have a pre-emptive right in proportion to the aggregate nominal amount of the number of ordinary shares held by them. In the event of an issuance of ordinary shares issued against payment other than in cash, pre-emptive rights shall not exist. The board of management shall have the power to resolve to restrict or exclude the pre-emptive rights of these shareholders, if and insofar as the board of management has also been designated by the general meeting for this purpose as the authorized body for the period of such designation. The provisions of the second and third full sentences of the first paragraph shall apply correspondingly. 4.4. If and insofar as a designation as referred to in the third paragraph of this article is not in force, the general meeting shall have the power, upon the proposal of the board of management - which proposal must be approved by the supervisory board - to resolve to restrict or exclude the pre-emptive rights of the holders of ordinary shares. 4.5. A resolution of the general meeting in accordance with the third or fourth paragraph of this article requires a majority of at least two thirds of the votes cast if less than one half of the issued share capital is represented at the meeting. 4.6. In order for resolutions of the general meeting to issue shares or to designate the board of management, as referred to in paragraph 1 and 2 of this article, to be valid, a prior or simultaneous resolution granting approval is required from each group of holders of shares of the same class whose rights are adversely affected by the issuance. 4.7. The ordinary shares must be paid up in full when they are taken. At least a quarter of the par value shall be paid on preference shares when they are taken. Further payment on the preference shares shall be made within one month after the board of management, subject to the approval of the supervisory board, has made a corresponding request in writing to the shareholders concerned. 4.8. Payment must be made in cash, unless another manner of contribution has been agreed upon. Payment in cash may be made in a foreign currency, subject to the company's consent. The payment obligation may be fulfilled by payment in a foreign currency for the amount in Dutch currency for which the amount so paid is freely exchangeable, determined using the exchange rate on the day of payment or, after applying the provisions of the next sentence, on the day mentioned therein. The company may request that payment shall be made against the exchange rate on a certain day within two months before the last day on which payment must be made, provided the shares or depositary receipts therefor shall be recorded forthwith after the issuance in a price list of a stock exchange outside the Netherlands. 4.9. The provisions of this article shall apply accordingly to the granting of rights to subscribe for shares, but shall not apply to issuance of shares to a person who exercises a right to subscribe for shares that was previously granted. The board of management shall have the power to issue such shares. Acquisition/Disposal of shares in its own share capital. Reduction of share capital. Article 5.


3 5.1. Subject to authorization by the general meeting and with due observance of the other provisions of section 2:98 of the Dutch Civil Code, the board of management may cause the company to acquire for consideration fully paid up shares in its own share capital. 5.2. Shares thus acquired may again be disposed of. The board of management shall not acquire shares in the company's own share capital as referred to above - where an authorization as referred to above has been granted - or dispose of such shares without the approval of the supervisory board. If depositary receipts for shares in the company have been issued, such depositary receipts shall be viewed as shares for the purpose of the provisions of this paragraph and the previous paragraph. 5.3. In the general meeting no votes may be cast on a share held by the company or a subsidiary or for a share for which one of them holds depositary receipts. Nonetheless, the holders of a right of usufruct and the holders of a right of pledge on shares held by the company or a subsidiary are not excluded from the right to vote on such shares if the right of usufruct or the right of pledge was granted prior to the time such share was held by the company or the subsidiary. Neither the company nor a subsidiary may cast votes in respect of a share for which it holds a right of usufruct or a right of pledge. Shares which are not entitled to voting rights pursuant to the provisions of law or this paragraph shall not be taken into account when determining to what extent: the shareholders cast votes; the shareholders are present or represented; or the share capital has been provided or is represented. 5.4. Upon the proposal of the board of management, which proposal must have the prior approval of the supervisory board, the general meeting shall have the power to resolve to reduce the issued share capital: - by cancelling shares acquired by the company in its own share capital; - reducing the par value of the shares by amending the articles of association; - cancelling preference shares, with repayment on those preference shares; or - releasing from the obligation to make further payment on the preference shares upon implementation of a resolution to reduce the par value of the shares, in compliance with relevant provisions of the law. Shares, share certificates and share register. Article 6. 6.1. The shares shall be in registered form. No share certificates shall be issued for the preference shares and the ordinary shares of type I, as referred to in the next paragraph. 6.2. Ordinary shares shall be available: - in the form of an entry in the share register without issuance of a share certificate (such shares are referred to in these articles of association as shares of type I); - and, to the extent the board of management so decides, an entry in the share register with the issuance of a share certificate, which share certificate shall consist of a scrip without dividend sheet (such shares and share certificates are referred to in these articles of association as shares and share certificates of type II). 6.3. The board of management may decide that the registration of ordinary shares of type I shall take place for one or more numbers of shares to be further determined by it.


4 6.4. Share certificates shall be available in such numbers of ordinary shares as the board of management shall determine. 6.5. All share certificates shall be signed by or on behalf of two board of management members, as well as countersigned by one or more persons to be designated by the board of management for that purpose; the signatures may be effected by a printed version of a legible and reproducible message sent by electronic means. 6.6. All share certificates shall be identified by numbers and/or letters in a manner to be determined by the board of management. 6.7. The board of management may determine, provided with the approval of the supervisory board, that for the trade on foreign stock exchanges share certificates will be issued that comply with the requirements set by the foreign stock exchange(s). 6.8. "Share certificate" shall include in these articles of association a certificate of more than one share. 6.9. The company can, pursuant to a resolution of the board of management, subject to the approval of the supervisory board, cooperate in the issuance of certificates in bearer form. Share certificates. Article 7. 7.1. Upon a written request from a person entitled to such certificates, share certificates that are missing or damaged, may be replaced by new certificates, or by duplicates bearing the same numbers and/or letters, provided that the applicant proves his title and - in the case of loss - the loss, to the satisfaction of the board of management, and further subject to such conditions as the board of management may deem necessary. 7.2. The issuance of new certificates or duplicates shall cause the original documents to be invalid. 7.3. The issuance of new certificates or duplicates for share certificates may in appropriate cases, at the discretion of the board of management, be published in newspapers to be determined by the board of management. Shareholders' register. Article 8. 8.1. With due observance of the provisions of law a share register shall be kept by or on behalf of the company, which register shall be regularly updated and which, at the discretion of the board of management, may, in whole or in part, be maintained in more than one copy and at more than one place. At least one copy will be maintained at the office of the company. 8.2. Each shareholder's name, his address, the date on which the shares were acquired, the number and the type of the shares held by him, the date of acknowledgement or service, the amount paid up on each share, and all other information that must be registered pursuant to the provisions of law, as well as such further information as the board of management shall deem desirable, whether at the request of a shareholder or not, shall be entered in the share register. 8.3. The board of management shall determine the form and the contents of the share register with due observance of the provisions of the first two paragraphs of this article. The board of management may determine that the share register shall vary as to its


5 form and contents according to whether they relate to shares of type I or to shares of type II. 8.4 Upon request, a shareholder shall be given free of charge a declaration of what is stated in the share register concerning the shares registered in his name, which statement may be signed by special proxy holders authorized thereto by the board of management. 8.5 The provisions of the preceding paragraphs shall apply accordingly to those who hold a right of usufruct or a right of pledge on one or more shares, in addition to any other information required to be registered in the share register pursuant to law. Exchange of shares. Article 9. 9.1. Subject to the provisions of article 6, a holder of an entry in the share register for one or more shares of type I may, upon his request, obtain one or more share certificates of type II up to an equal nominal amount. 9.2. Subject to the provisions of article 6, a holder of a share certificate of type II registered in his name may, after submitting the share certificate to the company, upon his request obtain an entry in the share register for one or more shares of type I up to an equal nominal amount. 9.3. The board of management may demand that a request as referred to in this article shall be made on a form to be supplied by the company free of charge, which shall be signed by the applicant. Transfer of shares. Article 10. 10.1. Unless the law provides otherwise and except as provided by the provisions of the following paragraphs of this article, the transfer of a share shall require an instrument intended for such purpose and, unless the company itself is a party to the transaction, the written acknowledgement of the transfer by the company; service upon the company of such instrument of transfer or of a copy or extract thereof signed as a true copy by the notary or the transferor shall be considered to have the same effect as an acknowledgement. 10.2. The transfer of a preference share can only take place with due observance of the provisions of article 11. 10.3. In cases where a share of type I is transferred, an instrument of transfer, signed by both parties to the transfer, on a form to be supplied by the company free of charge, must be submitted to the company. 10.4. In cases where a share for which a certificate of type II has been issued is transferred, the share certificate must be submitted to the company, provided that an instrument of transfer as referred to in the previous paragraph, printed on the back of the share certificate, has been duly completed and signed by or on behalf of the transferor, or a separate instrument in substantially the same form is submitted together with the share certificate. 10.5. If a transfer of a share of type II has been effected by service of an instrument of transfer upon the company, the company shall, at the discretion of the board of management, either endorse the transfer on the share certificate or cancel the share


6 certificate and issue to the transferee one or more share certificates registered in name up to an equal nominal amount. 10.6. The company's written acknowledgement of a transfer of a share of type II shall, at the discretion of the board of management, be effected either by endorsement of the transfer on the share certificate as proof of the acknowledgement or by the issuance to the transferee of one or more share certificates registered in name up to an equal nominal amount. 10.7. If a share is being transferred for inclusion in a joint deposit, as meant in the Securities Book-Entry Transfer Act ("Wge") ("Joint Deposit"), the transfer shall be accepted by the intermediary, as meant in the Wge ("Intermediary") in question. In cases where a share is being transferred for inclusion in the giro deposit, as meant in the Wge ("Giro Deposit"), the transfer shall be accepted by the central institute, as meant in the Wge ("Central Institute"). Transfer and acceptation can take place without the cooperation of the other participants in the Joint Deposit and without the cooperation of other Intermediaries. 10.8. An affiliated institution, as meant in the Wge, is empowered to transfer shares for inclusion in the Giro Deposit. An Intermediary is, insofar as deduction is possible pursuant to the Wge, empowered to deduct shares from the Joint Deposit. The Central Institute is, insofar as deduction is possible pursuant to the Wge, empowered to deduct shares from the Giro Deposit for inclusion in a Joint Deposit. 10.9. If the transfer of an ordinary share does not take place in accordance with the provisions of paragraphs 3, 4, 7 and 8 of this article, the transfer of an ordinary share can only take place with the permission of the board of management. The board of management may make its permission subject to such conditions as the board of management may deem necessary or desirable. The applicant shall always be entitled to demand that said permission be granted on the condition that transfer takes place to a person designated by the board of management. The permission shall be deemed to have been granted, should the board of management not have decided on granting permission for the request within six weeks of being requested to do so. 10.10. The provisions of the preceding paragraphs of this article shall apply correspondingly to the allotment of shares in the event of a division of any share constituting joint property, the transfer of a share as a consequence of a writ of execution and the creation of limited rights on a share. 10.11. The submission of requests and the submission of documents referred to in articles 5 to 9 inclusive shall be made at a place to be determined by the board of management. Different places may be determined the different types of shares. 10.12. The company is entitled to charge amounts, at no more than cost, and to be determined by the board of management, to those persons who request any services to be carried out pursuant to articles 5 to 9 inclusive. Preference shares. Article 11. 11.1. The approval of the supervisory board shall be required for every transfer of preference shares. Said approval shall be requested in writing.


7 11.2. If approval is refused, the supervisory board is obliged to designate one or more parties who are willing and able to acquire on payment of cash all the preference shares, to which the request relates at a price to be fixed by the transferor and the supervisory board in joint consultation within two months after said designation. 11.3. If the transferor has not received written notice from the company within three months after receipt by the company of the request to approve the proposed transfer, or a timely written rejection has not been accompanied at the same time by the designation of one or more interested parties as referred to in paragraph 2, the approval of the transfer shall be deemed to have been granted after the above-mentioned period has elapsed or after receipt of the notice of rejection. 11.4. If no agreement has been reached between the transferor and the board of management regarding the price referred to in paragraph 2 within two months after the rejection, said price shall be fixed by an expert to be designated by the transferor and the board of management in joint consultation or, in the absence of agreement thereon within three months after the rejection, by the chairperson of the Royal Dutch Association of Civil-law Notaries (Koninklijke Notariële Beroepsorganisatie) at the request of either party. 11.5. The transferor shall have the right to abandon the transfer, provided that he informs the board of management thereof in writing within one month after he has been informed of the name of the designated party or parties and of the price fixed. 11.6. If a transfer has been approved in accordance with paragraph 1 or paragraph 3, the transferor shall be entitled to transfer all the preference shares, to which his request related, to the party named in the request, during a period of three months after said approval. 11.7. The costs to the company in connection with the transfer may be charged to the party acquiring the shares. 11.8. Any transfer of a preference share shall be entered in the share register. Holders of a right of usufruct, holders of a right of pledge and holders of depositary receipts. Article 12. 12.1. No right of pledge can be established on the preference shares. 12.2. The holder of a right of usufruct who in accordance with the provisions of section 2:88 of the Dutch Civil Code, does not have the right to vote and the holder of a right of pledge who in accordance with the provisions of section 2:89 of the Dutch Civil Code, does not have the right to vote, shall not have the rights conferred by law on the holders of depositary receipts for shares issued with the cooperation of the company. 12.3. Where in these articles of association reference is made to others entitled to attend meetings, this shall include the holders of depositary receipts for shares issued with the cooperation of the company and the persons who, under the provisions of section 2:88 paragraph 4 or section 2:89 of the Dutch Civil Code, have the rights conferred by law on holders of depositary receipts for shares issued with the cooperation of the company. Board of management. Appointment. Article 13.


8 13.1. The company shall be managed by a board of management consisting of at least two members, under the supervision of a supervisory board. 13.2. The board of management members shall be appointed by the supervisory board. The supervisory board shall inform the general meeting of the intended appointment of a board of management member. The provisions of section 2:158 paragraph 10 of the Dutch Civil Code shall apply correspondingly. 13.3. A board of management member shall be appointed for a maximum period of four years provided, however, that unless such board of management member has resigned at an earlier date, his or her term of office shall lapse immediately after the annual general meeting, to be held in the fourth year after the year of his or her appointment. A board of management member may be re-appointed with due observance of the preceding sentence. 13.4. If the number of board of management members falls below two, the powers of the board of management shall remain unaffected. In such case, a meeting of the supervisory board shall be held forthwith to fill the vacancies in the board of management. 13.5. With due observance of the minimum referred to in paragraph 1 of this article, the number of board of management members shall be determined by the supervisory board. Board of management; suspension and removal. Article 14. 14.1. Board of management members may be suspended or removed by the supervisory board. 14.2. The supervisory board shall not remove a board of management member until the general meeting has been heard in respect of the intended removal. 14.3. The board of management members may be suspended by the supervisory board either collectively or individually. Within three months of such suspension a general meeting shall be held to hear the general meeting in connection with the intended removal of the suspended board of management member. If such general meeting is not held within three months of the suspension, the suspension shall lapse. The person concerned shall be entitled to account for his or her actions at that meeting. Representation. Article 15. 15.1. The board of management as well as two members of the board of management acting jointly shall have the authority to represent the company. 15.2. The board of management may grant to persons, whether or not employed by the company, the authority to represent the company and may determine the scope of such power of attorney as well as the title of such persons. 15.3. The board of management is authorized to perform the transactions as referred to in section 2:94 paragraph 1 of the Dutch Civil Code, to the extent such authority has not been explicitly excluded or limited pursuant to a provision of these articles of association. Board of management; decision process and internal rules and regulations. Article 16.


