NEW YORK, Jan 17, 2026, 18:59 EST — Market closed.
Microchip Technology Incorporated (MCHP.O) closed Friday 0.3% higher, at $74.70. The shares fluctuated between $74.35 and $75.69 during the session, with roughly 7.0 million shares traded.
The chipmaker heads into a holiday-shortened week following a nearly flat finish for U.S. stocks on Friday, as chip shares gained ground late in the session. U.S. markets will be closed Monday for Martin Luther King Jr. Day. (Reuters)
Tuesday’s reopening looks more promising than usual. Traders now have a couple of fresh analyst calls and a product-related statement to focus on, going beyond the usual daily swings in chip sentiment.
Stifel raised its price target to $90 from $80, sticking with a “buy” rating, MT Newswires reported. TD Cowen bumped its target up to $75 from $65 but held on to a “hold” rating. (MarketScreener)
Silicon Storage Technology (SST), part of Microchip, and contract chipmaker United Microelectronics Corp have qualified and launched an embedded SuperFlash Gen 4 platform built on a 28-nanometer process, targeting automotive-grade chips. “Developers need solutions that drive efficiency, speed up time to market and satisfy stringent industry standards,” said Mark Reiten, vice president at Microchip’s licensing business unit. (UMC)
The release taps into a familiar investor theme: chips in cars. While it’s not a direct revenue forecast, it adds weight to the ongoing story of rising automotive electronics demand and the drive to bring designs into production.
Sentiment across the sector has been hit by hefty spending hints at the supply chain’s top. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co announced plans for $52 billion to $56 billion in capital expenditures for 2026, driven by AI-related demand putting strain on capacity. (Reuters)
Microchip has its own narrative to back up. The company bumped its fiscal Q3 net sales forecast to around $1.19 billion earlier this month. CEO Steve Sanghi noted that “our bookings activity was very strong” in the December quarter. (Reuters)
That said, the outlook isn’t one-sided. Analyst enthusiasm and flashy product news could quickly lose steam if investors grow wary that the inventory correction is overstaying its welcome or if orders from industrial and auto sectors slip once more.
Microchip’s fiscal third-quarter results drop on Feb. 5, marking a key moment. Investors will zero in on bookings and backlog—that is, orders already lined up—as well as factory utilization rates. (Microchip)