An Austrian chipmaker is up 459% this year, turning Vienna’s bank-heavy market into one of the eurozone's best performers of 2026.
For years, Austria's stock market was largely seen as a play on banks, with energy company OMV providing one of the few major industrial exposures.
In 2026, however, the Vienna Stock Exchange has become one of the best-performing equity markets in Europe.
The biggest driver of that performance is not a bank or an oil producer, but a semiconductor supplier based in the Styrian town of Leoben, home to about 24,000 people.
Austria's benchmark ATX index has gained 21.3% since the beginning of January, according to Trading Economics.
No major eurozone equity market has performed better. Italy's FTSE MIB has risen 16.1%, the Netherlands' AEX has gained 15.5%, and Spain's IBEX 35 has advanced 11.5%.
Germany's DAX is up just 1.6%, while France's CAC 40 has climbed 2.3%.
The Euro Stoxx 50, which tracks many of the eurozone's largest listed companies, has gained 8.2%, less than half the return delivered by Austria's benchmark.
A little-known Austrian company behind the rally
The ATX consists of only 20 blue-chip companies and has traditionally been dominated by banks, industrial groups and other cyclical businesses.
At first glance, there is little to suggest it should outperform markets with far larger technology sectors.
The explanation becomes clear once the index's biggest winner is examined.
AT&S, formally known as Austria Technologie & Systemtechnik AG, has become one of Europe's standout performers this year.
Its shares have surged 459% since the first trading session of the year, climbing from €32.20 at the end of December to €174 on Thursday.
The company's market capitalisation has increased from roughly €1.25 billion to about €7 billion in just over six months.
That is a stronger performance than several well-known semiconductor companies associated with the artificial intelligence boom, including Micron Technology, Intel, AMD and Marvell.
Despite its remarkable rise, AT&S remains largely unknown outside the semiconductor industry because it manufactures a component that consumers never see.
What does AT&S actually produce?
AT&S specialises in integrated circuit substrates, one of the most critical components inside advanced semiconductor packages.
Modern artificial intelligence processors cannot simply be mounted directly onto a circuit board.
Instead, they sit on an integrated circuit substrate, an advanced platform that provides mechanical support while carrying thousands of microscopic electrical connections that deliver power and transfer data between the processor and the rest of the system.
Although largely invisible to end users, these substrates are essential to the performance and reliability of modern chips.
Producing them is also exceptionally challenging.
Each substrate consists of multiple ultra-thin layers containing microscopic wiring that must be manufactured with extraordinary precision.
Only a small number of companies worldwide possess the technological expertise required to produce the most advanced versions.
AT&S is the only major European manufacturer in this highly specialised market. Its main competitors are Japanese and Taiwanese companies, including Ibiden and Shinko Electric.
According to figures presented by AT&S to investors earlier this year, the global market for integrated circuit substrates was expected to grow by 18% in 2025 to approximately $11.1 billion (€9.7bn).
Strong financial results reinforce investor optimism
The favourable industry backdrop has already translated into stronger financial performance.
During its 2025/26 financial year, AT&S generated revenue of €1.8 billion, representing growth of 21% at constant exchange rates. Excluding proceeds from the sale of its plant in Ansan, South Korea, EBITDA increased by about 50% to €418 million, while free cash flow turned positive at €236 million after being deeply negative the previous year.
"2025/26 was a strong and pivotal financial year for AT&S," Chief Executive Michael Mertin said when the company reported annual results on 21 May.
Investor enthusiasm accelerated further on 13 June, when AT&S announced agreements with AMD and another major technology customer, reported by Reuters to be Intel, to expand production capacity at its facilities in Kulim, Malaysia, and Chongqing, China.
The planned investment of between €1.5 billion and €2 billion attracted significant attention because it was roughly equivalent to the company's market value at the beginning of the year.
One company is reshaping Austria's stock market
The rally has also altered the composition of Austria's equity market.
Financial institutions continue to dominate the country's main investment vehicles. In the iShares MSCI Austria ETF, Erste Group remains the largest holding at 24.2%, followed by BAWAG at 12.5%. Together with Raiffeisen Bank International and two insurance companies, financial stocks still account for roughly half of the fund.
AT&S, however, has become the fourth-largest holding, representing 5.9% of the portfolio. Just a year ago, it represented only a tiny share of the portfolio.
Austria has not suddenly become a technology market. Banks and cyclical companies still dominate its benchmark index.
Yet the extraordinary rise of AT&S illustrates how a single company operating in one of the most critical segments of the artificial intelligence supply chain can reshape the performance of an entire national stock market.