9 16.1. The supervisory board shall appoint one of the board of management members as chairperson and may appoint one of the other members as vice-chairperson. 16.2. Resolutions of the board of management shall be adopted by an absolute majority of votes cast. In case of a tie vote, the chairperson of the board of management shall have a casting vote. 16.3. If a board of management member has a direct or indirect personal conflict of interest with the company, he or she shall not participate in the deliberations and the decision- making process concerned in the board of management. If as a result no resolution of the board of management can be adopted, the resolution is to be adopted by the supervisory board. 16.4. A statement signed by the chairperson or, if appointed, the vice-chairperson, of the board of management or two board of management members, to the effect that the board of management has adopted a particular resolution, shall constitute evidence of such resolution vis-à-vis third parties. 16.5. The board of management shall, subject to the approval of the supervisory board, adopt rules of the board of management. Board of management; decision process. Article 17. 17.1. Without prejudice to the other provisions of these articles of association, resolutions of the board of management shall require the approval of the supervisory board concerning: a. issuance, including the granting of rights to subscribe for shares in the share capital of the company, and acquisition of shares in and debentures chargeable to the company or of debentures chargeable to a limited partnership or general partnership of which the company is a general partner with full liability; b. cooperation in the issuance of depositary receipts for shares in the company; c. application for listing or for withdrawal of the listing of the documents referred to under a and b above in the price list of any stock exchange; d. entry into or termination of a continuing cooperation by the company or a dependent company with another legal entity or partnership or as general partner with full liability in a limited partnership or general partnership, if such cooperation or the termination thereof will materially affect the company; e. acquisition by the company or a dependent company of a direct or indirect participation in the share capital of another company, the value of which is at least equal to the sum of one quarter of the issued share capital and the reserves of the company, as shown in its balance sheet with explanatory notes, as well as any material change in the size of such participation; f. Investments requiring an amount equal to at least one quarter of the issued share capital and reserves of the company, as shown in its balance sheet with explanatory notes; g. a proposal to amend the articles of association; h. a proposal to dissolve the company or a proposal for a legal merger of the company; i. application for bankruptcy or for a moratorium of payments;


10 j. termination of the employment of a considerable number of employees of the company or of a dependent company at the same time or within a short time- span; k. a far-reaching change in the working conditions of a considerable number of employees of the company or of a dependent company; l. a proposal to reduce the issued share capital. 17.2. The supervisory board may grant the approvals required pursuant to this article either for a specific transaction, or for a group of such transactions. 17.3. The supervisory board furthermore may decide that certain clearly defined resolutions from the board of management need to be submitted to the approval of the supervisory board. The supervisory board shall forthwith inform the board of management of such decision. Such resolutions shall be included in the rules and regulations as meant in article 16 paragraph 5. 17.4. Without prejudice to any other applicable provision of these articles of association, the board of management shall also require the approval of the supervisory board and the general meeting for resolutions of the board of management regarding a significant change in the identity or nature of the company or the enterprise, including in any event: a. the transfer of the enterprise or practically the entire enterprise to a third party; b. to conclude or cancel any long-lasting co-operation by the company or a subsidiary (dochtermaatschappij) with any other legal person or company or as a fully liable general partner of a limited partnership or a general partnership, provided that such co-operation or its cancellation is of essential importance to the company; c. to acquire or dispose of a participating interest in the capital of a company with a value of at least one-third of the sum of the assets according to the consolidated balance sheet with explanatory notes thereto according to the last adopted annual accounts of the company, by the company or a subsidiary (dochtermaatschappij). 17.5. The absence of the approval of the supervisory board and the general meeting for a resolution referred to in this article shall neither effect the representative authority of the board of management nor the board of management members. Board of management; prevented from acting or failing to act. Article 18. 18.1. If one or more board of management members are prevented from acting or are failing to act, the remaining members or the only remaining member shall temporarily be in charge of the management of the company. The supervisory board may, however, provide for temporary replacements. "Prevented from acting" means that a board of management member is temporarily unable to perform his or her duties as a result of: a. suspension; b. illness; or c. inaccessibility.


11 In the case of illness or inaccessibility, this means that contact between the board of management member concerned and the company has not been possible for a period of five (5) days, unless the supervisory board sets a different term. 18.2. If all board of management members are prevented from acting or are failing to act, the supervisory board shall be temporarily in charge of the management of the company. In this event, the supervisory board may also provide for temporary replacements or elect to delegate such responsibility for the management of the company to one or more persons, whether or not from among its members. Board of management; remuneration and indemnification. Article 19. 19.1. The policy regarding the remuneration of the board of management members will be adopted by the general meeting upon a proposal of the supervisory board. The proposal for the remuneration policy shall be made available in writing to the works council(s) designated for that purpose by law for its/their information at the same time as it is submitted to the general meeting. 19.2. The remuneration of the board of management members will, with due observance of the policy set out in paragraph 1, be determined by the supervisory board. The supervisory board will submit for approval by the general meeting a proposal regarding the arrangements for remuneration in the form of shares or rights to acquire shares. This proposal includes at least how many shares or rights to acquire shares may be awarded to board of management members and which criteria apply to an award or modification. The absence of the approval of the general meeting shall not invalidate the representative authority of the supervisory board. 19.3. Current and former board of management members shall be reimbursed for: (i) expenses in relation to conducting a defence against claims for damages or conducting a defence in other legal proceedings; and (ii) any damages they may be ordered to pay, incurred due to acts or omissions in the performance of their tasks as board of management member or another function they fulfil at the request of the company. The company shall indemnify them against financial losses that are a direct result of the foregoing. No reimbursement will be awarded and no indemnification will be granted to the party concerned in case and to the extent that a court in the Netherlands irrevocably has established that the acts and omissions may be characterised as being wilfully misconducted or intentionally reckless, including seriously imputable, unless this would be in view of all circumstances of the case contrary to the reasonableness and fairness (redelijkheid en billijkheid). In addition, no reimbursement will be given to the extent that the financial losses are covered by an insurance and the insurer has settled the financial losses. On behalf of the party concerned, the company may take out liability insurance. By means of a written agreement the supervisory board may further implement the foregoing. Supervisory board, supervision on the board of management. Article 20. 20.1. The supervisory board is charged with the supervision of the policies of the board of management and the general course of affairs in the company and its affiliated


12 enterprise. The supervisory board shall support the board of management with its advice. 20.2. The board of management shall provide the supervisory board, in a timely manner, with the information it needs to carry out its duties. At least once per year, the board of management shall inform the supervisory board in writing in respect of the principles of the strategic policy, the general and financial risks and the management and control system of the company. 20.3. The supervisory board shall prepare a profile for its size and composition, taking into consideration the nature of the business, its activities and the desired expertise and background of the supervisory board members. The supervisory board shall discuss the profile as well as any change thereof in the general meeting and with the works council as referred to in section 2:158 paragraph 11 of the Dutch Civil Code, hereinafter referred to as: the works council. Supervisory board; appointment. Article 21. 21.1. The supervisory board shall consist of at least three members or any larger number of members as determined by the supervisory board. The supervisory board shall appoint one of its members as its chairperson. 21.2. Supervisory board members shall be appointed by the general meeting on the recommendation of the supervisory board; in the event as referred to in the last sentence of paragraph 7 of this article the appointment shall be made by the supervisory board. The supervisory board shall inform the general meeting and the works council simultaneously of its nomination. 21.3. The general meeting and the works council may recommend persons to the supervisory board for appointment as a supervisory board member. The supervisory board shall promptly inform them when, as a result of which event and in accordance with which profile, a vacancy in the supervisory board must be filled. In the event the vacancy requires the strengthened right of recommendation as referred to in paragraph 5 of this article, the supervisory board shall include this fact in its information. 21.4. Together with a recommendation or nomination for appointment of a supervisory board member, the following information shall be given of the candidate: age; profession; number of shares held in the share capital of the company and the positions he or she holds or has held insofar as of importance with respect to the fulfilment of the duties of a member of the supervisory board. In addition, reference shall be made as for which companies he or she already serves as a member of the supervisory board; in the event this includes legal entities that belong to the same group it may be sufficient to mention such group. The recommendation or nomination of a member of the supervisory board shall state the grounds on which it is based. In the event of a re-appointment the way in which the candidate has performed his or her duty as a member of the supervisory board. 21.5. With regard to one third of the number of supervisory board members, the supervisory board shall place a person recommended by the works council on the nomination, unless the supervisory board objects to the recommendation on the grounds that the


13 person recommended is expected to be unsuitable for the fulfilment of the duties of supervisory board members or that the supervisory board will not be suitably composed when the appointment is made as recommended. If the number of supervisory board members cannot be divided by three, the nearest lower number that can be divided by three will be the basis for determining the number of members to which this enhanced right of recommendation applies. 21.6. If the supervisory board raises an objection against a person recommended by the works council it will inform the works council of that objection and the reasons for it. The supervisory board shall start consultations with the works council without delay with a view to reaching an agreement on the nomination. If the supervisory board determines that no agreement can be reached, a representative of the supervisory board designated for that purpose shall apply to the Enterprise Division of the Amsterdam Court of Appeal to uphold the objection. The application will not be filed until four weeks have lapsed since the consultations with the works council commenced. The supervisory board shall place the person recommended on the nomination if the Enterprise Division declares the objection unfounded. If the Enterprise Division upholds the objection, the works council may make a new recommendation in accordance with the provisions of paragraph 5 of this article. 21.7. The general meeting may by an absolute majority of votes cast, representing at least one-third of the outstanding share capital, overrule a nomination. If the general meeting with an absolute majority of votes cast overrules the nomination, but this majority does not represent at least one-third of the outstanding share capital, a new meeting can be convened in which meeting the nomination can be overruled by an absolute majority of votes cast. The provisions of section 2:158 paragraph 9 of the Dutch Civil Code apply with regard to convening the general meeting in order to appoint the nominee. If the nomination is rejected the supervisory board shall draw up a new nomination. Paragraphs 3 up to and including 6 of this article shall apply. If the general meeting does not appoint the nominee and does not resolve to reject the nomination, the supervisory board shall appoint the nominee. Supervisory board; prevented from acting or failing to act. Article 22. 22.1. If the number of supervisory board members falls below three, the powers of the supervisory board shall remain unaffected. In such case, the necessary measures to increase the number of members shall be taken forthwith. 22.2. In the event that one or more supervisory board members is prevented from acting or is failing to act, the remaining supervisory board members shall temporarily be in charge of the supervision of the company. The supervisory board may, however, provide for temporary replacements. If all supervisory board members are prevented from acting or are failing to act, other than pursuant to the provisions of article 24 hereafter, then (i) the person or persons previously designated by the supervisory board to act as a temporary replacement, or (ii) if the supervisory board has not provided for a temporary replacement, the person or persons designated by the general meeting to act as a temporary replacement, shall be charged with the responsibilities of the supervisory board, including selecting and


14 nominating supervisory board members for appointment by the general meeting in accordance with the provisions of article 21. In the absence of all supervisory board members, the person or persons designated as a temporary replacement, as referred to in the previous sentence, shall proceed with the required measures to fill the vacancies without delay. "Prevented from acting" means that a supervisory board member is temporarily unable to perform his or her duties as a result of: a. suspension; b. illness; or c. inaccessibility. In the case of illness or inaccessibility, this means that contact between the supervisory board member concerned and the company has not been possible for a period of five (5) days, unless the supervisory board sets a different term. 22.3. The works council may recommend persons for appointment as supervisory board member(s). The person convening the general meeting shall in due time inform the works council that the subject of the appointment of supervisory board member(s) will be considered at the general meeting, specifying whether the appointment is taking place in accordance with the works council's right of recommendation pursuant to article 21 paragraph 5. 22.4. Article 21 paragraphs 5 and 6 shall apply mutatis mutandis. Supervisory board; resignation. Article 23. 23.1. A supervisory board member position may not be held by: a. persons employed by the company; b. persons employed by a dependent company; c. board of management members and persons employed by an employees' organization customarily involved in the establishment of the terms of employment of the persons referred to under a and b. 23.2. A supervisory board member shall be appointed for a maximum period of four years, provided however that unless such supervisory board member resigned at an earlier date, his or her term of office shall lapse immediately after the annual general meeting, to be held in the fourth year after the year of his or her appointment. A supervisory board member may be re-appointed with due observance of the preceding sentence. A supervisory board member, appointed to fulfil an interim vacancy, shall - as far as it concerns the moment of retirement - take the place of his or her predecessor, unless the supervisory board provides otherwise at the moment of his or her appointment. 23.3. The supervisory board establishes a rotation schedule. 23.4. Upon application, the Enterprise Division of the Amsterdam Court of Appeal may remove a member of the supervisory board for dereliction of duties, for other important reasons or on account of any far-reaching change of circumstances as a result of which the company cannot reasonably be required to maintain him or her as a member of the supervisory board. The application can be made by the company, represented for this purpose by the supervisory board, and by a designated representative of the general meeting or the works council.


