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Texas Instruments fans fear of chip industry downturn with dour forecast

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Chipmaker Texas Instruments Inc forecast fourth-quarter revenue and profit below estimates as it expects demand across most of its end markets to decline, sending its shares down 5%.

After a two-year boom in the chip industry, triggered by tight supply and high demand, a downturn is setting in as personal electronics makers and retailers, who are sitting on bloated inventories due to inflation-hit demand, cut orders for chips.

On the earnings call, TI said order cancellations increased during the third quarter. Chip makers Advanced Micro Devices and Micron Technology have also warned of worsening demand.

“During the quarter we experienced expected weakness in personal electronics and expanding weakness across industrial,” TI Chief Executive Rich Templeton said.

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While TI called the automotive sector an exception to this trend, Summit Insights Group analyst Kinngai Chan noted that many automakers continue to order double the chips they need and expects the demand to slip to pre-pandemic levels in the first half of next year.

Shares of the Dallas, Texas-based company fell to $154 in extended trading. They have declined about 14% so far this year, mirroring decline in shares of its peers as investors brace for the chip industry boom to normalize.

The company forecast fourth-quarter revenue between $4.40 billion and $4.80 billion, compared with estimates of $4.93 billion, per Refinitiv data.

It forecast profit between $1.83 and $2.11, below estimates of $2.21.

TI said it does not expect a “meaningful” or “significant” impact to its revenue from U.S. restrictions on exports to China, where it makes 25% of its revenue from.

In the third quarter, the company reported a 13% rise in revenue to $5.24 billion on strong demand for its semiconductors from the auto sector. Analysts had expected $5.14 billion.

Excluding items, the company earned $2.45 per share, beating estimates of $2.39.

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Texas Instruments fans fear of chip industry downturn with dour forecast

Chipmaker Texas Instruments Inc forecast fourth-quarter revenue and profit below estimates as it expects demand across most of its end markets to decline, sending its shares down 5%.

After a two-year boom in the chip industry, triggered by tight supply and high demand, a downturn is setting in as personal electronics makers and retailers, who are sitting on bloated inventories due to inflation-hit demand, cut orders for chips.

On the earnings call, TI said order cancellations increased during the third quarter. Chip makers Advanced Micro Devices and Micron Technology have also warned of worsening demand.

“During the quarter we experienced expected weakness in personal electronics and expanding weakness across industrial,” TI Chief Executive Rich Templeton said.

Read Also

India tries to woo global companies by tweaking the Rs 76000 crore semiconductor display fabrication scheme
Qualcomm Snapdragon 6 Gen 1 SoC details leaked reveals key details and more

While TI called the automotive sector an exception to this trend, Summit Insights Group analyst Kinngai Chan noted that many automakers continue to order double the chips they need and expects the demand to slip to pre-pandemic levels in the first half of next year.

Shares of the Dallas, Texas-based company fell to $154 in extended trading. They have declined about 14% so far this year, mirroring decline in shares of its peers as investors brace for the chip industry boom to normalize.

The company forecast fourth-quarter revenue between $4.40 billion and $4.80 billion, compared with estimates of $4.93 billion, per Refinitiv data.

It forecast profit between $1.83 and $2.11, below estimates of $2.21.

TI said it does not expect a “meaningful” or “significant” impact to its revenue from U.S. restrictions on exports to China, where it makes 25% of its revenue from.

In the third quarter, the company reported a 13% rise in revenue to $5.24 billion on strong demand for its semiconductors from the auto sector. Analysts had expected $5.14 billion.

Excluding items, the company earned $2.45 per share, beating estimates of $2.39.

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