Microchip Technology Incorporated (MCHP) is on a roll. The semiconductor company revealed Monday that it expects fiscal third-quarter revenue to come in around $1.185 billion for the period ending December 31, 2025, marking the second time in less than a month it's bumped up its outlook.
A Pattern of Pleasant Surprises
The new revenue target sits comfortably above Microchip's original guidance range of $1.109 billion to $1.149 billion issued back on November 6, 2025. It also tops a December 2 update that already pointed to the high end of that range. When a company keeps raising guidance, investors tend to pay attention, and Microchip shares climbed 4.31% to $69.95 in premarket trading Tuesday.
The company also lifted its third-quarter adjusted earnings per share guidance last month to 40 cents, up from a prior range of 34 cents to 40 cents, bringing expectations in line with what analysts were expecting.
The Recovery Story Takes Shape
CEO and President Steve Sanghi painted a picture of momentum building across multiple fronts. The company is experiencing what he calls a "fairly broad-based recovery" in most end markets, driven by progress clearing out excess inventory both in distribution channels and with direct customers. Add to that new customer designs transitioning into production, and you've got the makings of an upswing.
"We continue to experience a fairly broad-based recovery in most of our end markets driven by progress we have made in inventory correction in distribution as well as direct customers, and with new customer designs turning to production," Sanghi explained. He noted that booking activity stayed strong throughout the December quarter despite the typical holiday season slowdown.
Here's a telling detail: Microchip entered the March quarter with a significantly stronger starting backlog than it had going into the December quarter. That's the kind of momentum that suggests this recovery might have legs.
Turning the Ship Around
Sanghi also highlighted progress on the company's turnaround efforts, specifically its nine-point recovery plan and broader strategic initiatives. "We have made substantial progress on most elements of our nine-point recovery plan as well as our strategic initiatives," he said.
The operational improvements are tangible. Internal inventory levels have dropped meaningfully, which should help reduce those pesky inventory write-offs. Meanwhile, the company is gearing up to ramp factory output in the March quarter, a move expected to lower under-utilization charges that eat into margins when manufacturing capacity sits idle.
Investors won't have to wait long for the full picture. Microchip Technology plans to release its complete fiscal third quarter 2026 financial results on February 5, 2026.