15 23.5. A supervisory board member may be suspended by the supervisory board; such suspension shall lapse by operation of law if the company has not requested the Enterprises Chamber for the removal of such member as referred to in section 2:161 paragraph 2 of the Dutch Civil Code, within one month of the beginning of the suspension. Withdrawal of confidence in the supervisory board. Article 24. 24.1. The general meeting may withdraw its confidence in the supervisory board by an absolute majority of votes cast, representing at least one third of the issued share capital. If less than one third of the issued share capital is represented at the meeting, a new meeting may be convened in which the general meeting may withdraw its confidence in the supervisory board by an absolute majority of the votes cast, regardless the portion of the share capital represented at the meeting. The resolution to withdraw confidence in the supervisory board shall specify the reasons for the resolution. The resolution may not be passed with regard to supervisory board members appointed by the Enterprise Division in accordance with paragraph 3 of this article. 24.2. A resolution as referred to in paragraph 1 shall not be passed until the board of management has notified the works council of the proposed resolution and the reasons for it. The notification shall take place at least thirty days before the general meeting at which the proposal is to be considered. If the works council determines a position on the proposal, the board of management shall inform the supervisory board and the general meeting of that position. The works council may can have its position explained at the general meeting. 24.3. The resolution referred to in paragraph 1 shall result in the immediate dismissal of the supervisory board members. In that case, the board of management shall request without delay the Enterprise Chamber of the Amsterdam Court of Appeal to appoint of one or more supervisory board members on a temporary basis. The Enterprise Chamber shall determine the consequences of the appointment. 24.4. The supervisory board shall use its best efforts to ensure that a new supervisory board is composed within the period set by the Enterprise Division and in accordance with article 21. Supervisory board; meetings and decision process. Article 25. 25.1. The supervisory board may adopt its resolutions by an absolute majority of votes cast at a meeting where at least one half of its members is present, provided that supervisory board members who have a conflict of interest shall not be taken into account when calculating such quorum. The supervisory board may adopt its resolutions in writing provided that the proposal was sent to all members and no member opposed this method of adopting a resolution and provided that more than half of the members will cast its votes in favour of the proposal. 25.2. If a supervisory board member has direct or indirect personal conflict of interest with the company, he or she shall not participate in the deliberations and the decision-making


16 process in the supervisory board. If as a result thereof no resolution of the supervisory board can be adopted, the resolution can be adopted by the general meeting. 25.3. Minutes shall be kept of the proceedings of the supervisory board meetings, which in any case shall include the resolutions adopted by the meeting. In the event that the resolutions have been adopted outside of a meeting, as referred to in the preceding paragraph, the resolutions so adopted shall be recorded in writing. Such record shall be signed by the chairperson of the supervisory board. 25.4. A statement signed by the chairperson of the supervisory board or two supervisory board members to the effect that the supervisory board has adopted a particular resolution shall constitute evidence of such a resolution vis-à-vis third parties. 25.5. The board of management members shall, if so invited by the supervisory board, attend the meetings of the supervisory board. 25.6. The supervisory board adopts rules of the supervisory board. Supervisory board; remuneration and indemnification. Article 26. 26.1. The company has a policy in respect of remuneration for the supervisory board. The policy will be adopted by the general meeting upon the proposal of the supervisory board. 26.2. Upon the proposal of the supervisory board, the general meeting shall determine the remuneration of supervisory board members within the scope of the remuneration policy referred to in paragraph 1 of this article. A supervisory board member shall not be granted any shares and/or rights to acquire shares by way of remuneration. 26.3. Within the scope of the remuneration policy referred to in paragraph 1 of this article, the supervisory board may grant an additional remuneration to be borne by the company to its chairperson or to members who pursuant to a resolution of the supervisory board have been designated to perform certain functions or activities of the supervisory board. 26.4. Current and former supervisory board members shall be reimbursed for: (i) expenses in relation to defending themselves against claims for damages or defending themselves in other legal proceedings; and (ii) any damages they may be ordered to pay, incurred due to acts or omissions in the performance of their tasks as supervisory board member or any other function they fulfil at the request of the company. The company shall indemnify them against financial losses that are a direct result of the foregoing. No reimbursement will be awarded and no indemnification will be granted to the party concerned in case and to the extent that a court in the Netherlands irrevocably has established that the acts and omissions may be characterized as being willfully misconducted or intentionally reckless, including seriously imputable, unless this would in view of all circumstances of the case be contrary to the standard of reasonableness and fairness (redelijkheid en billijkheid). In addition, no reimbursement will be given to the extent that the financial losses are covered by an insurance and the insurer has settled the financial losses. The company may take out liability insurance on behalf of the party concerned. By means of a written agreement the board of management may further implement the foregoing. General meetings; general.


17 Article 27. 27.1. The annual general meeting shall be held within six months after the end of the financial year. 27.2. The agenda of the annual general meeting shall at least include the following subjects: a. the written report of the board of management containing the course of affairs in the company and the conduct of management in the preceding financial year; b. the adoption of the annual accounts; c. if applicable, discussion of any changes to the company's reserves and dividend policy and justification thereof by the board of management; d. if applicable, the proposal to pay a dividend; e. the discharge of the board of management members in respect of its management during the previous financial year; f. the discharge of the supervisory board members in respect of its supervision during the previous financial year; g. each substantial change in the corporate governance structure of the company; and h. proposals placed on the agenda by the supervisory board, the board of management or shareholders submitted accordance with the provisions of these articles of association shall be discussed and resolved upon. Extraordinary general meeting. Article 28. 28.1. Extraordinary general meetings shall be held as often as deemed necessary by the board of management or the supervisory board, and must be held if one or more shareholders and others entitled to attend the meetings, jointly representing at least one-tenth of the issued share capital make a written request to that effect to the board of management and the supervisory board, specifying in detail the items to be discussed. 28.2. If the board of management fails to comply with a request as referred to in the preceding paragraph in such a manner that the general meeting can be held within six weeks after the request, the persons making the request may be authorized by the President of the Court in 's-Hertogenbosch to convene the meeting themselves. General meeting; place and convocation. Article 29. 29.1. The general meetings shall be held, at the option of the board of management, in Veldhoven, in Eindhoven, in Amsterdam or in The Hague; the convocation shall inform the shareholders and others entitled to attend the meetings accordingly. 29.2. The convocation of the general meeting shall be given in such manner as authorized by law (including, but not limited to, a written notice; a legible and reproducible message sent by electronic means; or an announcement published by electronic means). 29.3. The convocation shall be issued by the board of management or by those persons statutory entitled thereto. General meeting; convocation and agenda. Article 30. 30.1. The convocation shall be given with due observance of the statutory notice period.


18 30.2. The convocation shall state the business to be transacted as well as the other information prescribed by law or these articles of association. 30.3. Any items which one or more shareholders and others entitled to attend the meetings, representing at least one-hundredth of the issued share capital or representing a value of at least fifty million euro (EUR 50,000,000), have requested in writing to be considered, shall be included in the convocation or announced in the same manner, provided that the company has received the reasoned request or the proposal for a resolution no later than the sixtieth day prior to the date of the meeting. The board of management and the supervisory board shall inform the shareholders by means of explanatory notes to the agenda of all facts and circumstances relevant to the proposals on the agenda. These explanatory notes to the agenda shall be published on the website of the company. 30.4. Written requests as referred to in section 2:110 subsection 1 and section 2:114a subsection 1 of the Dutch Civil Code, may be submitted electronically. Requests as referred to in section 2:110 subsection 1 and section 2:114a subsection 1 of the Dutch Civil Code shall comply with conditions stipulated by the board of management, which conditions shall be posted on the company's website. General meeting; meeting order and reporting. Article 31. 31.1. The general meetings shall be presided over by the chairperson of the supervisory board or by any other person designated by the supervisory board. 31.2. A certificate signed by the chairperson confirming that the general meeting has adopted a particular resolution, shall constitute evidence of such resolution vis-à-vis third parties. General meeting; record date. Article 32. 32.1. All holders of shares and others entitled to attend meetings are authorized to attend the general meeting, to address the meeting and, in so far as they have such a right, to vote. 32.2. The chairperson is responsible for an orderly and efficient conduct of the general. All matters regarding the conduct of the general meeting shall be decided upon by the chairperson. 32.3. Persons entitled to attend the general meeting are those who at the record date prescribed by law, hold these rights and are registered as such in a register designated by the board of management for that purpose, regardless of who would have been entitled to attend the shareholders' meeting if no record date would apply. The convocation notice for the general meeting shall state the record date and the manner in which the persons entitled to attend the general meeting meeting may register and exercise their rights. 32.4. The board of management may decide that persons entitled to attend general meetings and vote there may, within a period prior to the general meetings to be set by the board of management, which period cannot start prior to the registration date as meant in paragraph 3, cast their votes electronically and/or by post in a manner to be decided by


19 the board of management. Votes cast in accordance with the previous sentence are equal to votes cast at the meeting. 32.5. The person who wishes to exercise the right to vote and to attend the general meeting has to sign the attendance list prior to the general meeting, as far as applicable stating the name (names) of the person(s) he is representing as proxy holder, the number of shares he is representing and, as far as applicable, the number of votes he is able to cast. 32.6. The written proxies must be provided to the holder of the register no later than the date mentioned in the convocation. 32.7. The provisions of the preceding paragraphs shall apply correspondingly to holders of a right of usufruct or holders of a right of pledge, who have the right to vote. 32.8. The board of management may decide that each person entitled to attend general meetings may by electronic means of communication take note of the business transacted at a shareholders' meeting. 32.9. The board of management may decide that each person entitled to attend general meetings and vote thereat may, either in person or by written proxy, by electronic means of communication vote at that meeting, provided that such person can be identified through the electronic means of communication and furthermore provided that such person can directly take note of the business transacted at the general meeting concerned. The board of management may attach conditions to the use of the electronic means of communication, which conditions shall be announced at the convocation of the general meetings and shall be posted on the company's website. General meeting; votes. Article 33. 33.1. At the general meeting each share shall confer the right to cast one (1) vote. 33.2. Valid votes may be cast for shares held by a person who, for another reason than in his capacity as shareholder of the company, would have been granted any right vis-à-vis the company pursuant to the resolution to be adopted, or who would have been released from any obligation vis-à-vis the company as a result thereof. General meeting; decision process. Article 34. 34.1. Unless these articles of association provide for a larger majority, resolutions shall be adopted with an absolute majority of votes cast. Blank votes and invalid votes shall not be taken into account. The chairperson shall decide on the method of voting and on the possibility of voting by acclamation. 34.2. In a vote concerning reappointments, further votes shall, if necessary, be taken until one of the nominees has obtained an absolute majority. In a tie vote no resolution will have been adopted. The second vote or votes may, at the chairperson's discretion, be taken at a subsequent meeting. 34.3. Except as provided in paragraph 2 above, in the event of a tie vote the relevant proposal shall be deemed rejected. Meetings of holders of ordinary shares. Article 35.


20 Separate meetings of holders of ordinary shares shall be held whenever a resolution of the meeting of holders of ordinary shares is necessary pursuant to the provisions of law and these articles of association. With respect to such meeting articles 28 to 34 inclusive shall apply correspondingly. Meetings of holders of preference shares. Article 36. 36.1. Extraordinary meetings of holders of preference shares shall be held (i) as often as the board of management considers necessary; (ii) whenever a resolution of the meeting of holders of preference shares is necessary pursuant to the provisions of law and these articles of association; and (iii) if holders of preference shares representing at least two- fifths of the issued preference share capital make a written request to that effect to the board of management, specifying in detail the business to be dealt with. 36.2. If the meeting has not been convened within fourteen days after the request in accordance with the preceding sentence by the holders of preference shares has been made, the applicants are authorized to convene the meeting themselves. Place of meetings and convocation. Article 37. 37.1. The chairperson of the board of management shall decide on the place where the meetings of holders of preference shares shall be held. 37.2. The meetings shall be convened by means of a notice to each holder of preference shares. The fact that a notice has not been received or has not been received in time, is no basis for the invalidity of a meeting, unless there is no proof that the notice was indeed ever sent out. 37.3. The notices shall be sent out by the chairperson of the board of management and in the event referred to in article 36 paragraph 2 by the holders of preference shares referred to therein. 37.4. The meeting shall be convened no later than on the eighth day prior to the meeting. 37.5. A meeting at which all the holders of the preference shares are present or represented, may also adopt valid resolutions without fulfilling the convening requirements for convocation as referred to in this article. 37.6. A meeting of holders of preference shares may adopt its resolutions in writing if the proposal has been sent to all holders of preference shares in writing, none of them opposes this manner of decision-making and all the holders of preference shares express themselves in favour of the proposal concerned. 37.7. The provisions concerning the chairpersonship of the meetings, the representation by proxy holders, the adoption of resolutions, the method of voting and tie votes contained in the articles 31, 33 and 34 shall apply correspondingly, provided, however, that only those persons may act as proxy holders who have not been opposed as such by the meeting of holders of preference shares. Annual accounts, management report and distributions. Article 38. 38.1. The financial year shall coincide with the calendar year. 38.2. Annually, within the period set under or pursuant to the law the board of management shall make generally available: the annual accounts, the management report, the


21 auditor's statement as well as other information which, under or pursuant to the law, must be made generally available together with the annual accounts. The board of management submits the annual accounts to the works council. 38.3. The board of management must prepare these annual accounts on business economical basis. 38.4. With the approval of the supervisory board, the board of management shall have the power to determine to what extent the profits - the positive balance of the profit and loss account - shall be retained by way of a reserve, with due observance of the statutory provisions with respect to the statutory reserves and after the provisions of article 39 paragraphs 1 and 2 have been fulfilled. 38.5. The general meeting shall adopt the annual accounts. The board of management shall have the annual accounts examined by a registered accountant designated for that purpose by the general meeting or another expert designated thereto in accordance with the provisions of section 2:393 of the Dutch Civil Code. In the event the general meeting does not designate such expert, the supervisory board is authorized thereto. Such designation may be made for an indefinite period of time. The expert shall issue a report to the general meeting, the supervisory board and the board of management and shall issue a report in writing containing the results thereof. 38.6. The external auditor or the other expert designated in accordance with the provisions of section 2:393 of the Dutch Civil Code shall be invited to the general meeting and is authorized to address the meeting. 38.7. The annual accounts can only be adopted if the general meeting has been informed of the expert's report. 38.8. The board of management shall explain, in a separate chapter of the management report, the principles of the corporate governance structure of the company. 38.9. Copies of the annual accounts which have been prepared, of the expert's report, of the management report and of the information to be added pursuant to any and all statutory provisions can be obtained and shall be available for inspection by the shareholders and others entitled to attend the meetings, at the office of the company as of the day of the said convocation until the close of that meeting to be specified in the convocation to the general meeting at which they will be discussed. Profit and loss; general. Article 39. 39.1. From the profit as shown in the annual accounts adopted by the general meeting, the percentage mentioned below of the amount paid or required to be paid, as of the beginning of the financial year for which the distribution is made, or, if the preference shares were taken in the course of said financial year, as of the day on which the preference shares were taken shall, if possible, first be distributed on those shares. The dividend on the preference shares shall only be distributed for the number of days that such shares were actually outstanding in the financial year concerned. The percentage referred to above shall be equal to the average value of the EURIBOR- percentage for cash loans with a duration of twelve months as published by the administrator of EURIBOR, the European Money Markets Institute (EMMI) located in Belgium or its legal successor(s), or in the absence of EURIBOR as benchmark, another benchmark that is


