Teleflex (TFX) stock dives on CEO exit and revenue forecast cut — what investors watch next
8 January 2026
1 min read

Teleflex (TFX) stock dives on CEO exit and revenue forecast cut — what investors watch next

New York, January 8, 2026, 14:02 EST — Regular session

Teleflex Incorporated shares slid 11.7% to $111.76 by mid-afternoon on Thursday after the medical device maker disclosed a CEO exit and trimmed its revenue forecast. The company said it was “the right time to transition leadership” as it pushes through a portfolio shift. 1

The drop matters because Teleflex is in the middle of a reset it has sold to investors as a cleanup job: slim down the company and lean harder into critical-care products. In December, Teleflex agreed to sell three businesses for $2.03 billion to sharpen its focus, with the deals expected to close in the second half of 2026. 2

On sales, Teleflex now expects full-year 2025 revenue of $3.270 billion to $3.278 billion, down from prior guidance of $3.305 billion to $3.320 billion. The company blamed softer-than-expected demand for intra-aortic balloon pumps and catheters in the U.S. and Asia at year-end, plus delays in purchase orders in its OEM business, which makes products for other companies. Teleflex said the figures are preliminary, with the quarter-end close still under way, and it expects to report full fourth-quarter and full-year results in late February or early March. 3

The leadership change was immediate. Liam Kelly left as president and chief executive at the end of Wednesday, and director Stuart Randle was appointed interim CEO on Thursday, an SEC filing showed. The board hired Spencer Stuart to run the search for a permanent CEO; the filing also said Randle will receive a $140,000-a-month stipend and a restricted stock grant valued at $1.5 million, due to be granted on January 13. 4

The move snapped a run higher in the stock. Teleflex ended Wednesday at $126.53 after five straight sessions of gains, and it remains well below its 52-week high of $185.94 set on Jan. 27, 2025, MarketWatch data showed. 5

Elsewhere in medtech, the tape was calmer. Johnson & Johnson was down about 1%, Medtronic eased roughly 0.2%, while Boston Scientific traded up about 1.1%.

What could go wrong from here is fairly plain: if the year-end slowdown in balloon-pump demand stretches into the new quarter, or if delayed orders slip again, investors may start to treat Thursday’s revenue cut as a trend, not a bump. The CEO search adds another moving part; “interim” can drag on.

Stock Market Today

American Airlines stock jumps nearly 8% as airlines rally — what to watch next week

American Airlines stock jumps nearly 8% as airlines rally — what to watch next week

7 February 2026
American Airlines shares jumped 7.6% to $15.24 Friday, rebounding with a broad rally that sent the Dow past 50,000 for the first time. Investors are watching the carrier’s battle with United at Chicago O’Hare, where a summer capacity surge could trigger a fare war. American also announced new Philadelphia–Porto service for 2027 and launched a centennial inflight menu.
Apple stock price ends week higher as Dow hits 50,000; jobs and CPI loom next

Apple stock price ends week higher as Dow hits 50,000; jobs and CPI loom next

7 February 2026
Apple closed up 0.8% at $278.12 Friday, then slipped 0.3% after hours. The S&P 500 jumped 1.97% and the Nasdaq rose 2.18% as chipmakers rallied, while Amazon fell 5.6% on higher capex guidance. Investors await U.S. jobs data Feb. 11 and CPI Feb. 13. Apple’s next dividend is $0.26 per share, payable Feb. 12.
Broadcom Stock Gets a Google AI Spend Lift as Jefferies Sees 60% Upside

Broadcom Stock Gets a Google AI Spend Lift as Jefferies Sees 60% Upside

7 February 2026
Google raised its 2026 capital expenditure forecast to $175 billion–$185 billion, with most spending expected on data-center chips. Broadcom shares rose about 2% after the announcement, while Nvidia and AMD slipped. Jefferies reiterated a buy rating on Broadcom, maintaining a $500 price target, implying a 62% upside from Wednesday’s close.
No $2,000 IRS stimulus check is coming in February 2026 — but Trump’s tariff-check talk keeps the rumors alive

No $2,000 IRS stimulus check is coming in February 2026 — but Trump’s tariff-check talk keeps the rumors alive

7 February 2026
The IRS has not announced new federal stimulus payments for February 2026, and Congress has not approved fresh checks. Trump told NBC he is considering $2,000 tariff rebate checks but has not committed, saying any payout would likely come later in 2026. The IRS warns taxpayers to ignore texts and emails about “stimulus payments” and verify notices through official channels.
AppLovin stock slides as Wells Fargo hikes target ahead of Feb. 11 earnings
Previous Story

AppLovin stock slides as Wells Fargo hikes target ahead of Feb. 11 earnings

SoFi stock rises as Wall Street debates dilution ahead of Jan. 30 earnings
Next Story

SoFi stock rises as Wall Street debates dilution ahead of Jan. 30 earnings

Go toTop