Beta Finch - Semiconductors - EN

Amphenol Q1 2026 Earnings Analysis

7 min · 30 apr 2026
aflevering Amphenol Q1 2026 Earnings Analysis artwork

Beschrijving

**BETA FINCH PODCAST SCRIPT** --- **ALEX:** Welcome to Beta Finch, your AI-powered earnings breakdown! I'm Alex, and I'm here with my co-host Jordan to dive into some fascinating quarterly results. Today we're unpacking Amphenol's absolutely monster Q1 2026 earnings call - and folks, when I say monster, I mean it. Jordan, before we jump in, I need to share our standard disclaimer with listeners. This podcast is AI-generated content for educational and entertainment purposes only. Nothing we discuss should be considered investment advice. Always do your own research and consult a qualified financial advisor before making any investment decisions. Now Jordan, let's talk about these numbers because they're pretty incredible. **JORDAN:** Alex, I've been covering tech earnings for years, and this Amphenol quarter is genuinely jaw-dropping. They just posted record sales of $7.6 billion - that's up 58% year-over-year and 33% organically. But here's the kicker - their IT datacom segment, which is heavily exposed to AI infrastructure, grew 81% organically. Eighty-one percent! **ALEX:** That's insane growth. And their guidance for Q2 is equally aggressive - they're projecting $8.1 to $8.2 billion in sales, which would be another 43-45% year-over-year growth. What's driving this AI boom for them specifically? **JORDAN:** So Amphenol makes connectors and interconnect products - basically the plumbing that connects all the components in data centers. CEO Adam Norwitt made a really interesting point on the call. He said that virtually all of their sequential growth in IT datacom came from AI-related products. These aren't just any connectors - they're high-speed, high-power interconnects that AI systems absolutely depend on. **ALEX:** And they just made a huge acquisition to strengthen this position, right? The CommScope deal? **JORDAN:** Exactly. They closed the CommScope acquisition in January for what appears to be around $2.1 billion based on the context. This gives them fiber optic capabilities to complement their copper products. Norwitt was really excited about this on the call - he kept emphasizing that they now have "the industry's broadest range of high-speed copper, power, and fiber optic interconnect products." **ALEX:** That seems strategic because there's this big debate in the AI world about whether future systems will use copper or fiber optic connections, right? **JORDAN:** Exactly, and that's where Amphenol's positioning gets really smart. There was a great exchange during the Q&A about co-packaged optics and other next-gen technologies. Norwitt basically said they don't care which technology wins because they play in both spaces now. His quote was memorable: "no matter what, there's going to be more interconnect." **ALEX:** So they're betting on the overall trend rather than a specific technology. That makes sense. What about their margins? Because with this kind of growth, you'd expect some operational challenges. **JORDAN:** That's the really impressive part. Despite integrating a major acquisition and growing at breakneck speed, they maintained adjusted operating margins of 27.3%. That's actually up 380 basis points year-over-year. CFO Craig Lampo attributed this to "robust operating leverage" - basically, they're scaling efficiently. **ALEX:** And this isn't just an AI story, is it? Looking at their other segments, they seem pretty diversified. **JORDAN:** Right, and this is important for investors to understand. While IT datacom is now 41% of their business, they're still seeing solid growth elsewhere. Defense was up 25% organically, industrial up 16% organically, even automotive grew modestly. Their book-to-bill ratio was 1.24 to 1, and every single end market had a positive book-to-bill. **ALEX:** That book-to-bill number is telling - it means orders are coming in 24% faster than they can ship products. There was an interesting question about capacity constraints and long-term supply agreements. Wh This episode includes AI-generated content.

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aflevering Micron Technology Q3 2026 Earnings Analysis artwork