22 officially determined, appointed or recommended as replacement of EURIBOR by (i) the European Central Bank, or another supervising authority, or in absence of this, (ii) the EMMI, aforementioned - weighted by the amount of days for which this percentage counted - during the financial year for which the distribution is made, plus two hundred basis points. 39.2. If the profit for a financial year is declared and one or more preference shares with repayment have been cancelled or preference shares have been fully repaid in that financial year, those persons who according to the share register referred to in article 8 were holders of said preference shares at the time of the said withdrawal or repayment shall have an inalienable right to a distribution of profit as described below. The profit which, if possible, shall be distributed to the said persons shall be equal to the amount of the distribution to which they would have been entitled under the provisions of paragraph 1 if they had still been holders of the aforementioned preference shares at the time when the profit was declared, this being calculated on the basis of the period for which they were holders of preference shares in the said financial year, a part of a month being counted as a full month. With regard to an alteration to the provisions of this paragraph, the proviso referred to in section 2:122 of the Dutch Civil Code, is made. If in any financial year the profit referred to in paragraph 1 is not sufficient to make the distributions referred to above in this article, the provisions of this article and paragraph 3 shall not apply in the subsequent financial years until the shortfall has been eliminated. 39.3. The profits that remain after article 38 paragraph 4 and paragraphs 1 and 2 of this article have been applied, shall be at the free disposal of the general meeting. 39.4. The general meeting is authorized to reserve said part of the profits, in whole or in part. 39.5. Distributions of profits may only take place to the extent shareholders' equity exceeds the amount of the issued share capital plus the reserve maintained pursuant to law. Profit and loss; distributions. Article 40. 40.1. Upon the proposal of the board of management, which proposal shall require the prior approval of the supervisory board, the general meeting shall be authorized to resolve to make distributions charged to the "other reserves" shown in the annual accounts or charged to "share premium reserve". 40.2. Upon the proposal of the board of management, which proposal shall require the prior approval of the supervisory board, the general meeting shall be authorized to make distributions to shareholders pursuant to article 39, this article 40 paragraph 1 and article 41 in the form of the issuance of shares and in kind. Interim dividends. Article 41. At its discretion and with due observance of the relevant provisions of the law, the board of management, with the prior approval of the supervisory board, may distribute one or more interim dividends on the shares before the annual accounts for any financial year have been adopted; such interim dividend can be made in cash, in kind and in the form of a distribution of shares. These interim dividends may also be distributed on a class of shares. Distributions.


23 Article 42. 42.1. Distributions pursuant to articles 39, 40 and 41, hereinafter referred to as distributions (or in singular: distribution), shall be made payable as from a date to be determined by the board of management. The date on which a distribution is payable for the first time in respect of shares of type I that have been issued may differ from the date in respect of shares of type II issued. 42.2. Distributions shall be made payable at a place or places to be determined by the board of management. 42.3. The board of management may determine the method of payment in respect of cash distributions on shares of type I. 42.4. Cash distributions in respect of shares for which share certificates of type II have been issued shall be paid, if such distributions are made payable only outside the Netherlands, in the currency of the country concerned, converted at the exchange rate on a day and time to be determined and announced by the board of management. If and insofar as on the first day on which a distribution is made payable, the company is unable, as a consequence of governmental regulations or other extraordinary circumstances beyond its control, to make the payment at the place designated outside the Netherlands or in the relevant foreign currency, the board of management may to that extent designate one or more places in the Netherlands instead where the distributions are made payable. In that event the provisions of the first sentence of this paragraph shall no longer apply. 42.5. The person entitled to any distribution on shares shall be the person in whose name the share is registered or, in the event of limited rights, the person whose right appears well-founded, at the date to be determined by the board of management for the purpose of each distribution in respect of the different types of shares. Such a payment shall acquit the company. 42.6. Notices relating to distributions and to the dates and places referred to in the preceding paragraphs of this article, shall be published in such manner as the board of management may deem desirable. 42.7. Claims for payment of distributions in cash shall lapse if such distributions have not been collected within five years following the date on which they were made payable. 42.8. In case of a distribution by way of shares in the share capital of the company pursuant to article 40 paragraph 2 those shares shall be registered in the share register. A share certificate of type II shall be issued to the holders of shares of type II for a nominal amount equal to the amount added. 42.9. The provisions of paragraphs 5 and 8 shall apply correspondingly in respect of any other distributions that do not take place pursuant to the articles 39, 40 and 41. Amendment of articles of association, dissolution and liquidation. Article 43. 43.1. A resolution to amend the articles of association or to dissolve the company shall only be valid if: a. the approval of the supervisory board has been or will be obtained; b. the complete proposals were available for inspection by the shareholders and the others entitled to attend meetings at the office of the company and - in the event


24 of a listing - at a banking institution designated in the convocation to the general meeting, as from the date of said convocation until the close of that meeting; and c. without prejudice to the provision of paragraph 3 of this article the resolution is adopted at a general meeting at which more than one half of the issued share capital is represented and with at least three-fourths of the votes cast; if the required share capital is not represented at a meeting convened for that purpose, a subsequent meeting shall be convened, to be held within four weeks of the first meeting, at which, irrespective of the share capital represented, the resolution can be adopted with at least three-fourths of the votes cast. 43.2. A resolution to appoint a registered accountant or other expert designated in accordance with section 2:393 of the Dutch Civil Code is also only valid if the provisions referred to in the preceding paragraph of this article under c have been fulfilled, provided, however, that instead of the majority of at least three-fourths of the votes cast referred to under c of that paragraph, a majority of at least two-thirds is required. 43.3. If a resolution as referred to in the first and second paragraph of this article is proposed by the board of management, the resolution will be adopted, contrary to the provisions of paragraph 1 under c and paragraph 2 of this article, with an absolute majority of votes cast irrespective of the represented share capital at the meeting. Liquidation. Article 44. 44.1. If the company is dissolved, liquidation shall be effected by the board of management under the supervision of the supervisory board, unless the general meeting resolves otherwise. 44.2. When adopting a resolution to dissolve the company, the general meeting may grant the liquidators and the persons charged with the supervision of the liquidation a remuneration. 44.3. After the liquidation has ended, the liquidators shall render account in accordance with the provisions of Book 2 of the Dutch Civil Code. Liquidation surplus. Article 45. After all liabilities have been settled, including costs made in connection with the liquidation, first, if possible, all holders of preference shares shall be paid the amount paid on their shares increased by the percentage referred to in article 39 paragraph 1 to be calculated over the financial year in which the payment takes place until the moment of payment, and by the previous years' shortfall in dividend on said shares. The balance shall be paid on the ordinary Shares. Consignment account. Article 46. The amounts that are payable to shareholders or creditors and have not been claimed within six months after they have been made payable, shall be deposited in a consignment account. Provisions remaining in force after liquidation. Article 47. The provisions of these articles of association shall remain in force during the liquidation period, in so far these provisions can still be implemented. Fractional shares.


25 Article 48. 48.1. Each ordinary share consists of such number of fractional shares as will be determined by the board of management, which number shall be recorded at the trade register within eight (8) days after such determination. The par value of an ordinary share divided by the number of fractional shares as determined by the board of management, represents the par value of a fractional share. 48.2. Every fractional share shall be in registered form. 48.3. Without prejudice to the other provisions of this article 48, the provisions of Title 4 of Book 2 of the Dutch Civil Code on shares and shareholders shall apply accordingly to fractional shares and holders of fractional shares, to the extent not stipulated otherwise in those provisions. 48.4. The provisions of these articles of association with respect to shares and shareholders shall apply accordingly to fractional shares and holders of fractional shares, to the extent not stipulated otherwise in paragraphs 5 and 6 of this article 48. 48.5. A holder of one or more fractional shares may exercise the meeting and voting rights attached to an ordinary share together with one or more other holders of one or more fractional shares to the extent the total number of fractional shares held by such holders of fractional shares equals the number of fractional shares which constitute an ordinary share or a multiple thereof. These rights shall be exercised either by one of them who has been authorized to that effect by the others in writing, or by a proxy authorized to that effect by those holders of fractional shares in writing. 48.6. The (interim) dividend and any other distribution to which the holder of one ordinary share is entitled divided by the number of fractional shares which constitute an ordinary share, represents the entitlement to the (interim) dividend and any other distribution of a holder of a fractional share. 48.7. At the written request to that effect made by a holder of ordinary shares, the board of management shall resolve that each ordinary share designated in the resolution will be converted into such number of fractional shares as determined by the board of management in accordance with paragraph 1 of this article 48. This shall be recorded in the shareholders’ register. The company may charge costs for a conversion and recording as referred to hereinbefore in this paragraph to the applicant. 48.8. Leaving aside the situation referred to in paragraph 7 of this article 48, in the event the holder of one or more fractional shares acquires such number of fractional shares that the total number of fractional shares held equals the number of fractional shares which constitute an ordinary share, the fractional shares shall by operation of law be consolidated into one ordinary share. This shall be recorded in the shareholders’ register.


Document

Exhibit 2.1

Description of Securities Registered under Section 12 of the Exchange Act

Title of Each Class Name of Each Exchange on Which Registered
Ordinary Shares The NASDAQ Stock Market LLC
(Nominal value 0.09 per share)

All values are in Euros.

Capitalized terms used but not defined herein have the meanings given to them in ASML’s annual report on Form 20-F for the year ended December 31, 2023 (the “2023 Form 20-F”).

The following description of our ordinary shares includes a summary of certain provisions of our Articles of Association. The summary does not purport to be complete and is qualified in its entirety by reference to our Articles of Association, which have been filed with the SEC, and the applicable provisions of Dutch law.

General

Our ordinary shares are listed for trading in the form of registered ASML NASDAQ shares and in the form of registered ASML Euronext Amsterdam shares. The principal trading market of our ordinary shares is Euronext Amsterdam (trading symbol: ASML). Our ordinary shares also traded on NASDAQ (trading symbol: ASML).

ASML’s authorized share capital amounts to €126.0 million and is divided into:

Type of shares Amount of shares Nominal value Votes per share
Cumulative preference shares 700,000,000 €0.09 per share 1
Ordinary shares 700,000,000 €0.09 per share 1

The issued and fully paid-up ordinary shares with a nominal value of €0.09 each were as follows:

Year ended December 31 2021 2022 2023
Issued ordinary shares with nominal value of €0.09 402,601,613 394,589,411 393,421,721
Issued ordinary treasury shares with nominal value of €0.09 3,873,663 8,548,631 6,162,857
Total issued ordinary shares with nominal value of €0.09 406,475,276 403,138,042 399,584,578

As of December 31, 2023, 86,366,821 ordinary shares were held by 268 registered holders with a registered address in the US. Since certain of our ordinary shares were held by brokers and nominees, the number of record holders in the US may not be representative of the number of beneficial holders, or of where the beneficial holders are resident.

Each ordinary share consists of 900 fractional shares. Fractional shares entitle the holder thereof to a fractional dividend, but do not give entitlement to voting rights. Only those persons who hold shares directly in the share register in the Netherlands, held by us at our address at 5504 DR Veldhoven, de Run 6501, the Netherlands, or in the New York share register, held by JP Morgan Chase Bank, N.A., P.O. Box 64506, St. Paul, MN 55164-0506, United States, can hold fractional shares. Shareholders who hold ordinary shares through the deposit system under the Dutch Securities Bank Giro Transfer Act maintained by the Dutch central securities depository Euroclear Nederland or through the Depository Trust Company cannot hold fractional shares.

No cumulative preference shares have been issued. Each share carries one vote.

Our shares listed on Nasdaq are registered with JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A., our New York Transfer Agent, pursuant to the terms of the Transfer Agent Agreement between ASML and JPMorgan Chase Bank N.A. Our shares listed on Euronext Amsterdam are held in dematerialized form through the facilities of Euroclear Nederland, the Dutch centralized securities custody and administration system. The New York Transfer Agent charges shareholders a fee of up to USD 5.00 per 100 shares for the exchange of our shares listed at Nasdaq for our shares listed at Euronext Amsterdam and vice versa.

Dividends payable on our shares listed at Nasdaq are declared in euro and converted to US dollars at the rate of exchange at the close of business on the date determined by the Board of Management. The resulting amounts are distributed through the New York Transfer Agent and no charge is payable by holders of our shares listed at Nasdaq in connection with this conversion or distribution.

Pursuant to the terms of the Transfer Agent Agreement, we have agreed to reimburse the New York Transfer Agent for certain out of pocket expenses, including in connection with any mailing of notices, reports or other communications made generally available by ASML to holders of ordinary shares. The New York Transfer Agent has waived its fees associated with routine services to ASML associated with our shares listed at Nasdaq. In addition, the New York Transfer Agent in consideration of its acting as Transfer Agent has agreed to make a contribution towards covering certain expenses incurred by ASML in connection with the issuance and transfer of our shares listed on Nasdaq. In the year ended December 31, 2023, the Transfer Agent contributed USD 0.6 million towards coverage of expenses incurred by ASML (which mainly comprised of audit, advisory, legal and listing fees incurred due to the existence of our share listing on Nasdaq).

Special voting rights, limitation voting rights and transfers of shares

There are no special voting rights on the issued shares in our share capital.

In 2012, we issued shares to three key customers – Intel, TSMC and Samsung – as part of the customer co-investment program (CCIP) to accelerate ASML’s development of EUV. Under this program, the participating customers funded certain development programs and invested in ASML’s ordinary shares. The shares issued in the CCIP were held by foundations which issued depository receipts to participants in the CCIP. In 2023, the remaining participating customer cancelled its depository receipts in accordance with the terms and conditions of the agreement between ASML and the relevant customer.

There are currently no limitations, either under Dutch law or in ASML’s Articles of Association, on the transfer of ordinary shares in the share capital of ASML. Pursuant to ASML’s Articles of Association, the Supervisory Board’s approval shall be required for every transfer of cumulative preference shares.

Issue and repurchase of (rights to) shares

Our Board of Management has the power to issue ordinary shares and cumulative preference shares insofar as it has been authorized to do so by the General Meeting. The Board of Management requires approval of the Supervisory Board for such an issue. The authorization by the General Meeting can only be granted for a certain period not exceeding five years and may be extended for no longer than five years on each occasion. If the General Meeting has not authorized the Board of Management to issue shares, the General Meeting will be authorized to issue shares on the Board of Management’s proposal, provided that the Supervisory Board has approved such a proposal.

Holders of ASML’s ordinary shares have a preemptive right, in proportion to the aggregate nominal amount of the ordinary shares held by them. This preemptive right may be restricted or excluded. Holders of ordinary shares do not have preemptive right with respect to any ordinary shares issued for consideration other than cash or ordinary shares issued to employees. If authorized for this purpose by the General Meeting, the Board of Management has the power, subject to approval of the Supervisory Board, to restrict or exclude the preemptive rights of holders of ordinary shares.

