Live: Will Teradyne Stock Rally After Q1 Earnings Tonight?
Quick Read
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Teradyne (TER) guided Q1 2026 revenue of $1.15B-$1.25B and non-GAAP EPS of $1.89-$2.25, with AI applications expected to drive over 70% of revenue. Wall Street expects the company to deliver EPS of $2.11 tonight on revenue of $1.21 billion. Both figures are slightly above the midpoint of Teradyne’s guidance.
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This live blog is being updated by Eric Bleeker, who hosts the 24/7 Wall St. AI Investor Podcast. So you’ll get expert analysis of their earnings. Simply stay on this page and new updates will appear below automatically. We expect Teradyne’s earnings to be released shortly after 4:30 p.m. ET.
Live Updates
What to Watch When Teradyne Begins Trading Tomorrow Morning
Levels to Watch at the Open
With Teradyne (NASDAQ:TER | TER Price Prediction) off roughly 9% after-hours from a $380.13 close, the first reference is the 50-day moving average at $327.31. Below that, the $344.59 average analyst target becomes a magnet. Upside reclaim level: $402.
Will the Move Hold?
History argues for a bounce attempt: TER’s average day-of reaction is -1.08%, but the one-week average is +6.09%. The Q2 guide deceleration is the wildcard.
Overnight Catalysts
The 8:30 AM ET call commentary on AI compute, China export controls, and order linearity can flip sentiment. Expect sell-side downgrades or target trims by 7 AM given a forward P/E near 67.
Volume and Volatility
Plan for elevated open volume, wide spreads, and added risk on a 1.79 beta name.
However, keep in mind that Teradyne shares are already recovering from their initial 12% drop, so Wall Street could come to the defense of the stock with management having already telegraphed a slowdown in the back half of the year.
Why Are Teradyne Shares Down 12%?
The guidance reaction is the entire story tonight. Teradyne (NASDAQ:TER) just reported Q1 EPS of $2.56 on revenue of $1.28 billion, yet shares are down roughly 12% after-hours because the Q2 outlook implies a sharp sequential slowdown.
Guidance vs. The Whisper
Management guided Q2 revenue of $1.15 billion to $1.25 billion and non-GAAP EPS of $1.86 to $2.15. The midpoint barely clears the Street’s $1.95 EPS and $1.19 billion revenue consensus, and the high end sits below what Q1 just delivered.
That is the bombshell: after a 107.77% year-to-date run, investors were positioned for a raise well above whisper numbers. The full-year framework was maintained rather than raised. Key assumption holding it back is the company’s own warning of slower second-half growth, with AI compute strength insufficient to offset normalization elsewhere. Watch the call for any walk-up of the full-year framework.
Why is Teradyne Stock Plummeting After-Hours? Look at the Company's Guidance
Well, it didn’t take long to find the fly in the ointment in Teradyne’s earnings. Here’s what the company said about guidance:
“Guidance for the second quarter of 2026 is revenue of $1,150 million to $1,250 million, with GAAP net income of $1.83 to $2.12 per diluted share and non-GAAP net income of $1.86 to $2.15 per diluted share. Non-GAAP guidance excludes acquired intangible asset amortization and amortization on our investment in Technoprobe, as well as the related tax impact on non-GAAP adjustments.”
Earlier we had covered what Wall Street expected next quarter:
“Wall Street expects EPS of $1.95 next quarter on sales of $1.19 billion. While Teradyne has signaled its growth will slow in the back half of the year, the company will likely need to guide a good bit above this level for investors to be happy with its results.”
So, Teradyne exceeded these expectations, but they do represent a steep deceleration. The company has warned that growth would slow in the second half of the year, but this level of deceleration is likely a surprise and below ‘whisper numbers’ on Wall Street.
Teradyne Drops 12% After Announcing Q1 Earnings
Headed into Teradyne’s earnings, we had seen nothing but good results after-hours, but investors aren’t happy with what they see.
Earnings of $2.56 crushed expectations of $2.11 while revenue of $1.28b came in well ahead of expectations as well.
We noted the bar had been raised for tonight’s earnings with Teradyne shares rallying throughout 2026, we’ll continue looking at why shares are seeing such a pronounced decline after-hours.
Teradyne Results Due Soon
Teradyne results are expected a little before 4:30 p.m. ET.
We’ll update this live blog once they hit.
Bloom Energy and Seagate have already reported stunning results tonight and are up 13% and 10%, respectively. So it’s been a good night for AI earnings already.
Countdown to Teradyne's Earnings: What's at Stake
Teradyne (NASDAQ:TER) shares fell 5.44% intraday to $380.12 ahead of tonight’s post-close release, cooling a run that has the stock higher by 423.18% over the past year and 107.77% year-to-date.
KPIs That Matter
- Semiconductor Test revenue, $883M last quarter, is the AI tell.
