Semtech Corp (SMTC) delivered the kind of quarterly results that make you squint at the numbers—not quite a win, not quite a loss, but enough to get analysts reaching for their calculators with renewed enthusiasm.
The semiconductor company posted third-quarter fiscal 2026 revenue of $267 million on Monday, which came up just short of the $268.83 million analysts were expecting. But here's the twist: adjusted earnings landed at 48 cents per share, comfortably beating the 45-cent estimate. Call it a split decision that somehow sparked optimism rather than disappointment.
CEO Hong Hou pointed to what matters next. "As power constraints intensify for our customers, we believe we are positioned to lead with ultra-power-efficient solutions spanning high-bandwidth data center networking, LoRa connectivity for rapidly expanding IoT use cases, and sensing technologies that enhance the functionality of next-generation AI interfaces," he said.
Looking ahead, Semtech expects fourth-quarter revenue between $268 million and $278 million, essentially matching the $268.68 million consensus estimate. The company's adjusted earnings guidance of 40 cents to 46 cents per share straddles the analyst target of 43 cents per share.
The market's immediate reaction wasn't exactly cheerful—shares tumbled 7.7% to $64.54 on Tuesday. But the analyst community saw something different in the tea leaves, with four firms boosting their price targets after digesting the results.
Benchmark analyst Cody Acree maintained his Buy rating and lifted his target from $76 to $85. Baird analyst Craig Ellis kept his Outperform rating intact while raising his target from $70 to $88. Piper Sandler's Harsh Kumar reiterated an Overweight rating and bumped his target from $65 to $70. Even Morgan Stanley's Joseph Moore, who maintains a more neutral Equal-Weight stance, raised his target from $64 to $67.
The takeaway? Sometimes a company's story matters more than a single quarter's numbers, and analysts seem to be betting that Semtech's focus on power efficiency positions it well for the AI-driven infrastructure buildout ahead.