2023 authorization to issue shares

At our 2023 AGM, the Board of Management was authorized from April 26, 2023 through October 26, 2024, subject to the approval of the Supervisory Board, to issue shares and/or rights thereto representing up to a maximum of 5% of our issued share capital at April 26, 2023, plus an additional 5% of our issued share capital at April 26, 2023, that may be issued in connection with mergers, acquisitions and/or (strategic) alliances. Our shareholders also authorized the Board of Management through October 26, 2024, subject to approval of the Supervisory Board, to restrict or exclude preemptive rights with respect to holders of ordinary shares up to a maximum of 5% of our issued share capital in connection with the general authorization to issue shares and/or rights to shares, plus an additional 5% in connection with the authorization to issue shares and/or rights to shares in connection with mergers, acquisitions and/or (strategic) alliances.

We may repurchase our issued ordinary shares at any time, subject to compliance with the requirements of Dutch law and our Articles of Association. Any such repurchases are subject to the approval of the Supervisory Board and the authorization by the General Meeting, which authorization may not be for more than 18 months.

2023 authorization to repurchase shares

At the 2023 AGM, the Board of Management was authorized, subject to Supervisory Board approval, to repurchase through October 26, 2024, up to a maximum of 10% of our issued share capital at April 26, 2023, at a price between the nominal value of the ordinary shares purchased and 110% of the market price of these securities on Euronext Amsterdam or Nasdaq.

Read more details on our share buyback program in:

Consolidated Financial Statements - Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements - Note 22 Shareholders’ equity.

ASML Preference Shares Foundation

The ASML Preference Shares Foundation (Stichting Preferente Aandelen ASML), a foundation organized under Dutch law, has been granted an option right to acquire preference shares in the share capital of ASML. The Foundation may exercise the Preference Share Option in situations where, in the opinion of the Foundation’s Board of Directors, ASML’s interests, ASML’s business or the interests of ASML’s stakeholders are at stake. This may be the case if:

•A public bid for ASML’s shares is announced or made, or there is a justified expectation that such a bid will be made without any agreement having been reached with ASML in relation to such a bid; or

•In the opinion of the Foundation’s Board of Directors, the (attempted) exercise of the voting rights by one shareholder or more shareholders, acting in concert, is materially in conflict with ASML’s interests, ASML’s business or ASML’s stakeholders.

Objectives of the Foundation

The Foundation’s objectives are to look after the interests of ASML and the enterprises maintained by and/or affiliated in a group with ASML, in such a way that the interests of ASML, of those enterprises and of all parties concerned are safeguarded in the best possible way, and that influences in conflict with these interests, which might affect the independence or the identity of ASML and those companies, are deterred to the best of the Foundation’s ability, and everything related to the above or possibly conducive thereto. The Foundation aims to realize its objects by acquiring and holding cumulative preference shares in the capital of ASML and by exercising the rights attached to these shares, particularly the voting rights.

The Preference Share Option

The Preference Share Option gives the Foundation the right to acquire such number of cumulative preference shares as the Foundation will require, provided that the aggregate nominal value of such number of cumulative preference shares shall not exceed the aggregate nominal value of the ordinary shares issued at the time of exercise of the Preference Share Option. The subscription price will be equal to their nominal value. Only one-fourth of the subscription price would be payable at the time of initial issuance of the cumulative preference shares, with the other three-fourths of the nominal value only being payable when ASML calls up this amount. Exercise of the preference Share Option could effectively dilute the voting-power of the outstanding ordinary shares by one-half.

Cancellation of cumulative preference shares

Cancellation and repayment of the issued cumulative preference shares by ASML requires authorization by the General Meeting, on a proposal to this effect made by the Board of Management and approved by the Supervisory Board. If the Preference Share Option is exercised and as a result cumulative preference shares are issued, ASML will initiate the repurchase or cancellation of all cumulative preference shares held by the Foundation on the Foundation’s request. In that case, ASML is obliged to effect the repurchase and respective cancellation as soon as possible. A cancellation will result in a repayment of the amount paid and exemption from the obligation to pay up on the cumulative preference shares. A repurchase of the cumulative preference shares can only take place when such shares are fully paid up.

If the Foundation does not request ASML to repurchase or cancel all cumulative preference shares held by the Foundation within 20 months of issuance of these shares, we will be required to convene a General Meeting for the purpose of deciding on a repurchase or cancellation of these shares.

Board of Directors

The Foundation is independent of ASML. The Board of Directors of the Foundation is composed of four independent members from the Netherlands’ business and academic communities. The Foundation’s Board of Directors is composed per December 31, 2023, of the following members: Mr. A.P.M. van der Poel, Mr. S. Perrick, Mr. S.S. Vollebregt and Mr. J. Streppel.

Other than the arrangements made with the Foundation as described above, ASML has not established any other anti-takeover devices.

US listing requirements

As ASML’s New York Shares are listed on Nasdaq Stock Market LLC, Nasdaq corporate governance standards in principle apply to us. However, Nasdaq rules provide that foreign private issuers may follow home country practice in lieu of the Nasdaq corporate governance standards subject to certain exceptions. Our corporate governance practices are primarily based on Dutch requirements. The table on this page sets forth the practices followed by ASML in lieu of Nasdaq rules the exception as described above.

Quorum ASML does not follow Nasdaq’s quorum requirements applicable to meetings of ordinary shareholders. In accordance with Dutch law and generally accepted Dutch business practice, ASML’s Articles of Association provide that there are no quorum requirements generally applicable to general meetings of shareholders.
Solicitation of proxies ASML does not follow Nasdaq’s requirements regarding the solicitation of proxies and the provision of proxy statements for general meetings of shareholders. ASML does furnish proxy statements and solicit proxies for the General Meeting. Dutch corporate law sets a mandatory (participation and voting) record date for Dutch listed companies at the 28th day prior to the date of the General Meeting. Shareholders registered at such a record date are entitled to attend and exercise their rights as shareholders at the General Meeting, regardless of sale of shares after the record date.
Distribution of Annual Report ASML does not follow Nasdaq’s requirement regarding distribution to shareholders of copies of an annual report containing audited Financial Statements prior to our AGM. The distribution of our annual reports to shareholders is not required under Dutch corporate law or Dutch securities laws, or by Euronext Amsterdam. Furthermore, it is generally accepted business practice for Dutch companies not to distribute annual reports. In part, this is because the Dutch system of bearer shares has made it impractical to keep a current list of holders of the bearer shares in order to distribute the annual reports. Instead, we make our Annual Report available at our corporate head office in the Netherlands (and at the offices of our Dutch listing agent as stated in the convening notice for the meeting) no later than 42 days prior to convocation of the AGM. In addition, we post a copy of our Annual Reports on our website prior to the AGM.
Equity compensation arrangements ASML does not follow Nasdaq’s requirement to obtain shareholder approval of stock option or purchase plans or other equity compensation arrangements available to officers, directors or employees. It is not required under Dutch law or generally accepted practice for Dutch companies to obtain shareholder approval of equity compensation arrangements available to officers, directors or employees. The General Meeting adopts the Remuneration Policy for the Board of Management, approves equity compensation arrangements for the Board of Management and approves the remuneration for the Supervisory Board. The Remuneration Committee evaluates the achievements of individual members of the Board of Management with respect to the short- and long-term quantitative performance and he full Supervisory Board evaluates the quantitative performance criteria. Equity compensation arrangements for employees are adopted by the Board of Management within limits approved by the General Meeting.

Document

Exhibit 8.1

List of main subsidiaries

Legal Entity Country of Incorporation
Subsidiaries of ASML Holding NV1:
ASML Belgium BV Belgium (Essen)
Hermes Microvision Co., Ltd. (Beijing) China (Beijing)
ASML (Shanghai) Electrical Equipment Co. Ltd. China (Shanghai)
ASML (Beijing) Equipment Repair Company Limited China (Beijing)
ASML (Shanghai) Lithography Facilities Science and Technology Co. Ltd. China (Shanghai)
Cymer Semiconductor Equipment (Shanghai) Co. Ltd. China (Shanghai)
Hermes Microvision (Shanghai) Co., Ltd China (Shanghai)
Brion Technologies (Shenzhen) Co. Ltd. China (Shenzhen)
ASML France S.a.r.l. France (Bernin)
ASML Verwaltungs GmbH i.l. Germany (Berlin)
ASML Berlin GmbH (formerly Berliner Glas GmbH) Germany (Berlin)
ASML Germany GmbH Germany (Dresden)
ASML Participations Germany GmbH Germany (Dresden)
ASML Hong Kong Ltd. Hong Kong SAR
ASML Ireland Ltd. Ireland (Dublin)
ASML Israel (2001) Ltd. Israel (Kiryat Gat)
ASML Italy S.r.l. Italy (Avezzano)
ASML Japan Co. Ltd. Japan (Tokyo)
Cymer Japan, Inc. Japan (Tokyo)
ASML Equipment Malaysia Sdn. Bhd. Malaysia (Georgetown, Pulau Pinang)
Cymer BV Netherlands (Veldhoven)
ASML Netherlands BV Netherlands (Veldhoven)
ASML Trading BV Netherlands (Veldhoven)
Hermes Microvision Incorporated BV Netherlands (Veldhoven)
ASML Singapore Pte. Ltd. Singapore
Cymer Singapore Pte Ltd. Singapore
ASML Korea Co. Ltd. South Korea (Gyeonggi-Do)
ASML Repair Center Korea Ltd. South Korea (Gyeonggi-Do)
Cymer Korea, Inc. South Korea (Gyeonggi-Do)
ASML Taiwan Ltd. Taiwan (Hsinchu City)
ASML Technology Taiwan Ltd. Taiwan (Hsinchu City)
Cymer Southeast Asia Ltd. Taiwan (Hsinchu City)
ASML (UK) Ltd. UK (Edinburgh (Scotland))
Cymer, LLC US (Carson City, Nevada)
Hermes Microvision, LLC US (Los Angeles, California)
EO Technical Solutions LLC US (Vancouver, Washington)
ASML US, LLC US (Wilmington, Delaware)
ASML US, LP US (Wilmington, Delaware)
  1. All of our subsidiaries are (directly or indirectly) wholly-owned.

Document

Exhibit 12.1

Certification of the Chief Executive Officer

I, Peter T.F.M. Wennink, certify that:

1.I have reviewed this Annual Report on Form 20-F of ASML Holding NV;

2.Based on my knowledge, this report does not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which such statements were made, not misleading with respect to the period covered by this report;

3.Based on my knowledge, the Financial Statements, and other financial information included in this report, fairly present in all material respects the financial condition, results of operations and cash flows of the company as of, and for, the periods presented in this report

4.The company’s other certifying officer(s) and I are responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e)) and internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(f) and 15d-15(f))for the company and have:

a.Designed such disclosure controls and procedures, or caused such disclosure controls and procedures to be designed under our supervision, to ensure that material information relating to the company, including its consolidated subsidiaries, is made known to us by others within those entities, particularly during the period in which this report is being prepared;

b.Designed such internal control over financial reporting, or caused such internal control over financial reporting to be designed under our supervision, to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of Financial Statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles;

c.Evaluated the effectiveness of the company’s disclosure controls and procedures and presented in this report our conclusions about the effectiveness of the disclosure controls and procedures, as of the end of the period covered by this report based on such evaluation; and

d.Disclosed in this report any change in the company’s internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the period covered by the Annual Report on Form 20-F that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the company’s internal control over financial reporting; and

5.The company’s other certifying officer(s) and I have disclosed, based on our most recent evaluation of internal control over financial reporting, to the company’s auditors and the audit committee of the company’s board of directors (or persons performing the equivalent functions):

a.All significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the design or operation of internal control over financial reporting which are reasonably likely to adversely affect the company’s ability to record, process, summarize and report financial information; and

b.Any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant role in the company’s internal control over financial reporting.

Date: February 14, 2024

/s/ Peter T.F.M. Wennink

Name: Peter T.F.M. Wennink

Title: President, CEO and member of the Board of Management

Certification of the Chief Financial Officer

I, Roger J.M. Dassen, certify that:

1.I have reviewed this Annual Report on Form 20-F of ASML Holding NV;

2.Based on my knowledge, this report does not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact necessary to make the statements made, in light of the circumstances under which such statements were made, not misleading with respect to the period covered by this report;

3.Based on my knowledge, the Financial Statements, and other financial information included in this report, fairly present in all material respects the financial condition, results of operations and cash flows of the company as of, and for, the periods presented in this report;

4.The company’s other certifying officer(s) and I are responsible for establishing and maintaining disclosure controls and procedures (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(e) and 15d-15(e)) and internal control over financial reporting (as defined in Exchange Act Rules 13a-15(f) and 15d-15(f))for the company and have:

a.Designed such disclosure controls and procedures, or caused such disclosure controls and procedures to be designed under our supervision, to ensure that material information relating to the company, including its consolidated subsidiaries, is made known to us by others within those entities, particularly during the period in which this report is being prepared;

b.Designed such internal control over financial reporting, or caused such internal control over financial reporting to be designed under our supervision, to provide reasonable assurance regarding the reliability of financial reporting and the preparation of Financial Statements for external purposes in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles;

c.Evaluated the effectiveness of the company’s disclosure controls and procedures and presented in this report our conclusions about the effectiveness of the disclosure controls and procedures, as of the end of the period covered by this report based on such evaluation; and

d.Disclosed in this report any change in the company’s internal control over financial reporting that occurred during the period covered by the Annual Report on Form 20-F that has materially affected, or is reasonably likely to materially affect, the company’s internal control over financial reporting; and

5.The company’s other certifying officer(s) and I have disclosed, based on our most recent evaluation of internal control over financial reporting, to the company’s auditors and the audit committee of the company’s board of directors (or persons performing the equivalent functions):

a.All significant deficiencies and material weaknesses in the design or operation of internal control over financial reporting which are reasonably likely to adversely affect the company’s ability to record, process, summarize and report financial information; and

b.Any fraud, whether or not material, that involves management or other employees who have a significant role in the company’s internal control over financial reporting.

Date: February 14, 2024

/s/ Roger J.M. Dassen

Name: Roger J.M. Dassen

Title: Executive Vice President, CFO and member of the Board of Management

Document

Exhibit 13.1

Certification of CEO and CFO Pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as Adopted Pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002

In connection with the Annual Report on Form 20-F of ASML Holding NV for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2023 as filed with the SEC on the date hereof, Peter T.F.M. Wennink, as CEO of the Company, and Roger J.M. Dassen, as CFO of the Company, each hereby certifies, pursuant to 18 U.S.C. Section 1350, as adopted pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, that, to the best of his knowledge:

1.The Report fully complies with the requirements of Section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Exchange Act; and

2.The information contained in the Report fairly presents, in all material respects, the financial condition and results of operations of the issuer.