Micron Technology Q3 2026 Earnings Analysis

More earnings analysis: https://betafinch.com [https://betafinch.com] Groups: CHIPS (https://betafinch.com/groups/CHIPS) [https://betafinch.com/groups/CHIPS)] ────────── ALEX: Welcome to Beta Finch, your AI-powered earnings breakdown. Today we're digging into Micron Technology's fiscal Q3 2026 results, and folks, this is one of those quarters where the numbers almost don't sound real. Before we get into it, quick reminder: this podcast is AI-generated content for educational and entertainment purposes only. Nothing we discuss should be considered investment advice. Always do your own research and consult a qualified financial advisor before making any investment decisions. JORDAN: Yeah, "don't sound real" is right. Let's just start with the top line — $41.5 billion in revenue. That's up 74% sequentially and 346% year-over-year. ALEX: Year over year! Not sequentially — year over year revenue more than quadrupled. And it's their fifth straight record quarter, with the single largest sequential dollar jump in company history, $17.6 billion. JORDAN: DRAM did most of the heavy lifting — $31.3 billion, up 67% sequentially, three quarters of total revenue. But NAND actually grew even faster percentage-wise, up 99% sequentially to $9.9 billion. Prices in NAND jumped mid-80s percent. ALEX: And the profitability is what really jumps out to me. Gross margin hit 84.9%, up 10 points in a single quarter. Operating margin over 81%. EPS came in at $25.11, more than doubling sequentially. JORDAN: These aren't small beats over guidance either — Sanjay Mehrotra said revenue, gross margin, and EPS all exceeded the high end of guidance. And the data center number is the real story underneath all this — data center revenue exceeded $25 billion in the quarter, annualizing above $100 billion. Data center SSDs alone more than doubled sequentially to over $5 billion. ALEX: So let's talk about the big strategic news, because this is arguably bigger than the quarterly numbers themselves — these Strategic Customer Agreements, or SCAs. Micron now has 16 of them signed. JORDAN: This is the part I think investors are going to spend the next few quarters trying to fully digest. These are take-or-pay, multi-year deals — five years for most, three years for automotive — running roughly calendar 2026 through 2030. They cover about 20% of Micron's DRAM volume and a third of NAND volume over that period. ALEX: And the pricing structure is interesting. The largest agreements have a ceiling tied to current, very elevated prices, and a floor — but Sanjay was emphatic that even at that floor price, gross margins would be "well above" any peak margin Micron has ever hit in a past cycle. JORDAN: That's the headline for me. Historically Micron's margins have been this brutal boom-bust cycle — peaks in the low 60s percent gross margin, then crashing during downturns. If the floor on these new contracts is above the old ceiling, that's a structurally different business. ALEX: Fourteen of the sixteen SCAs represent about $100 billion in cumulative minimum revenue over their terms — that's the RPO, remaining performance obligation, a new disclosure they're rolling out this quarter under ASC 606. JORDAN: And this is where the Q&A got really interesting. Analysts pushed hard on what that $100 billion actually represents. Tim Arcuri from UBS did the math — $100 billion over roughly five years is about $20 billion a year, which is well below Micron's current $40-plus billion quarterly run rate. ALEX: Right, and Sanjay's response was basically: don't read too much into that number, it's a conservative floor. He said about 20% of DRAM and 30% of NAND volume is covered, translating to roughly 25% of revenue over the agreement term — and actual revenue is expected to run "much higher" than the RPO minimum. JORDAN: Mark Murphy also fielded some good detective work from Morgan Stanley's Joe Moore on the cash deposits — Micron's getting about $22 billion in deposits and financial commitments tied to these deals, $18 billion of that i This episode includes AI-generated content.

