Texas Instruments Eases Fear of Major Slowdown With Forecast

Texas Instruments Eases Fear of Major Slowdown With Forecast
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Texas Instruments gave a quarterly sales forecast that was in line with reduced expectations, calming investor concerns about a collapse in global demand for electronics, according to Bloomberg.

First-quarter profit will be $1.03 a share to $1.21 a share on revenue of $3.34 billion to $3.62 billion, the company said in a statement. On average, analysts predicted earnings of $1.21 a share and sales of $3.6 billion. The company’s revenue forecast indicates a year-over-year decline of 4.5 percent to 12 percent.

The world’s sixth-largest chipmaker reported fourth-quarter net income of $1.24 billion, or $1.27 per share, compared with $344 million, or 34 cents a share, in the same period a year earlier. Revenue fell about 1 percent to $3.72 billion. Analysts had estimated a profit of $1.23 a share on sales of $3.75 billion. The company reported its first year-over-year revenue decline since the first quarter of 2016.

Smartphone-related orders were weak, particularly in China, company executives said on a conference call after the results were released. Orders for makers of mobile phone equipment remained strong ahead of the deployment of new 5G cellular networks.

Three months ago, the biggest maker of analog semiconductors was one of the first to warn that demand for electronics was cooling after several years of ravenous consumption. Texas Instruments has more products and customers than any other semiconductor company, making its earnings and predictions a proxy for the broader industry. After a couple of years of accumulating components, those customers are now cutting back purchases.

In October, Texas Instruments said it was too early to say whether the U.S.-China trade dispute was hurting demand, or if order reductions were naturally slowing following recent years of torrid chip-industry growth. The company’s analog chips perform the fundamental task of translating real-world inputs, like sounds and touch, into electronic signals. Unlike Intel and Qualcomm, Texas Instruments’ semiconductors don’t cost tens of millions of dollars to develop and aren’t typically at risk of becoming obsolete quickly. That means the company is less vulnerable to sudden swings in demand or competitive pressure.