/s/ Peter T.F.M. Wennink

Name: Peter T.F.M. Wennink

Title: President, CEO and member of the Board of Management

Date: February 14, 2024

/s/ Roger J.M. Dassen

Name: Roger J.M. Dassen

Title: Executive Vice President, CFO and member of the Board of Management

Date: February 14, 2024

A signed original of this written statement required by Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 has been provided to the Company and will be retained by the Company and furnished to the SEC or its staff upon request.

This certification accompanies the Report pursuant to section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 and shall not, except to the extent required by the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, be deemed filed by the Company for purposes of section 18 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.

Document

Exhibit 15.1

Consent of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

We consent to the incorporation by reference in the registration statements (No. 333-116337, 333-126340, 333-136362, 333-141125, 333-142254, 333-144356, 333-147128, 333-153277, 333-162439, 333-170034, 333-188938, 333-190023, 333-192951, 333-203390, 333-219442, and 333-227464) on Form S-8 of our report dated February 14, 2024, with respect to the consolidated financial statements of ASML Holding NV and the effectiveness of internal control over financial reporting.

/s/ KPMG Accountants N.V.

Amstelveen, the Netherlands.

February 14, 2024

a2023asmlinsidertradingp

Document Type Corporate Policy © ASML 2021 - Confidential Public ASML Insider Trading Rules 2023 Exhibit 19.1


© ASML 2023 – Insider Trading Rules Policy page 2 of 19 Public Contents Introduction & Purpose ................................................................................................................... 3 Scope ............................................................................................................................................... 3 Principles and requirements ............................................................................................................ 4 Enclosures ..................................................................................................................................... 15 Responsibilities ............................................................................................................................. 15 Communication and training ......................................................................................................... 15 Definitions ..................................................................................................................................... 15 References ..................................................................................................................................... 18 Obsolescence ................................................................................................................................. 18 Annex 1: non-exhaustive list of transactions that must be notified by PDMRs and closely associated persons with PDMRs ................................................................................................... 19


© ASML 2023 – Insider Trading Rules Policy page 3 of 19 Public Introduction & Purpose In order to safeguard the proper functioning of the financial markets and to protect market integrity, everyone dealing on a stock exchange should simultaneously have access to the same information. Executing a Trade when having price-sensitive information that has not been disclosed to the public is called 'insider trading' (in Dutch: 'handelen met voorwetenschap'). Market abuse regulations are designed to maintain and encourage market transparency and to prevent insider trading. This Policy (also referred to as “Insider Trading Rules”) is intended to ensure that all ASML Employees and Related Persons comply with rules on insider trading. It also intends to promote compliance with United States laws relating to insider trading and limit the risk of ASML’s good reputation and business integrity being harmed as a result of prohibited or undesirable Trading in ASML Securities.The Policy is an important aspect of ASML’s corporate culture and is supported by the ASML Code of Conduct. Failure to comply with this Policy may lead to disciplinary or other actions and/or severe penalties as described in and referred to in article 6 of this Policy and/or could lead to violations of United States insider trading laws resulting in civil or criminal penalties. Scope These Insider Trading Rules apply to all persons working under a contract of employment or otherwise for ASML, a subsidiary or group company of ASML, including ASML Board of Management Members and ASML Supervisory Board Members (together referred to in these Insider Trading Rules as "ASML Employees"). As indicated in these Insider Trading Rules, certain parts of these rules apply to a particular group of people within ASML only, such as ASML Board of Management Members, ASML Supervisory Board Members or Permanent Insiders. Certain capitalised terms used in these Insider Trading Rules have the meaning as described under Definitions at the end of this Policy or as otherwise defined in the text of this Policy. All references in the male form should be understood to also include the female form.


© ASML 2023 – Insider Trading Rules Policy page 4 of 19 Public Principles and requirements 1. Rules for all ASML Employees 1.1 Inside Information Inside Information is a crucial term in these Insider Trading Rules. In relation to ASML, Inside Information essentially refers to information that has not been publicly disclosed that could affect the trading price of ASML shares or other ASML Securities. Please refer to the Definitions (below) for its full legal definition. 1.2 Prohibition of insider trading and exemptions thereto 1.2.1 If an ASML Employee or Related Person possesses Inside Information, he may not Trade, or attempt to Trade, in ASML Securities. A cancellation or amendment of an order concerning ASML Securities is also considered Trading. 1.2.2 This prohibition does not apply in the following situations (exemptions): (a) if the ASML Employee or Related Person Trades in discharge of an obligation that has become due in good faith (and not to circumvent the insider trading prohibition) and where (i) the obligation results from an order placed or a binding agreement concluded, or (ii) the transaction is carried out to satisfy a legal or regulatory obligation that arose, before the ASML Employee or Related Person concerned possessed Inside Information; (b) the purchase or acceptance of ASML Securities in connection with ASML’s employee share purchase or equity plans, provided that (i) such Trade occurs under a pre-planned and organized approach and (ii) the purchase or acceptance takes place under a defined framework under which any Inside Information cannot influence the purchase or acceptance of ASML Securities; (c) the sale of ASML Securities acquired under ASML’s employee share purchase or equity plans immediately after the sale has become possible under such plan, provided that (i) the proceeds of the sale are used for the purpose of immediately fulfilling outstanding tax obligations arising from the initial acquisition (also known as a sale to cover taxes) and (ii) the sale occurs under a pre-agreed mechanism which does not allow any discretion for ASML or the ASML Employee. 1.2.3 An exception to the prohibition contained in article 1.2.1 will in any case apply if the Trade is executed pursuant to a Discretionary Portfolio Management Contract and such Discretionary Portfolio Management Contract: (a) sets out the amount of securities to be purchased or sold and the price at which and the date on which the securities were to be purchased or sold;


© ASML 2023 – Insider Trading Rules Policy page 5 of 19 Public (b) includes a written formula or algorithm, or computer program, for determining the amount of securities to be purchased or sold and the price at which and the date on which the securities were to be purchased or sold; OR (c) does not permit the ASML Employee or Related Person to exercise any influence over the how, when or whether to effect purchases or sales, provided that: (d) No Inside Information: the ASML Employee or Related Person entering into the Discretionary Portfolio Management Contract is not in possession of Inside Information at the time of entry into such contract; (e) No Hedging: the ASML Employee or Related Person does not enter into or alter a corresponding or hedging transaction or position; (f) Good Faith: the contract was entered into in good faith and was not part of a plan or scheme to evade insider trading prohibitions and the ASML Employee or Related Person who entered into the Discretionary Portfolio Management Contract will act in good faith with respect to such contract; (g) No Influence: the ASML Employee or Related Person who entered into the Discretionary Portfolio Management Contract does not encourage, make a recommendation, induce, or otherwise influence the person that performs the actual Trades under the contract after such contract has been put in place. 1.2.4 In the case of Discretionary Portfolio Management Contracts that contemplate Trades in the United States (for example, on Nasdaq) or Discretionary Portfolio Management Contracts entered into by ASML Employees or Related Persons that are US persons or located in the United States, in order to rely on the exception set forth in article 1.2.3 to the prohibition contained in article 1.2.1 the following additional requirements of Rule 10b5-1 must also be satisfied: (a) Cooling-Off Period: a cooling-off period as published on the ASML Insider Trading Compliance intranet has been observed prior to making a first Trade under that contract; (b) No Amendments without Cooling-Off: the ASML Employee or Related Person who entered into the Discretionary Portfolio Management Contract does not alter or deviate from the contract (whether by changing the amount, price or timing of the purchase or sale) unless such ASML Employee or Related Person observes a cooling-off period as specified on the ASML Insider Trading Compliance Intranet before Trading could begin under such contract and also complies with the good faith requirement as set out in article 1.2.3 of this Policy;


© ASML 2023 – Insider Trading Rules Policy page 6 of 19 Public (c) Overlapping Plans: the ASML Employee or Related Person who entered into the Discretionary Portfolio Management Contract has no outstanding (and does not subsequently enter into any additional) Rule 10b5-1 compliant Discretionary Portfolio Management Contract, subject to the following exceptions: (i) Several Contracts with Different Brokers Under One Discretionary Portfolio Management Contract: a series of separate contracts with different broker-dealers or other agents acting on behalf of the ASML Employee or Related Person to execute Trades thereunder as part of a Discretionary Portfolio Management Contract may be treated as a single Discretionary Portfolio Management Contract, provided that the individual constituent contracts with each broker-dealer or other agent contain the same parameters (algorithms, formulas, instructions, etc.) and, when taken together as a whole, meet all of the applicable conditions of and remain collectively subject to the provisions of this Policy. This includes that a modification of any individual contract would amount to a termination/modification of the whole Discretionary Portfolio Management Contract and require observance of a cooling- off period as specified on the ASML Insider Trading Compliance Intranet before Trading could begin under any contract within such consolidated Discretionary Portfolio Management Contract; (ii) Successor Discretionary Portfolio Management Contracts : the ASML Employee or Related Person may simultaneously maintain two Discretionary Portfolio Management Contracts if one of them is a successor trading plan under which Trades are not scheduled to begin until completion or expiration of the existing predecessor plan. If the predecessor plan is terminated early, Trading under the successor plan cannot commence until the applicable cooling-off period as specified on the ASML Insider Trading Compliance intranet has run from the termination date of the predecessor plan; and (iii) Sell-to-Cover Arrangements: the ASML Employee or Related Person may use sell-to-cover arrangements that authorize the sale of only enough securities necessary to satisfy tax withholding obligations arising exclusively from the vesting of shares acquired under ASML’s equity compensation plans. (d) Single-Trade Discretionary Portfolio Management Contracts: the ASML Employee or Related Person may only enter into one Single-Trade Discretionary Portfolio Management Contract during any 12-month period. (e) Board Member Representation: in the case of a ASML Board of Management Member or ASML Supervisory Board Member, such Member has included a representation in the


© ASML 2023 – Insider Trading Rules Policy page 7 of 19 Public Discretionary Portfolio Management Contract certifying that, on the date of adoption (and any amendment) of such contract: (i) such Member is not aware of any Inside Information; and (ii) such Member is entering into (or amending) the Discretionary Portfolio Management Contract in good faith and not as part of a plan or scheme to evade Rule 10b5-1 or any applicable laws. 1.2.5 Compliance with Rule 10b5-1 is not mandatory for Trading in securities in the US by insiders. As such, compliance with Rule 10b5-1 is not required in all circumstances under this Policy. However, given the protection and assurance that Rule 10b5-1 provides – i.e., that a person is not deemed to be Trading on the basis of Inside Information if the conditions set out in articles 1.2.3 and 1.2.4 are followed – many insiders in the US seek to comply with Rule 10b5- 1 for Trading in a company’s securities by means of a Discretionary Portfolio Management Contract, particularly for those that extend over a period of time. Therefore, compliance with Rule 10b5-1 is required under this Policy for any Trading in the United States (for example, on Nasdaq) or by US persons or persons located in the United States in reliance upon the Discretionary Portfolio Management Contract exception to the general prohibition contained in article 1.2.1. 1.2.6 Notwithstanding the above, Trades under a Discretionary Portfolio Management Contract entered into by an ASML Board of Management Member or ASML Supervisory Board Member will not be exempted from article 1.2.1 to the extent these Trades are executed during a Closed Period. 1.3 No unlawful disclosure or tipping 1.3.1 An ASML Employee or Related Person may not disclose Inside Information to anyone else, except (i) where the disclosure is made strictly as part of the ASML Employee’s regular duty or function and the recipient of the Inside Information is under an obligation of confidentiality, or (ii) if the disclosure is to report a possible violation of securi ties laws or regulations to any governmental entity. 1.3.2 An ASML Employee or Related Person may not whilst in the possession of Inside Information recommend or induce anyone to engage in Trading in ASML Securities. 1.4 No Trading during Closed Periods 1.4.1 ASML Board of Management Members and ASML Supervisory Board Members, Related Persons, ASML Permanent Insiders, and ASML Employees so instructed by the Central


© ASML 2023 – Insider Trading Rules Policy page 8 of 19 Public Officer1 may not Trade in ASML Securities during a Closed Period, regardless of whether they possess Inside Information. 1.4.2 The Closed Periods are the periods of 30 calendar days prior to the publication of ASML ’s annual financial report and semi-annual financial report, and of ASML’s first and third quarterly figures. The publication of the annual financial report means the public statement whereby ASML announces, in advance to the publication of the final annual financial report, the preliminary financial results agreed by the ASML Board of Management that will be included in the annual financial report, provided that the disclosed preliminary financial results contain all the key information relating to the financial figures expected to be included in the final annual financial report. 1.4.3 The Central Officer will communicate the specific dates of the Closed Periods in any financial year, inter alia via the intranet of the Company, prior to the start of the financial year. Any changes or additions will be announced in the same manner. 1.5 No Trading in ASML Securities in violation of ASML instructions An ASML Employee or Related Person may not Trade in ASML Securities when the Central Officer has prohibited him from doing so, regardless of whether he possesses Inside Information. 1.6 No Trading in certain other listed companies 1.6.1 An ASML Employee may not Trade in financial instruments relating to other listed compan ies if the Central Officer has prohibited him from doing so, regardless of whether he possesses inside information in relation to these companies or financial instruments. 1.6.2 The exceptions referred to in articles 1.2.2, 1.2.3 and 1.2.4 apply mutatis mutandis to the prohibition in article 1.6.1. 1.7 Dispensation The Central Officer may grant an ASML Employee or Related Person dispensation from any of the restrictions included in articles 1.4 through 1.6, to the extent permitted by law. Any dispensation request must be made in writing stating the reasons for the request. “Writing” shall be deemed to include electronic communication. Any dispensation from a prohibition granted by the Central Officer is without prejudice to the statutory market abuse prohibitions, including the prohibition on insider trading. 1 E.g. ASML Employees who are closely involved in the preparation of the consolidated financial results and/or business outlook.


