Citi's global top picks in Semiconductors are Texas Instruments (TXN), TSMC (TSM), Sony (SNE), Samsung (SSNLF), ASML (ASML), and Lam Research (LRCX), analysts led by Christopher Danely tell investors in a research note. Citi is "becoming more constructive as fundamentals are bottoming and semis are shipping below demand." The firm expects revenue for the Semiconductor sector in 2019 to decline 7% year-over-year, down from 15% year-over-year growth in 2018, due to the "memory crash dragging down overall sales." If China goes into recession, Citi believes semis will see "another big leg down." If not, the firm expects upside in the second half of 2019.
News For TXN;TSM;SNE;SSNLF;ASML;LRCX From the Last 2 Days
TD Cowen analyst Joshua Buchalter raised the firm's price target on Texas Instruments to $175 from $160 and keeps a Hold rating on the shares. The firm said the print wasn't great but an important improvement and positive indicator on stability for the group. That said, numbers still need to move meaningfully higher to build medium-term valuation support or material buyback growth.
BofA raised the firm's price target on Texas Instruments (TXN) to $190 from $175 and keeps a Neutral rating on the shares. TI's small Q1 beat and inline but sequentially rising Q2 sales guidance, "while modest, potentially marks a recovery inflection in industrial chip demand," with positive read-across for U.S. peers such as Analog Devices (ADI), Microchip (MCHP), NXP Semiconductors (NXPI) and On Semiconductor (ON), the analyst tells investors. However, despite an expected recovery, TI's sustained high capex intensity could keep reported calendar year 2024-26 pro-forma EPS below $6 per share, the analyst added.
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Argus raised the firm's price target on TSMC to $160 from $130 and keeps a Buy rating on the shares. The analyst cites the company's Q1 earnings and revenue beat, stating that while the stock sold off on cautious company guidance for industry demand growth in 2024, the firm still expects solid company growth as inflation recedes and electronic device demand picks up. Throughout a down 2023, demand for the company's 5nm products remained strong, and TSMC has successfully ramped 3 nm node products, the firm added.