Stock Markets April 28, 2026 05:02 PM

NXP Raises Q2 Outlook on Industrial, Automotive Recovery; Shares Surge in After-Hours Trade

Company projects revenue and adjusted earnings above Street estimates as order activity improves in key end markets

By Caleb Monroe NXPI TXN
NXP Raises Q2 Outlook on Industrial, Automotive Recovery; Shares Surge in After-Hours Trade
NXPI TXN

NXP Semiconductors issued guidance for the second quarter that exceeds Wall Street projections, citing a pickup in industrial and automotive demand as customers work through pandemic-era inventory. The stronger-than-expected outlook lifted NXP shares by roughly 15% in extended trading. The company also reported first-quarter revenue and adjusted earnings that beat consensus estimates.

Key Points

  • NXP projected Q2 revenue of $3.35 billion to $3.55 billion, above the LSEG estimate of $3.27 billion.
  • NXP issued Q2 adjusted EPS guidance of $3.29 to $3.72, exceeding the $3.17 per-share estimate.
  • Improving order activity in the automotive and industrial markets is driving NXP's optimistic outlook, and the stock rose roughly 15% in after-hours trading.

NXP Semiconductors said on Tuesday that it expects second-quarter revenue and adjusted profit per share to come in above analysts' expectations, a forecast the company attributes to a continued recovery in its industrial and automotive end markets. The guidance sparked a roughly 15% rise in NXP's share price during after-hours trading.

The chipmaker, which earns the bulk of its sales from automotive and industrial customers, reported that new orders are increasing following a prolonged slump. That slump followed a period of excess inventory accumulation during the pandemic, and customers have been clearing those inventories, the company said.

For the quarter ending in June, NXP gave a revenue range of $3.35 billion to $3.55 billion. That guidance compares with a consensus estimate of $3.27 billion compiled by LSEG.

On the profit front, NXP forecast adjusted earnings per share between $3.29 and $3.72 for the quarter, above the $3.17 per-share estimate reflected in LSEG data.

The company's own results for the first quarter were ahead of expectations as well. NXP reported first-quarter revenue of $3.18 billion versus estimates of $3.16 billion. On an adjusted basis, the company earned $3.05 per share, above the $2.95-per-share estimate.

The positive outlook from NXP follows a similarly upbeat forecast from analog chipmaker Texas Instruments last week, which the article said was supported by demand in data center and industrial chips.


Context and market reaction

NXP's revenue and profit outlook assumes an ongoing improvement in the industrial and automotive chip markets as end-market customers reduce inventories they accumulated during the pandemic. The company reported that new orders are on the rise, signaling a potential stabilization after the earlier slump.

The market responded immediately to NXP's guidance, with the company's shares jumping about 15% in extended trading following the announcement.


What NXP reported versus expectations

  • Q2 revenue guidance: $3.35 billion to $3.55 billion (LSEG estimate: $3.27 billion).
  • Q2 adjusted EPS guidance: $3.29 to $3.72 (LSEG estimate: $3.17).
  • Q1 revenue: $3.18 billion (estimate: $3.16 billion).
  • Q1 adjusted EPS: $3.05 (estimate: $2.95).

The company highlighted the automotive and industrial markets as the primary drivers of its revenue base and the areas where order activity has begun to improve.


Broader semiconductor note

The article noted that Texas Instruments also issued a strong forecast the prior week, with strength tied to data center and industrial chip demand, suggesting pockets of improvement across parts of the analog and industrial semiconductor landscape.

Risks

  • The recovery NXP cited depends on end-market customers clearing excess inventory built up during the pandemic, particularly in the automotive and industrial sectors.
  • NXP's guidance is forward-looking and contingent on sustained order momentum in its core markets; if order improvement slows, revenue and profit expectations may not be met.

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