© ASML 2023 – Insider Trading Rules Policy page 9 of 19 Public 1.8 Consultation Central Officer The Central Officer may, at an ASML Employee's request, render advice on whether a prohibition or exception under this article 1 applies to a particular Trade or other behaviour (see also article 5.4 of these Insider Trading Rules). 1.9 Miscellaneous 1.9.1 Every ASML Board of Management Member and ASML Supervisory Board Member must inform their Related Persons in writing of their obligations under this article 1. In addition, each financial year, every ASML Board of Management Member and ASML Supervisory Board Member must inform their Related Persons which periods shall be deemed to be Closed Periods and of the changes or additions thereto as announced by the Central Officer in accordance with article 1.4.3. 1.9.2 The restrictions included in articles 1.4 through 1.6 will continue to have effect until six months after the date on which the ASML Employee will have ceased to be employed by ASML or will have ceased to occupy the relevant position with ASML, and without prejudice to the statutory market abuse prohibitions. 2. Additional rules for ASML Board of Management Members and ASML Supervisory Board Members 2.1 Long-term investment If an ASML Board of Management Member or ASML Supervisory Board Member holds ASML Securities, he must hold these for long-term investment purposes. For ASML Board of Management members, an exception to this rule applies for ASML Securities received as remuneration, such as performance shares. This obligation will continue to have effect until six months after the date on which the ASML Board of Management Member or ASML Supervisory Board Member will have ceased to be employed by ASML or will have ceased to occupy that position with ASML. 2.2 Other trading restrictions 2.2.1 The Company may grant options on ASML Securities or other equity based remuneration components to ASML Board of Management Members, in accordance with the relevant arrangements of the Company and the numbers approved by the Company's general meeting of shareholders. Such ASML Board of Management Member shall accept and exercise such options or other equity based remuneration components in accordance with the applicable regulations and these Insider Trading Rules.


© ASML 2023 – Insider Trading Rules Policy page 10 of 19 Public 2.2.2 ASML Board of Management Members and ASML Supervisory Board Members and their Related Persons may not buy or write options on ASML Securities, for which the date of expiry is less than six months after the date of the respective transaction. 2.2.3 The restrictions in this article 2.2 will continue to have effect until six months after the date on which the ASML Board of Management Member or the ASML Supervisory Board Member will have ceased to be employed by ASML or will have ceased to occupy that position with ASML. 2.3 Notifications by ASML Board of Management Members and ASML Supervisory Board Members 2.3.1 Each ASML Board of Management Member or ASML Supervisory Board Member must notify both the AFM and the Central Officer of the following at the time indicated: (a) without delay: each change, in number and/or type, in his share and/or voting interest in ASML. In this context, "share" also includes rights to obtain shares, such as options. A change in the type of interest will, for example, occur if an option is exercised and consequently shares are obtained; (b) promptly and ultimately within 3 business days: every transaction in ASML Securities conducted by him or on his account. A non-exhaustive list of transactions that must be notified is included in Annex 1 to these Insider Trading Rules; and (c) within two weeks of the appointment as a member of the Board of Management or Supervisory Board: his holding in ASML shares or voting rights. 2.3.2 The notifications referred to under articles 2.3.1(a) and (b) can be combined if and to the extent permitted by law. 2.3.3 ASML Board of Management Members or ASML Supervisory Board Members must instruct any person arranging or executing transactions on their behalf, such as an individual portfolio manager, to timely inform them of any transaction or change that is notifiable under this article, or to make the required notifications on their behalf. 2.3.4 ASML Board of Management Members and ASML Supervisory Board Members may request the Central Officer to submit the necessary notifications to the AFM on their behalf. The request must be made in writing, including by email. The Central Officer must have received the request before 13:00 hours CET on the business day following the date of the transaction (or other event triggering the notification requirement). The request must be accompanied by a draft containing all details (to the extent available) that must be notified to the AFM. On the date of the transaction (or other notification trigger event) the ASML Board of Management Member or ASML Supervisory Board Member must confirm (or amend or supplement) these


© ASML 2023 – Insider Trading Rules Policy page 11 of 19 Public details. The Central Officer may pose additional requirements in order to ascertain due and timely notification to the AFM. ASML Board of Management Members and ASML Supervisory Board Members will at all times remain responsible themselves for notifications to the AFM made on their behalf. 2.3.5 If an ASML Board of Management Member, ASML Supervisory Board Member or Related Person has entered into a Discretionary Portfolio Management Contract, the ASML Board of Management Member, ASML Supervisory Board Member or Related Person as the case may be, must provide the Central Officer with a copy of that contract and of any amendment or supplement to it. 2.4 Obligations ASML Board of Management Members and ASML Supervisory Board Members relating to their Closely Associated Persons 2.4.1 ASML Board of Management Members and ASML Supervisory Board Members must inform the Central Officer of all persons that qualify as their Closely Associated Persons (see Definitions for the full legal definition of "Closely Associated Persons"). These persons include spouses, certain other relatives and certain legal entities managed or controlled by ASML Board of Management and ASML Supervisory Board Members or their Closely Associated Persons. 2.4.2 ASML Board of Management Members and ASML Supervisory Board Members must inform their Closely Associated Persons in writing (and keep a copy thereof) of their duty to notify the AFM and the Central Officer promptly and ultimately within 3 business days of every transaction in ASML Securities. 3. Insider list 3.1 Pursuant to ASML’s legal obligations under the European Market Abuse Regulation ((EU) No 596/2014), ASML will keep a list of persons who have or may have access to Inside Information (the "insider list"). The insider list is divided into separate sections relating to different Inside Information, as well as a section with the details of ASML Permanent Insiders. New sections will be added to the insider list upon the identification of new Inside Information. The various sections of the insider list will be maintained by either the Central Officer or a person working on the relevant project or event. 3.2 The insider list includes the following details of individuals who have access to Inside Information: (a) First name(s) and surname(s), as well as birth surname(s); (b) Professional telephone number(s);


© ASML 2023 – Insider Trading Rules Policy page 12 of 19 Public (c) Company name and address; (d) Function and reason for being insider; (e) Date and time at which a person obtained access to Inside Information, or, in relation to ASML Permanent Insiders, date and time at which a person was included in the permanent insider section; (f) Date and time at which a person ceased to have access to Inside Information; (g) Date of birth; (h) National identification number; (i) Personal telephone numbers; (j) Personal full home address. 3.3 ASML is the data controller with regard to the processing of personal data (to be) included in the insider list and may only use these data in accordance with applicable laws and the ASML privacy policy, and for the following purposes: (a) Keeping the insider list in accordance with these Insider Trading Rules; (b) Complying with legal obligations, including the European Market Abuse Regulation ((EU) No 596/2014) and complying with requests from the AFM or another competent authority; (c) Controlling the flow of Inside Information, thereby managing ASML’s confidentiality duties; (d) Informing certain ASML Employees of Closed Periods; (e) Informing ASML Employees of which other persons are in the same section of the insider list; and (f) Holding or commissioning an inquiry into transactions conducted by or on behalf of an ASML Employee or a Closely Associated Person with an ASML PDMR. 3.4 ASML will retain the data in the list in accordance with ASML’s Data Retention Policy. The insider list and all updates thereof will be dated. ASML will retain the insider list for a period of at least five years after it is drawn up or updated. If such data is necessary for an internal or external investigation, the resolution of a dispute or in connection with legal proceedings, ASML will retain the relevant data until the relevant investigation, dispute or legal proceeding has ended.


© ASML 2023 – Insider Trading Rules Policy page 13 of 19 Public 3.5 ASML will inform an ASML Employee of his inclusion in the insider list. An ASML Employee included in the insider list must acknowledge in writing (which also includes electronic communication) that he is aware of his duties as set forth in these Insider Trading Rules, as well as the applicable sanctions included and referred to in article 6 of these Insider Trading Rules. 3.6 ASML may provide information from the insider list to the AFM or other competent authorities upon their request. Information of the insider list will not be supplied to other parties, except when required or allowed by law or if a legitimate interest of ASML requires this. 3.7 Persons included in the insider list are entitled to review the personal data processed by ASML and request necessary amendments. Persons may also request to see which other persons are likewise included in the relevant section of the insider list. 4. Additional rules for ASML Permanent Insiders 4.1 Trading restrictions ASML Permanent Insiders, other than ASML Board of Management Members and ASML Supervisory Board Members, may not buy or write options on ASML Securities, for which the date of expiry is less than six months after the date of the respective transaction. This restriction will continue to have effect until six months after the date on which the ASML Permanent Insider will have ceased to be employed by ASML or will have ceased to occupy his position with ASML. 4.2 Notification obligations Each Permanent Insider other than an ASML Management Board Member and ASML Supervisory Board Member must within three business days notify the Central Officer of every transaction in ASML Securities conducted by him or on his account by means of the Insider Transactions Reporting form. In case the transaction in ASML Securities is executed via the UBS Equate plus tool, the Central Officer is deemed to have been duly notified. 5. Central officer 5.1 The Company's Board of Management will announce who has been appointed as Central Officer and where he can be reached. The Central Officer may, in consultation with the ASML Board of Management, appoint one or more deputies, whether or not with offices in other countries, to carry out his duties and powers. The Company's Board of Management shall announce who the appointed deputies are as well as where they are to be contacted. The Central Officer may, in consultation with the Company's Board of Management, appoint persons to replace him in his absence and/or to assist him in the execution of his tasks.


© ASML 2023 – Insider Trading Rules Policy page 14 of 19 Public 5.2 The Central Officer has the duties and powers granted to him in these Insider Trading Rules. The Company's Board of Management may grant additional duties or powers to the Central Officer. 5.3 The Central Officer may, in exceptional circumstances, grant dispensation from prohibitions, restrictions or obligations included in the Insider Trading Rules, to the extent permitted by law. 5.4 ASML Employees and Related Persons may request the Central Officer as to advise whether a prohibition, restriction or obligation contained in the Insider Trading Rules applies to them. If an ASML Employee or Related Person is in doubt as to whether a prohibition or obligation applies, it is advisable that he contacts the Central Officer and seeks advice. ASML Employees and Related Persons will at all times remain fully responsible for compliance with the Insider Trading Rules and the law. 5.5 The Central Officer is authorised to hold or commission an inquiry into transactions conducted by or on behalf an ASML Employee or a Person Closely Associated with an ASML Board of Management Member of an ASML Supervisory Board Member. The Central Officer may report the outcome of the inquiry to the chairman of the Supervisory Board and/or other ASML Board of Management Members or ASML Supervisory Board Members if deemed appropriate. 6. Sanctions 6.1 In the event of a violation of any provision of this Policy, ASML or, as the case may be, the employer reserves the right to impose any sanctions which it is entitled to impose pursuant to the applicable law and/or the (employment) agreement with the person in question. Such possible sanctions include - depending on the gravity of the offence - a warning, a serious warning, payment to ASML of derived benefits, suspension, termination of the (employment) agreement with the person involved, by way of summary dismissal or otherwise, and a report to a competent authority. 6.2 A description of the market abuse prohibitions under the European Market Abuse Regulation ((EU) No 596/2014) and related maximum sanctions can be found on the Company's intranet. 7. Miscellaneous 7.1 Circumstances not covered by this Policy The ASML Board of Management has the right to take decisions in any circumstances not covered by this Policy, provided that it does so in accordance with any applicable statutory provisions and laws, including the Market Abuse Regulation and United States securities laws.


© ASML 2023 – Insider Trading Rules Policy page 15 of 19 Public 7.2 Amendments The provisions under this Policy may be amended and/or supplemented by a resolution of the ASML Board of Management. Such resolution shall require approval of the Company's Supervisory Board. Amendments and supplements will enter into force from the moment that they are announced, unless the announcement specifies otherwise. 7.3 Governing law These Insider Trading Rules are governed by Dutch law. Enclosures Annex 1: non-exhaustive list of transactions that must be notified by PDMRs and Closely Associated Persons with PDMRs. Responsibilities The Legal & Compliance Department is responsible for the implementation of this Policy throughout the organization. Communication and training This Policy is publicly available. The Legal & Compliance Department will organize regular training (tuned to the needs of the various departments and/or stakeholders) to raise awareness about market abuse laws and regulations and this Policy in particular. A computer based training on this topic is made available on MyLearning. Deviations There are no exceptions to this Policy. Definitions Term Definition AFM Netherlands Authority for the Financial Markets (Stichting Autoriteit Financiële Markten) ASML Board of Management Members The members of the Company's board of management (directie)


© ASML 2023 – Insider Trading Rules Policy page 16 of 19 Public ASML Employees Persons working under a contract of employment or otherwise performing tasks for ASML, a subsidiary or group company of ASML, members of the ASML's Board of Management and Supervisory Board ASML Permanent Insiders Persons who have access at all times to all Inside Information. ASML Permanent Insiders are or will be placed on the permanent part of ASML’s insider list, and receive a notification informing them thereof ASML PDMR a person discharging managerial responsibilities, which means a person within ASML who is: (a) a member of ASML's Board of Management or Supervisory Board; or (b) a senior executive not being a member of ASML’s Board of Management or Supervisory Board, who has regular access to Inside Information and power to take managerial decisions affecting the future developments and business prospects of ASML ASML Securities ASML shares or debt instruments, or derivatives or other financial instruments linked to them ASML Supervisory Board Members The members of the corporate body charged with the supervision of ASML's management (raad van commissarissen) Closed Period Periods defined in article 1.4.2 of these Insider Trading Rules. Closely Associated Persons (a) spouses, registered partners or life partners of, or other persons cohabiting in a similar way with a PDMR; (b) children who fall under a PDMR's authority (including all minors, i.e. children younger than 18 years) or who are under legal restraint and for whom a PDMR has been appointed guardian; (c) other blood relatives or those otherwise related to a PDMR, who have on the date of the Trade shared a joint household with him for at least one year; (d) or legal entities, trusts as referred to in section 1, subparagraph (c) of the Act on the Supervision of Trust Offices (Wet toezicht trustkantoren) or partnerships, (i) whose executive responsibility is vested in a PDMR or a person as referred to in point (a), (b) or (c), (ii) which are controlled by a PDMR, or a person as referred to in paragraphs (a) to (c); (iii) which have been created for the benefit of a PDMR, or a person as referred to in paragraphs (a) to (c); or (iv) the economic interests of which are substantially equivalent to a PDMR, or a person as referred to in paragraphs (a) to (c). Company or ASML ASML Holding N.V. Discretionary A written contract, instruction or plan entered into by an ASML Employee or


© ASML 2023 – Insider Trading Rules Policy page 17 of 19 Public Portfolio Management Contract Related Person and a financial firm permitted under the Dutch Financial Markets Supervision Act and, in the case of trading activity in the US or by US persons or persons in the US, Rule 10b5-1, to manage private portfolios which provides that the ASML Employee or Related Person as principal, cannot exercise any influence on Trades by the financial firm pursuant to such contract, instruction or plan. EquatePlus The software tool for the purpose of administering the Company's employee stock participation plans, including the possibility for ASML Employees to Trade in ASML Securities under such plans. Inside Information (a) Information of a precise nature, which has not been made public, relating, directly or indirectly, to ASML or to one or more financial instruments (including ASML Securities), and which, if it were made public, would be likely to have a significant effect on the prices of those financial instruments or on the price of related derivative financial instruments; or (b) under United States laws: information which is material non-public information. Information is material if (a) there is a substantial likelihood that a reasonable investor would consider the information important in determining whether to trade in a security; or (b) the information, if made public, likely would affect the market price of a company's securities. Information is considered to be non-public unless it has been adequately disclosed to the public, which means that the information must be publicly disseminated and sufficient time must have passed for the securities markets to digest the information. Although there is no fixed period for how long it takes the market to absorb information, out of prudence a person in possession of material non- public information should refrain from any trading activity for two full trading days following its official release. Related Person Closely Associated Persons and any other person or entity over whom an ASML Board of Management Member or ASML Supervisory Board Member exercises substantial influence or control over his, her or its securities trading decisions Rule 10b5-1 A provision of United States securities laws that: (a) codifies the prohibition on insider trading under United States securities laws, making it clear that the anti-fraud rules prohibit the purchase or sale of securities on the basis of (i.e. while the relevant person is in possession of) material non-public information in breach of a duty owed to the issuer, shareholders or the person who was the source of the information; and (b) provides a safe harbor from insider trading for purchases and sales of securities where e.g. a contract for sale or purchase of securities has been entered into when the relevant person was not aware of material non-public information, and such contract does not permit the relevant person to exercise discretion over trades and certain other conditions (as described in detail in articles 1.2.3 and 1.2.4) are met.


