Business World

TI profit tops estimates on automotive, industrial demand; share prices rise

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LOS ANGELES — Chipmaker Texas Instrument­s (TI) topped Wall Street targets for first-quarter profit and gave a strongerth­an-expected outlook for the second quarter, thanks to higher sales of semiconduc­tors used in cars and industrial machinery.

TI’s shares, which have fallen 6% in 2018, climbed more than 5% in after-hours trading on Tuesday.

The Dallas-based chipmaker, which primarily develops analog chips used in industrial equipment, automobile­s and consumer electronic­s, has benefited as automakers increasing­ly invest in self-driving technology.

The automotive industry accounted for 19% of TI’s revenue last year, up from 18% in 2016 and 15% in the previous year.

The company has continued to invest in its industrial and automotive chip businesses to strengthen its position, Dave Pahl, the company’s vice-president and head of investor relations, said on a call with analysts.

“This is based on our belief that industrial and automotive will be the fastest-growing semiconduc­tor markets. They have increasing semiconduc­tor content. These markets also provide diversity and longevity,” Mr. Pahl said.

TI’s results come one week after semiconduc­tor equipment maker Lam Research Corp.’s quarterly report showed that its shipments missed Wall Street expectatio­ns for the first time since 2013.

Lam’s results dragged other semiconduc­tor stocks lower, and the Philadelph­ia SE Semiconduc­tor Index has since fallen 8.4%.

The index has almost doubled in value over the past two years thanks to booming demand for chips used in automobile­s, Internet-connected devices and consumer gadgets.

For the second quarter, TI expects revenue of between $3.78 billion and $4.10 billion, and earnings of $1.19 to $1.39 per share. The earnings forecast includes an estimated $10-million tax benefit.

Analysts were expecting revenue of $3.90 billion and earnings of $1.23 per share.

“(TI’s second-quarter outlook) indicates that at least for them, the industry must be holding up well. We are not seeing any type of slowdown in demand for TI,” said David Heger, an analyst at Edward Jones.

TI’s net income rose 37% to $1.37 billion or $1.35 per share in the three months ended March 31. Excluding items, the company earned $1.21 per share, beating analysts’ average estimate by 10 cents, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

First-quarter revenue rose about 11% to $3.90 billion and topped expectatio­ns of $3.65 billion. —

 ?? REUTERS ?? A TEXAS INSTRUMENT­S (TI) office is shown in San Diego, California, US, April 24.
REUTERS A TEXAS INSTRUMENT­S (TI) office is shown in San Diego, California, US, April 24.

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