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Wedbush Downgrades Tower Semiconductor on Valuation Concerns Despite Strong Silicon Photonics Outlook

MarketDash Editorial Team
3 hours ago
Tower Semiconductor shares fell Wednesday after Wedbush downgraded the stock from outperform to neutral, citing valuation constraints and memory cost headwinds despite the company's strong position in the growing silicon photonics market.

Tower Semiconductor Ltd. (TSEM) is learning that sometimes being good at what you do isn't enough if the market's already celebrating your success. Shares dropped Wednesday after Wedbush downgraded the stock, not because the company's struggling, but because at these prices, there's just not much room left to run.

The Downgrade That Says Everything's Fine (Just Expensive)

Wedbush analyst Matt Bryson shifted Tower Semiconductor from outperform to neutral while keeping his $125 price target intact. The reasoning? High component prices, particularly for memory, are creating headwinds for the Israeli chipmaker. Those elevated costs hit especially hard in mobile revenues, which account for roughly a quarter of Tower's business.

But here's the twist: Wedbush still likes Tower's silicon photonics story. The firm views Tower as the leading silicon photonics foundry, with optical demand getting a boost from networking and data center buildouts. Recent reports of indium phosphide (InP) shortages could actually help Tower, since silicon photonics offers an alternative to traditional InP-heavy optical designs.

Bryson even thinks Tower could ramp up silicon photonics revenue faster than the roughly two-year timeline baked into current models, thanks to strong demand and well-timed equipment installations. Management has said their announced expansions are fully backed by customer orders, and more capacity announcements could be coming. The problem? With shares trading near Wedbush's target, the good news is already reflected in the price.

The Valuation Math That Changes Everything

Here's where it gets interesting. Wedbush currently values Tower at roughly 25x projected 2027 earnings, a premium compared to peers like TSMC and GlobalFoundries. That multiple already assumes current earnings estimates might be too conservative.

Even if you run the optimistic scenario with 2027 earnings around $6 per share, applying a more reasonable 20x multiple still lands you near the current stock price and price target. Translation: you'd need everything to go right just to justify where the stock already trades.

Market Reaction

Tower Semiconductor shares were down 2.53%, trading at $117.58 at publication time.

Wedbush Downgrades Tower Semiconductor on Valuation Concerns Despite Strong Silicon Photonics Outlook

MarketDash Editorial Team
3 hours ago
Tower Semiconductor shares fell Wednesday after Wedbush downgraded the stock from outperform to neutral, citing valuation constraints and memory cost headwinds despite the company's strong position in the growing silicon photonics market.

Tower Semiconductor Ltd. (TSEM) is learning that sometimes being good at what you do isn't enough if the market's already celebrating your success. Shares dropped Wednesday after Wedbush downgraded the stock, not because the company's struggling, but because at these prices, there's just not much room left to run.

The Downgrade That Says Everything's Fine (Just Expensive)

Wedbush analyst Matt Bryson shifted Tower Semiconductor from outperform to neutral while keeping his $125 price target intact. The reasoning? High component prices, particularly for memory, are creating headwinds for the Israeli chipmaker. Those elevated costs hit especially hard in mobile revenues, which account for roughly a quarter of Tower's business.

But here's the twist: Wedbush still likes Tower's silicon photonics story. The firm views Tower as the leading silicon photonics foundry, with optical demand getting a boost from networking and data center buildouts. Recent reports of indium phosphide (InP) shortages could actually help Tower, since silicon photonics offers an alternative to traditional InP-heavy optical designs.

Bryson even thinks Tower could ramp up silicon photonics revenue faster than the roughly two-year timeline baked into current models, thanks to strong demand and well-timed equipment installations. Management has said their announced expansions are fully backed by customer orders, and more capacity announcements could be coming. The problem? With shares trading near Wedbush's target, the good news is already reflected in the price.

The Valuation Math That Changes Everything

Here's where it gets interesting. Wedbush currently values Tower at roughly 25x projected 2027 earnings, a premium compared to peers like TSMC and GlobalFoundries. That multiple already assumes current earnings estimates might be too conservative.

Even if you run the optimistic scenario with 2027 earnings around $6 per share, applying a more reasonable 20x multiple still lands you near the current stock price and price target. Translation: you'd need everything to go right just to justify where the stock already trades.

Market Reaction

Tower Semiconductor shares were down 2.53%, trading at $117.58 at publication time.