© ASML 2023 – Insider Trading Rules Policy page 18 of 19 Public Single-Trade Discretionary Portfolio Management Contract A Discretionary Portfolio Management Contract that is designed to effect a single transaction and has the practical effect of requiring such a result. Such Discretionary Portfolio Management Contracts do not include sell-to-cover transactions described in provision 1.2.4 (c) (iii) herein. A Discretionary Portfolio Management Contract does not qualify as a Single-Trade Discretionary Portfolio Management Contract if such contract includes a wide price range or several different stock triggers and if it gives broad trading execution discretion to the broker or agent, even if such broker or agent happens to acquire or dispose of the entire volume of such contract in one single trade. Trade or Trading Acquiring or disposing of, or conducting any other transaction on a person’s own account or for the account of a third party, directly or indirectly, relating to, financial instruments A cancellation or amendment of an order concerning a financial instrument is also considered to be a Trade. References Related regulation, legislation or external standards Related internal documents EU Market Abuse Regulation ASML Code of Conduct US Securities laws, incl. US Securities Exchange Act of 1934 Corporate Policies as disclosed on the Corporate Policy Portal. Obsolescence This policy replaces ASML Insider Trading Rules 2022


© ASML 2023 – Insider Trading Rules Policy page 19 of 19 Public ANNEX 1: NON-EXHAUSTIVE LIST OF TRANSACTIONS THAT MUST BE NOTIFIED BY PDMRS AND CLOSELY ASSOCIATED PERSONS WITH PDMRS Transactions in ASML Securities which need to be notified to the AFM and ASML under Article 19 of the European Market Abuse Regulation ((EU) No 596/2014), include the following : a) acquisitions or disposals; b) transactions undertaken by persons professionally arranging or executing transactions or by another person on behalf of a PDMR or a Person Closely Associated with a PDMR, including where discretion is exercised (e.g. under an individual portfolio or asset management mandate); c) gifts and donations made or received, and inheritance received; d) acceptance or exercise of a stock option, including of a stock option granted to managers or employees as part of their remuneration package, and the disposal of shares stemming from the exercise of a stock option; e) subscription to a capital increase or debt instrument issuance; f) conditional transactions upon the occurrence of the conditions and actual execution of the transactions; g) automatic or non-automatic conversion of a financial instrument into another financial instrument, including the exchange of convertible bonds to shares; h) pledging (or a similar security interest), borrowing or lending by or on behalf of a PDMR or Person Closely Associated with a PDMR; i) short sale, subscription or exchange; j) entering into or exercise of equity swaps; k) transactions in or related to derivatives, including cash-settled transactions; l) entering into a contract for difference on a financial instrument of ASML or on emission allowances or auction products based thereon; m) acquisition, disposal or exercise of rights, including put and call options, and warrants; n) transactions in derivatives and financial instruments linked to a debt instrument of ASML, including credit default swaps; o) transactions executed in index-related products, baskets and derivatives, insofar as required by Article 19 of Regulation (EU) No 596/2014 ; p) transactions executed in shares or units of investment funds, including alternative investment funds (AIFs) referred to in Article 1 of Directive 2011/61/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council, insofar as required by Article 19 of Regulation (EU) No 596/20142; q) transactions executed by manager of an AIF in which the PDMR or Person Closely Associated with PDMR have invested, insofar as required by Article 19 of Regulation (EU) No 596/20142; and r) transactions made under a life insurance policy, where the investment risk is borne by the PDMR or Person Closely Associated with PDMR and he/she has the power or discretion to make investment decisions regarding specific instruments in that life insurance policy or to execute transactions regarding specific instruments for that life insurance policy.


a20231016_asmlxclawbackx

US Clawback Policy ASML Holding N.V. 1 Public ASML HOLDING N.V. CLAWBACK POLICY UNDER US/NASDAQ RULES The supervisory board (the “Supervisory Board”) of ASML Holding N.V. (the “Company”) have determined that it is appropriate for the Company to adopt this Clawback Policy under US/Nasdaq Rules (the “Policy”) to be applied to the Executive Officers of the Company effective as of the Effective Date in accordance with Rule 10D-1 (the “Rule”) under the Exchange Act (as defined below). 1. Definitions For purposes of this Policy, the following definitions shall apply: a) "Remuneration Committee” means the remuneration committee of the Supervisory Board of the Company. b) “Company Group” means the Company and each of its Subsidiaries, as applicable. c) “Covered Compensation” means any Incentive-Based Compensation granted, vested or paid to a person who served as an Executive Officer at any time during the performance period for the Incentive- Based Compensation and that was received (i) on or after October 2, 2023, being the effective date of Nasdaq Rule 5608, (ii) after the person became an Executive Officer and (iii) at a time that the Company had a class of securities listed on a national securities exchange or a national securities association. d) “Effective Date” means the date on which this Policy has been adopted by the Supervisory Board, being October 16, 2023. e) “Erroneously Awarded Compensation” means the amount of Covered Compensation granted, vested or paid to a person during the fiscal period when the applicable Financial Reporting Measure relating to such Covered Compensation was attained that exceeds the amount of Covered Compensation that otherwise would have been granted, vested or paid to the person had such amount been determined based on the applicable Restatement, computed without regard to any taxes paid (i.e., on a pre-tax basis). For Covered Compensation based on share price or total shareholder return, where the amount of Erroneously Awarded Compensation is not subject to mathematical recalculation directly from the information in a Restatement, the Supervisory Board will determine the amount of such Covered Compensation that constitutes Erroneously Awarded Compensation, if any, based on a reasonable estimate of the effect of the Restatement on the share price or total shareholder return upon which the Covered Compensation was granted, vested or paid and the Company shall maintain documentation of such determination of that reasonable estimate and provide such documentation to the Nasdaq. f) “Exchange Act” means the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. g) “Executive Officer” means the members of the board of management of the Company (“Board of Management”), being those officers of the Company who qualify as Executive Officers for the purpose of this policy in accordance with the Rule, and any other person determined by the Supervisory Board to qualify as an Executive Officer of the Company in accordance with the Rule. h) “Financial Reporting Measure” means (i) any measure that is determined and presented in accordance with the accounting principles used in preparing the Company’s financial statements, and any measures derived wholly or in part from such measures and may consist of IFRS/GAAP or non- IFRS/non-GAAP financial measures (as defined under Regulation G of the Exchange Act and Item 10 of Regulation S-K under the Exchange Act), (ii) share price or (iii) total shareholder return. Financial Reporting Measures need not be presented within the Company’s financial statements or included in a filing with or submission to the SEC. Exhibit 97.1


US Clawback Policy ASML Holding N.V. 2 Public i) “Home Country” means the Company’s jurisdiction of incorporation, being the Netherlands. j) “Incentive-Based Compensation” means any compensation that is granted, earned or vested based wholly or in part upon the attainment of a Financial Reporting Measure. k) “Lookback Period” means the three completed fiscal years (plus any transition period of less than nine months that is within or immediately following the three completed fiscal years and that results from a change in the Company’s fiscal year) immediately preceding the date on which the Company is required to prepare a Restatement for a given reporting period, with such date being the earlier of: (i) the date the Supervisory Board, a committee of the Supervisory Board, or the officer or officers of the Company authorized to take such action if Supervisory Board action is not required, concludes, or reasonably should have concluded, that the Company is required to prepare an Restatement, or (ii) the date a court, regulator or other legally authorized body directs the Company to prepare a Restatement. Recovery of any Erroneously Awarded Compensation under the Policy is not dependent on if or when the Restatement is actually filed. l) “Nasdaq” means the Nasdaq Stock Market. m) “Received”: Incentive-Based Compensation is deemed “received” in the Company’s fiscal period during which the Financial Reporting Measure specified in or otherwise relating to the Incentive-Based Compensation award is attained, even if the grant, vesting or payment of the Incentive-Based Compensation occurs after the end of that period. n) “Restatement” means a required accounting restatement of any Company financial statement due to the material noncompliance of the Company with any financial reporting requirement under the securities laws, including (i) to correct an error in previously issued financial statements that is material to the previously issued financial statements (commonly referred to as a “Big R” restatement) or (ii) to correct an error in previously issued financial statements that is not material to the previously issued financial statements but that would result in a material misstatement if the error were corrected in the current period or left uncorrected in the current period (commonly referred to as a “little r” restatement), within the meaning of Exchange Act Rule 10D-1 and Nasdaq Rule 5608. Changes to the Company’s financial statements that do not represent error corrections under the then-current relevant accounting standards will not constitute Restatements. Recovery of any Erroneously Awarded Compensation under the Policy is not dependent on fraud or misconduct by any person in connection with the Restatement. o) “SEC” means the United States Securities and Exchange Commission. p) “Subsidiary” means any domestic or foreign corporation, partnership, association, joint stock company, joint venture, trust or unincorporated organization that is, directly or indirectly, majority-owned by the Company. 2. Recoupment of Erroneously Awarded Compensation In the event of a Restatement, any Erroneously Awarded Compensation received during the Lookback Period prior to the Restatement (a) that is then-outstanding but has not yet been paid shall be forfeited and (b) that has been paid to any person shall be subject to reasonably prompt repayment to the Company Group in accordance with Section 3 of this Policy. The Supervisory Board must pursue (and shall not have the discretion to waive) the forfeiture and/or repayment of such Erroneously Awarded Compensation in accordance with Section 3 of this Policy, except as provided below. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Supervisory Board may determine not to pursue the forfeiture and/or recovery of Erroneously Awarded Compensation from any person if the Remuneration Committee determines that such forfeiture and/or recovery would be impracticable due to any of the following circumstances: (i) the direct expense paid to a third party (for example, reasonable legal expenses and


US Clawback Policy ASML Holding N.V. 3 Public consulting fees) to assist in enforcing the Policy would exceed the amount to be recovered, including the costs that could be incurred if pursuing such recovery would violate local laws other than the Company’s Home Country laws (following reasonable attempts by the Company Group to recover such Erroneously Awarded Compensation, the documentation of such attempts, and the provision of such documentation to the Nasdaq), (ii) pursuing such recovery would violate the Company’s Home Country laws adopted prior to November 28, 2022 (provided that the Company obtains an opinion of Home Country counsel acceptable to the Nasdaq that recovery would result in such a violation and provides such opinion to the Nasdaq), or (iii) recovery would likely cause any otherwise tax-qualified retirement plan, under which benefits are broadly available to employees of Company Group, to fail to meet the requirements of 26 U.S.C. 401(a)(13) or 26 U.S.C. 411(a) and regulations thereunder. 3. Means of Repayment In the event that the Supervisory Board determines that any person is required to repay any Erroneously Awarded Compensation in accordance with this Policy, the Supervisory Board shall provide written notice to such person by email or certified mail to the physical address on file with the Company Group for such person, and the person shall satisfy such repayment in a manner and on such terms as required by the Supervisory Board, and the Company Group shall be entitled to set off the repayment amount against any amount owed to the person by the Company Group, to require the forfeiture of any award granted by the Company Group to the person, or to take any and all necessary actions to reasonably promptly recoup the repayment amount from the person, in each case, to the fullest extent permitted under applicable law, including without limitation, Section 409A of the Internal Revenue Code and the regulations and guidance thereunder. If the Supervisory Board does not specify a repayment timing in the written notice described above, the applicable person shall be required to repay the Erroneously Awarded Compensation to the Company Group by wire, cash or cashier’s check no later than thirty (30) days after receipt of such notice. 4. No Indemnification No person shall be indemnified, insured or reimbursed by the Company Group in respect of any loss of compensation by such person in accordance with this Policy; such indemnification or reimbursement would also be prohibited through modification to current compensation arrangements or other means that would amount to de facto indemnification. 5. Miscellaneous This Policy generally will be administered and interpreted by the Supervisory Board. Any determination made by the Supervisory Board with respect to this Policy shall be final, conclusive and binding on all interested parties. Any discretionary determinations of the Supervisory Board under this Policy, if any, need not be uniform with respect to all persons, and may be made selectively amongst persons, whether or not such persons are similarly situated. This Policy is intended to satisfy the requirements of Section 954 of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, as it may be amended from time to time, and any related rules or regulations promulgated by the SEC or the Nasdaq, including any additional or new requirements that become effective after the Effective Date which upon effectiveness shall be deemed to automatically amend this Policy to the extent necessary to comply with such additional or new requirements. The provisions in this Policy are intended to be applied to the fullest extent of the law. To the extent that any provision of this Policy is found to be unenforceable or invalid under any applicable law, such provision will be applied to the maximum extent permitted and shall automatically be deemed amended in a manner consistent with its objectives to the extent necessary to conform to applicable law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any provision of this Policy shall not affect the validity or enforceability of any other provision of this Policy. Recoupment of Erroneously Awarded Compensation under this Policy is not dependent upon the Company Group satisfying any conditions in this Policy, including any requirement to provide applicable documentation to the Nasdaq.


US Clawback Policy ASML Holding N.V. 4 Public The rights of the Company Group under this Policy to seek forfeiture or reimbursement are in addition to, and not in lieu of, any rights of recoupment, or remedies or rights other than recoupment, that may be available to the Company Group pursuant to the terms of any law, government regulation or stock exchange listing requirement or any other policy, code of conduct, employee handbook, employment agreement, equity award agreement, or other plan or agreement of the Company Group. 6. Amendment and Termination To the extent permitted by, and in a manner consistent with applicable law, including the laws of the Netherlands, US securities laws and SEC and Nasdaq rules, the Supervisory Board may terminate, suspend or amend this Policy at any time in its discretion. 7. Successors This Policy shall be binding and enforceable against all persons and their respective beneficiaries, heirs, executors, administrators or other legal representatives.