SANTA CLARA, Calif., June 08, 2017 -- Applied Materials, Inc. today announced that its Board of Directors has approved a quarterly cash dividend of $0.10 per share payable on the company’s common stock. The dividend is payable on September 14, 2017 to shareholders of record as of August 24, 2017.
About Applied Materials
Applied Materials, Inc. (Nasdaq:AMAT) is the leader in materials engineering solutions used to produce virtually every new chip and advanced display in the world. Our expertise in modifying materials at atomic levels and on an industrial scale enables customers to transform possibilities into reality. At Applied Materials, our innovations make possible the technology shaping the future. Learn more at www.appliedmaterials.com.
Contact:
Ricky Gradwohl (editorial/media) 408.235.4676
Michael Sullivan (financial community) 408.986.7977


Anthropic Fights Pentagon Blacklisting in Dual Federal Court Battles
Disney Plans to Cut 1,000 Jobs Amid Ongoing Restructuring Efforts
San Francisco Suspect Arrested After Molotov Cocktail Attack on OpenAI CEO Sam Altman's Home
Lumentum Holdings Rides AI Wave With Order Book Filled Through 2028
Rio Tinto's California Boron Assets Attract Over a Dozen Bidders, Valued at Up to $2 Billion
Chalco Stock Surges as Q1 2025 Profit Forecast Jumps Up to 58%
China Vanke Seeks Bond Extension Amid Mounting Debt Crisis
Tokyo Electric Power Attracts Major Investors Amid Billion-Dollar Restructuring Push
Pony.ai, Uber, and Verne Launch Europe's First Commercial Robotaxi Service in Zagreb
Pilots Fear Retaliation for Refusing Middle East Flights Amid Ongoing Conflict
NIO ES9 SUV Launch Sends HK Shares Down 7% Despite Bold Pricing Strategy
TSMC Posts Strong Q1 2025 Revenue, Riding AI Chip Demand Wave
Kia Cuts EV Sales Target for 2030 Amid Slowing Demand and U.S. Policy Shifts
Bill Ackman Eyes New Fund to Bet Against Market Complacency
China's AI Stocks Surge as Zhipu and MiniMax Hit Record Highs
FedEx Pilots and Union Reach Tentative Agreement on 40% Pay Increase
MATCH Act: How New U.S. Chip Legislation Could Freeze China's Semiconductor Ambitions 