4 jul 20268 min
aflevering Broadcom Q2 2026 Earnings Analysis artwork

Broadcom Q2 2026 Earnings Analysis

More earnings analysis: https://betafinch.com [https://betafinch.com] Groups: CHIPS (https://betafinch.com/groups/CHIPS) [https://betafinch.com/groups/CHIPS)], AI_LEADERS (https://betafinch.com/groups/AI_LEADERS) [https://betafinch.com/groups/AI_LEADERS)] ────────── # Beta Finch Podcast Script: Broadcom Q2 2026 Earnings **ALEX**: Welcome to Beta Finch, your AI-powered earnings breakdown where we decode the numbers that matter. I'm Alex, and joining me as always is Jordan. Today we're diving into Broadcom's absolutely explosive Q2 2026 results that had Wall Street buzzing. But before we get started, I need to mention that this podcast is AI-generated content for educational and entertainment purposes only. Nothing we discuss should be considered investment advice. Always do your own research and consult a qualified financial advisor before making any investment decisions. **JORDAN**: Thanks Alex, and wow - where do we even begin with these numbers? Broadcom just delivered what might be one of the most impressive quarters we've seen in the semiconductor space. We're talking about $22.2 billion in total revenue, up 48% year-over-year, with AI semiconductor revenue alone hitting $10.8 billion. **ALEX**: That AI number is just staggering, Jordan. To put it in perspective, their AI semiconductor business grew 143% year-over-year. But what really caught my attention was CEO Hock Tan's guidance - they're expecting AI semiconductor revenue to hit $16 billion in Q3, which would be over 200% growth year-over-year. **JORDAN**: And let's talk about those margins, because this is where Broadcom really shows its operational excellence. Operating margin hit a record 67% with adjusted EBITDA at 69% of revenue. Even as they're scaling up massively, they're maintaining these incredible margins through operational leverage. **ALEX**: The bookings number was absolutely wild too - $30 billion in AI semiconductor bookings against $10.8 billion they actually shipped. That's nearly 3x coverage, which tells us demand is just insatiable right now. **JORDAN**: Speaking of demand, let's break down what's driving this growth. Broadcom has essentially become the go-to partner for the biggest names in AI. They've got long-term agreements with Google for multiple generations of TPUs and AI networking. They're providing Anthropic with access to over 1 gigawatt of compute this year, with plans to scale that to 5 gigawatts starting in 2027. **ALEX**: And the OpenAI partnership is massive - they're on track for production late this year with a commitment to deploy 1.3 gigawatts in 2027 as part of a larger 10-gigawatt agreement through 2029. Then there's Meta with their MTIA partnership expecting to deploy 3 gigawatts through the end of 2028. **JORDAN**: What I found fascinating in the Q&A was when Tan talked about their strategic vision. They're not just selling chips anymore - they're creating what they call the "AI XPU platform" with Apollo, Blackstone, and other major investors to deploy over 20 gigawatts of compute capacity. The first tranche alone is valued at $35 billion. **ALEX**: That's a brilliant move, Jordan. Instead of just hoping their customers can finance these massive deployments, Broadcom is essentially helping create the infrastructure to fund it. It's like they're not just building the highway, they're helping finance the construction too. **JORDAN**: And let's not forget about networking - this was about 40% of their AI revenue in the quarter. Tan mentioned they have at least one generation of technology leadership in networking, which is crucial because you can't build scalable AI clusters without world-class networking. They're shipping the industry's only 100 terabit Ethernet switch and are already taping out a 200 terabit version. **ALEX**: The guidance going forward is just jaw-dropping. For fiscal 2026, they're expecting AI semiconductor revenue of $56 billion - that's up approximately 180% from fiscal 2025. And they're reiterating that fiscal 2027 will exceed $100 billion in AI semiconductor revenue. **JORDAN**: One thing that This episode includes AI-generated content.

4 jun 20268 min
aflevering NVIDIA Q1 2027 Earnings Analysis artwork

NVIDIA Q1 2027 Earnings Analysis

More earnings analysis: https://betafinch.com [https://betafinch.com] Groups: MAG7 (https://betafinch.com/groups/MAG7) [https://betafinch.com/groups/MAG7)], CHIPS (https://betafinch.com/groups/CHIPS) [https://betafinch.com/groups/CHIPS)], AI_LEADERS (https://betafinch.com/groups/AI_LEADERS) [https://betafinch.com/groups/AI_LEADERS)] ────────── # Beta Finch Podcast Script: Nvidia Q1 2027 Earnings **ALEX**: Welcome to Beta Finch, your AI-powered earnings breakdown where we decode the numbers that matter. I'm Alex, and I'm here with my co-host Jordan. Today we're diving into Nvidia's absolutely mind-blowing Q1 2027 results that just dropped. This podcast is AI-generated content for educational and entertainment purposes only. Nothing we discuss should be considered investment advice. Always do your own research and consult a qualified financial advisor before making any investment decisions. **JORDAN**: Thanks Alex. And wow, where do we even begin with these numbers? Nvidia just reported $82 billion in quarterly revenue - that's up 85% year-over-year and 20% sequentially. To put that in perspective, they added $13.5 billion in revenue in just one quarter, which they're calling a record sequential increase. **ALEX**: It's absolutely staggering, Jordan. And what really caught my attention is that this marks their third consecutive quarter of year-over-year acceleration. When you're already at this massive scale, continuing to accelerate growth is almost unprecedented. Their data center revenue alone hit $75 billion, up 92% year-over-year. **JORDAN**: The Blackwell architecture is really the star of the show here. CEO Jensen Huang called it "the fastest product ramp in our company's history." What's interesting is they're seeing demand from everywhere - hyperscalers, AI cloud providers, sovereign customers, even enterprise and industrial applications. **ALEX**: Speaking of segmentation, Jordan, they made some pretty significant changes to how they report their business. They've broken their data center segment into two main categories: Hyperscale and something they're calling ACIE - which stands for AI clouds, industrial, and enterprise. What's your take on this restructuring? **JORDAN**: It's actually brilliant strategic positioning, Alex. The Hyperscale segment, which includes the big public cloud providers, generated $38 billion and grew 12% quarter-over-quarter. But here's what's really exciting - that ACIE segment hit $37 billion and grew 31% quarter-over-quarter. This shows Nvidia isn't just dependent on the big tech giants anymore. **ALEX**: Exactly. And Jensen Huang was pretty eloquent about this during the Q&A. He explained that AI is incredibly diverse - from language models to 3D graphics for manufacturing, to proteins for life sciences. The applications run everywhere from hyperscale clouds to enterprise on-premises to industrial facilities. Nvidia is positioning itself as the only company that can serve all these different use cases with their full-stack solution. **JORDAN**: What absolutely blew my mind was their announcement about Vera - their new CPU designed specifically for agentic AI. Jensen said this opens up a brand new $200 billion total addressable market that they've never addressed before. And get this - they're projecting nearly $20 billion in CPU revenue visibility just this year. **ALEX**: That's a massive new growth driver, Jordan. And Jensen was really passionate explaining how agentic AI works differently. He described agents as essentially having "harnesses" around AI models that handle orchestration, memory management, and tool use - and all of that runs on CPUs. With billions of potential agents in the future, each needing their own computational resources, you can see why this CPU opportunity is so massive. **JORDAN**: The financial metrics are just incredible across the board. They generated a record $49 billion in free cash flow, up from $35 billion in Q4. And speaking of returning value to shareholders - they're increasing their quarterly dividend from one cent to 25 cents per share, plus announcing an $80 billion share repu This episode includes AI-generated content.

