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Texas Instruments (TXN) stock dropped 12% after the company issued third-quarter guidance that fell short of Wall Street's earnings expectations, raising concerns over the impact of ongoing tariffs and geopolitical uncertainty. While the semiconductor firm delivered better-than-expected second-quarter results, investors appeared more focused on the company's cautious tone for the quarters ahead.
Texas Instruments shares dropped after the company issued weak earnings guidance and said uncertainty over tariffs has weighed on demand. The midpoint of the company's third-quarter earnings forecast came up short of analyst expectations.
Shares of Texas Instruments Inc TXN tanked in early trading on Wednesday, despite the company reporting upbeat second-quarter results.
Texas Instruments Inc (NASDAQ:TXN) shares plunged 12% as the semiconductor company issued a soft outlook for the third quarter, which overshadowed strong results for Q2. The company guided Q3 revenue between $4.45 billion and $4.8 billion, compared to Street estimates of $4.59 billion.
While strong demand for its solutions across all business segments drives TXN's Q2 revenues higher. efficient cost management aids margin expansion.
Diane King Hall and Sam Vadas start the trading day with a trade deal update. The duo discuss the U.S. deal with Japan, setting tariffs at 15% and what it means for the broader markets.
U.S. stock futures were higher this morning, with the Dow futures gaining around 200 points on Wednesday.
Texas Instruments' Q2 2025 results were not as bad as the share price reaction would suggest. Overly optimistic expectations, coupled with broader trends in the semiconductors sector are to blame for the sharp drop. Although we are seeing some early signs of a recovery, it is too early to jump-in and buy TXN stock.
Texas Instruments shares slumped nearly 12% in premarket trading on Wednesday, after its quarterly profit forecast indicated a hit to demand for its analog chips that stoked investor fears of tariff-related disruptions.
Analysts say the tone on the earnings call was “moody” and “appears to have shifted markedly” as executives express more caution.