Does Analog Devices’ Soft Q3 Guidance Prove Apple’s iPhone 7 Cut?

By | May 18, 2016

Scalper1 News

Apple ‘s ( AAPL ) iPhone 7 expectations might have dug into guidance provided Wednesday by  Analog Devices ( ADI ), as the 3D Touch supplier topped Q2 expectations but guided to current-quarter sales that would dip 5% year over year. In early trading on the stock market today , Analog Devices shares were up a fraction, near 55.50. Fellow Apple suppliers Broadcom ( AVGO ), NXP Semiconductors ( NXPI ),  Skyworks Solutions ( SWKS ) and  Qorvo ( QRVO ) were up all by close to 2% or more. For its fiscal Q2 ended April 30, Analog Devices reported $779 million in sales and 64 cents earnings per share ex items, down a respective 5% and 12% vs. the year-earlier quarter. It was the first quarter in nine that Analog Devices’ sales have fallen and the second period of declining EPS. But both metrics beat the consensus of 29 analysts polled by Thomson Reuters for $777.6 million and 62 cents, as well as Analog Devices’ own guidance issued three months ago. Consumer sales toppled 27% year over year, leading a 3% fall in communications sales, Analog Devices said. Industrial and automotive sales — Analog Devices’ bread-and-butter segments — fell 1% apiece. For fiscal Q3, Analog Devices CEO Vincent Roche sees a return to consumer market growth and mid- to high-single-digit growth in the company’s business-to-business segments. But the high point of ADI’s Q3 sales and EPS guidance lagged Wall Street consensus. Analog Devices guided to $800 million to $840 million in sales and 66-74 cents, down a respective 5% and 9% vs. the year-earlier quarter, missing analysts’ model for $846.6 million and 75 cents. On average, Analog Devices’ Q3 sales have grown 13.5% year over year, trailing 20% growth in Q4. But recent reports indicate Apple might have cut its component orders for the iPhone 7, expected to be released in September. Scalper1 News

Scalper1 News