21 mei 20268 min
aflevering Analog Devices Q2 2026 Earnings Analysis artwork

Analog Devices Q2 2026 Earnings Analysis

More earnings analysis: https://betafinch.com [https://betafinch.com] Groups: CHIPS (https://betafinch.com/groups/CHIPS) [https://betafinch.com/groups/CHIPS)] ────────── ALEX: Welcome to Beta Finch, your AI-powered earnings breakdown where we dive into the numbers that matter. I'm Alex, and I'm joined by my co-host Jordan to break down some truly impressive results from Analog Devices. Before we jump in, I need to mention that this podcast is AI-generated content for educational and entertainment purposes only. Nothing we discuss should be considered investment advice. Always do your own research and consult a qualified financial advisor before making any investment decisions. Jordan, ADI just dropped some seriously impressive Q2 2026 numbers. What jumped out at you first? JORDAN: Alex, these weren't just good results - they were record-breaking across the board. ADI posted $3.62 billion in revenue, which beat the high end of their guidance and represents 15% sequential growth and a massive 37% year-over-year jump. But here's what really caught my attention: their earnings per share hit $3.09, up 67% year-over-year. That's the kind of growth that makes investors sit up and take notice. ALEX: Those are some serious numbers. And what's fascinating is that this growth isn't coming from just one area - it's broad-based. Can you break down where this strength is coming from? JORDAN: Absolutely. The industrial segment, which now represents 50% of their revenue, was the real powerhouse - up 20% sequentially and 56% year-over-year. But what's really exciting is their data center business within communications. This segment grew over 90% year-over-year, and CEO Vincent Roche mentioned it's being driven equally by their optical and power portfolios. That's where the AI infrastructure boom is really showing up. ALEX: Speaking of AI, they made a pretty significant strategic move during the quarter. Tell us about this Empower Semiconductor acquisition. JORDAN: This is where things get really interesting from a technology standpoint. ADI is acquiring Empower Semiconductor for their integrated voltage regulator technology and silicon capacitors. Roche described this as the "final piece" of their comprehensive grid-to-core power platform. The compelling part? Empower's technology can allegedly reduce data center power consumption by 10-15% while shrinking power footprints by up to 4x. In an AI world where power efficiency is becoming critical, that's huge. ALEX: And the timing seems perfect given what we're hearing about power constraints in data centers. What did management say about when this technology will start generating meaningful revenue? JORDAN: Roche was pretty clear - they expect to see significant revenue starting in 2027. Right now, Empower has minimal revenue, but there are design wins already in the pipeline. The combination of Empower's cutting-edge tech with ADI's manufacturing scale and go-to-market capabilities should accelerate deployment significantly. ALEX: Let's talk about their automotive business, because that's been a mixed bag across the semiconductor industry lately. How did ADI perform there? JORDAN: This was actually one of the pleasant surprises. Auto revenue was up 8% sequentially and 2% year-over-year, which doesn't sound massive until you consider the broader auto semiconductor headwinds we've been seeing. What's really impressive is that their battery management systems for EVs returned to year-over-year growth for the first time in two years. CFO Richard Puccio mentioned they saw record performance in Europe and Japan, plus a material pickup in China during the back part of the quarter. ALEX: That China recovery is interesting. Now, let's talk margins because 73% gross margin is pretty extraordinary. Is this sustainable? JORDAN: That's the key question. The 73% gross margin was driven by favorable mix, higher utilization, and pricing actions. But Puccio was pretty candid that they're running factories near capacity, so there's limited upside from utiliza This episode includes AI-generated content.

