Entegris Inc.: 10-K Risk Factor Changes

2026 vs 2025  ·  SEC EDGAR  ·  2026-05-22
Other years: 2025 vs 2024 · 2024 vs 2023
⚠ AI-Generated

The summary below was generated by an AI language model and may contain errors or omissions. All other content on this page is deterministically extracted from the original SEC EDGAR filing.

Entegris replaced a broad tariff risk factor with a more specific disclosure focused on current U.S. and international trade actions, reflecting concrete pricing and supplier pressures rather than potential future trade disputes. The company added a new AI risk disclosure covering compliance, accuracy, intellectual property, and competitive implementation concerns, signaling heightened focus on emerging technology governance. These changes, combined with 10 substantively modified risks including technology innovation and export controls, indicate a shift toward more operationally immediate and emerging-technology-focused risk disclosure.

✓ Deterministic extraction — no AI-generated data

Classification is based on semantic text similarity scoring and may include approximations. “No match” means no high-confidence textual match was found — not necessarily that a section was removed.

2
New Risks
2
Removed
10
Modified
18
Unchanged
🟢 New in Current Filing

Recent tariffs and other trade actions taken by the U.S. and other countries where we do business have increased, and may continue to increase, our import and export costs, requiring us, in certain situations, to increase our prices, add a surcharge or find alternative suppliers which, in turn, may harm our relationships with customers, reduce demand for our products and decrease our profitability.

In recent years, including during 2025, the U.S. government has imposed tariffs and implemented other trade actions affecting products and materials imported into the U.S. In response to these tariffs and other changes in U.S. trade policy, several countries, including China,…

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In recent years, including during 2025, the U.S. government has imposed tariffs and implemented other trade actions affecting products and materials imported into the U.S. In response to these tariffs and other changes in U.S. trade policy, several countries, including China, have threatened or imposed retaliatory tariffs on U.S. exports. The continuing imposition of tariffs by the U.S. and others may also give rise to further escalations of protectionist and retaliatory trade measures. Tariffs and related trade measures may be expanded, modified or restructured, and exemptions or exclusions may be limited or unavailable, which could further increase costs or disrupt supply chains. These tariffs and other trade measures could have a material adverse effect on our business, results of operations, or financial condition. Our business and operating results are heavily dependent on international trade. We import raw materials and finished goods into the U.S. and we export products from the U.S. to our customers throughout the world, including those in China. Because of the recent tariffs and other trade restrictions, we have experienced increased and additional costs with respect to our import and export of such materials, finished goods, and products, and we may continue to experience these costs. In turn, we may be required to increase the prices of our products or add surcharges, which may reduce demand and harm our relationships with our customers. If we do not, or are unable to, increase prices or add surcharges without reducing demand, we may experience reduced profitability. Furthermore, retaliatory tariffs imposed by countries where we have significant sales, like China, could cause our customers to source products from local and non-U.S. competitors, which could further reduce demand for, and the overall competitiveness of, our products and decrease our market share. Additionally, we may be required to source our materials from alternative suppliers which could significantly increase our costs, lead to significant delays, and result in reliability or quality issues, all of which could harm our reputation and decrease demand for our products. The extent and duration of the tariffs and the resulting impact on general economic conditions and on our business are uncertain and depend on various factors, such as negotiations and overall relationships between the U.S. and affected countries, the responses of other countries or regions, exemptions or exclusions that may be granted, availability and cost of alternative sources of supply, and demand for our products in affected markets.

🟢 New in Current Filing As we incorporate AI capabilities into our operations, we may be subject to various risks, including compliance risks, the potential for AI to produce inaccurate results, intellectual property and cybersecurity risks, and the risk that we are unable to use AI as successfully as our competitors, which may result in legal liability, reputational damage and other harm to our business. 🔒
🔴 No Match in Current Filing Our revenues and operating results have fluctuated in the past and may do so in the future, which could impact our stock price. 🔒
🔴 No Match in Current Filing Tariffs, additional taxes, and other protectionist measures resulting from international trade disputes, strained international relations and changes to foreign and national security policy could increase our procurement and manufacturing costs, reduce the competitiveness or availability of our products and have other adverse effects on our operations. 🔒
🟡 Modified If we are unable to anticipate and respond to rapid technological change and customer requirements by continuing to innovate and introduce new and enhanced products and solutions, we may experience a loss of market share, decreased sales, revenue, profitability and damage to our reputation. 🔒
🟡 Modified Risk Factor Summary 🔒
🟡 Modified Export controls, economic sanctions, and other similar restrictions may limit our ability to sell our products to certain customers, require us to obtain governmental licenses, put the Company at a competitive disadvantage both domestically and internationally and expose us to additional legal liability, all of which could harm our business and financial condition. 🔒
🟡 Modified We are subject to a variety of rapidly evolving environmental laws and regulations that could cause us to incur significant liabilities and expenses. 🔒
🟡 Modified Climate change may have a long-term impact on our business, including by causing disruptions to our operations which may result in decreased revenue and cash flows. 🔒
🟡 Modified A significant portion of our sales is concentrated on a limited number of key customers, and our net sales and profitability may materially decline if we were to lose one or more of these customers. 🔒
🟡 Modified Because a significant amount of our sales and manufacturing activity occurs outside the U.S., we are exposed to risks inherent in operating a global business, including changes in economic policy, geopolitical tensions and challenges in managing a diverse workforce and operating under differing business and legal environments, which may harm our reputation or profitability. 🔒
🟡 Modified As a result of global economic uncertainty, we may experience reduced demand for our products, increased costs, challenges in forecasting our operating results and identifying and prioritizing business risks, and other negative effects, any of which may materially and adversely affect our business, financial condition and results of operations. 🔒
🟡 Modified Our revenue is primarily dependent upon demand from the global semiconductor ecosystem. Fluctuations in demand, whether from industry cyclicality, changes in consumer spending, macroeconomic conditions, or other factors, may cause our revenues and operating results to vary significantly, which could adversely affect our business. 🔒
🟡 Modified We receive government incentives, grants, and subsidies that are subject to conditions, reporting requirements, and compliance obligations, and failure to satisfy these requirements could result in the reduction, termination, or clawback of benefits, as well as potential penalties or reputational harm, any of which could adversely affect our business, financial condition, and results of operations. 🔒
13 more changes in this filing

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