- Non-GAAP operating margin held 29% in Q4, setting a high bar.
- Robotics trajectory after the ~400-employee 2025 restructuring.
Beat/Miss Triggers
Management guided revenue of $1.15B to $1.25B with non-GAAP EPS of $1.89 to $2.25. Teradyne has beaten EPS estimates in 8 consecutive quarters, including a 30.43% surprise last quarter. Clearing the high end could extend the rally; falling beneath risks profit-taking against a forward P/E of 67, especially with the average analyst target at $344.59, already below the current quote.
Here's What Wall Street Expects When Teradyne Reports Q1 Earnings Tonight
The big numbers to watch when Teradyne reports tonight are:
- Revenue: Wall Street expects $1.21 billion
- EPS: Wall Street estimates $2.11 in adjusted earnings
The reality is Teradyne shares are up more than 80% year-to-date, so the company likely will need to surpass both these numbers if shares are going to rise after hours. More important than this quarter’s numbers will be guidance.
Wall Street expects EPS of $1.95 next quarter on sales of $1.19 billion. While Teradyne has signaled its growth will slow in the back half of the year, the company will likely need to guide a good bit above this level for investors to be happy with its results.
Teradyne (NASDAQ:TER) reports first quarter fiscal 2026 results tonight after the close, capping a vertical run that has the semiconductor test leader trading near record territory. Shares last changed hands at $381.54, up 60.56% over the past three months versus a 4.9% gain for the NASDAQ 100. Year to date, Teradyne is up 107.77%. With this recent rally and a P/E past 100, a lot of expectations are baked into tonight’s results. Let’s see what investors are expecting from Teradyne.
What Wall Street Expects
Management’s own Q1 2026 guidance, issued with the Q4 earnings report, frames the bar: revenue of $1.15 billion to $1.25 billion and non-GAAP EPS of $1.89 to $2.25. CFO Michelle Turner described the midpoint as a new quarterly record, with 11% sequential and 75% year-over-year growth at midpoint.
Other modeled inputs analysts are watching: gross margin of 58.5% to 59.5%, operating expenses running 26% to 28% of sales, a non-GAAP operating profit rate near 32%, and AI applications expected to drive upwards of 70% of revenue.
The Q4 Setup and Stock Reaction
Last quarter set a high bar. Teradyne posted Q4 revenue of $1.083 billion, beating consensus by 11.81%, and non-GAAP EPS of $1.80, beating by 30.43%. Revenue grew 43.89% year over year, and non-GAAP operating margin expanded to 29% from 21.7%. Semi Test delivered $883 million, Product Test $110 million, and Robotics $89 million.
Shares closed at $283.38 the day of that release. Since then the stock has run roughly a third higher, peaking at an all-time high of $410.83 on April 24 before two consecutive sessions of selling. Teradyne fell 5.18% on April 27 amid US-China tensions and profit-taking, and is off another 5.09% intraday today.
What Wall Street Will Be Watching
CEO Greg Smith told investors on the Q4 call: “In 2026, we expect year-over-year growth across all of our businesses, with strong momentum in compute driven by AI.” The questions tonight focus on whether that thesis is intact and how aggressively management will guide.
- AI test demand: SoC revenue grew 47% sequentially in Q4 and memory hit a record $206 million, up 61%. Investors want confirmation that HBM and DRAM test orders are still ramping into 2026.
- Mobile and compute mix: Compute grew 90% year-over-year in 2025 and now represents nearly 50% of the SoC mix. Mobile recovery commentary remains a swing factor.
- Robotics trajectory: Management is aiming for breakeven this year, with large e-commerce customer revenue expected to triple between 2025 and 2026.
- Full-year framing: Turner has signaled a 60/40 first-half/second-half split, an inversion of 2025. Any sign of weaker second-half visibility, especially given Smith’s caution about a “2-, 3-quarter surge that may lead to a shorter period of digestion”, will matter.
- Trade policy: Recent commentary flagged significant uncertainty beyond Q2 due to trade policy impacts, particularly in automotive and industrial.
Sell-side targets remain split. Evercore ISI lifted its target to $430 from $320 on April 27 and UBS sits at $440, while the broader consensus across 16 brokerages (10 Buy, 6 Hold) sits near $324.53, well below the current quote. Tonight’s guide is the swing variable.
Eric Bleeker has been investing for more than 20 years. He began his career working at Microsoft before joining Motley Fool, one of the largest publishers of financial research. In his 15 years at Motley Fool Eric served as the General Manager for Fool.com and led coverage in the Technology & Telecom sector. In addition, he was a featured columnist and has hosted dozens of investing seminars attended by more than a million total investors. Eric has more than 1,000 financial bylines to his name and has been featured in The Wall Street Journal, CNBC, Fox Business, and many other leading publications. He is currently focused on artificial intelligence investing and is a CFA Charterholoder.
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