20 mei 20268 min
aflevering Applied Materials Q2 2026 Earnings Analysis artwork

Applied Materials Q2 2026 Earnings Analysis

More earnings analysis: https://betafinch.com [https://betafinch.com] Groups: CHIPS (https://betafinch.com/groups/CHIPS) [https://betafinch.com/groups/CHIPS)] ────────── **Beta Finch Podcast Script** ALEX: Welcome to Beta Finch, your AI-powered earnings breakdown. I'm Alex. JORDAN: And I'm Jordan. Today we're diving into Applied Materials' Q2 2026 earnings - and wow, what a quarter this was. ALEX: Before we jump in, I need to mention that this podcast is AI-generated content for educational and entertainment purposes only. Nothing we discuss should be considered investment advice. Always do your own research and consult a qualified financial advisor before making any investment decisions. JORDAN: Absolutely. Now Alex, Applied Materials just posted some truly impressive numbers. We're talking record revenue of $7.91 billion - that's up 13% sequentially and 11% year-over-year. ALEX: And it gets better. Their non-GAAP earnings per share hit $2.86, up 20% year-over-year. But Jordan, what really caught my attention was their gross margin crossing 50% for the first time in over 25 years. JORDAN: That's huge! And CEO Gary Dickerson was pretty clear about what's driving this - it's all about AI. He mentioned that global token generation has increased more than threefold in just the past three months. That's an incredible acceleration. ALEX: Right, and what's interesting is how AI demand is diversifying. Dickerson talked about "agentic AI" - these aren't just chatbots responding to queries, but AI systems that can plan, reason, and execute tasks autonomously. This is creating demand for more CPU-intensive computing, plus additional DRAM and NAND memory. JORDAN: Which plays perfectly into Applied's sweet spot. CFO Brice Hill said they expect their semiconductor equipment business to grow more than 30% this calendar year. And get this - their customers are now providing 8-quarter rolling forecasts. That's unprecedented visibility for planning. ALEX: That long-term visibility is fascinating. It tells us customers aren't just thinking quarters ahead - they're planning years out. Hill mentioned they're tracking over 100 factory projects globally and added more than 10 just in the last quarter. JORDAN: And Applied is positioning itself right at the center of the most critical technologies. Dickerson said leading-edge foundry logic, DRAM, and advanced packaging will account for more than 80% of wafer fab equipment spending growth in 2026, with a similar profile expected in 2027. ALEX: Let's talk about their new products. They announced two new solutions for gate-all-around transistors - the Trillium ALD system and a precision PECVD system. These are designed specifically for the complex requirements of AI chips. JORDAN: The technical details are impressive, but what investors should understand is that these products command premium pricing because they solve critical problems that no one else can. That's how Applied's gross margins have expanded 800 basis points since 2013. ALEX: Speaking of growth drivers, their Applied Global Services segment hit record revenue of $1.67 billion, up 17% year-over-year. Hill raised their long-term AGS growth expectation to mid-teens annually, potentially higher this year. JORDAN: That's significant because services typically have higher margins and more predictable revenue streams. With over 35,000 chambers now connected to their AIx software platform, they're using AI to optimize customer operations and drive higher service revenues. ALEX: Now let's talk about the elephant in the room - China. China represented 24% of their semiconductor systems and services revenue. There are ongoing export restrictions, but management seems confident in their guidance despite these headwinds. JORDAN: The Q&A session revealed some interesting dynamics. When asked about pricing power given the tight equipment market, Dickerson emphasized they typically work on 2-3 year pricing contracts per project, so changes happen gradually. But their portfolio is getting more valuab This episode includes AI-generated content.

15 mei 20268 min