New York, Jan 18, 2026, 18:19 (EST) — Market closed.
- Texas Instruments wrapped up Friday up 1.3%, closing at $191.58 ahead of the holiday-shortened week.
- Stifel bumped its price target to $200 but stuck with a Hold rating, citing early signs of demand picking up.
- Investors are bracing for Texas Instruments’ earnings release on Jan. 27, keen to catch management’s outlook on industrial and automotive chip demand.
Stifel raised its price target on Texas Instruments (TXN) to $200 from $170 but kept its Hold rating. The firm pointed to a renewed “analog appetite” and said edge AI is increasingly “more of a reality.” The price target signals where Stifel sees fair value over the next year, while the Hold rating suggests a neutral view—neither a buy nor a sell. 1
U.S. markets reopen Tuesday after the Martin Luther King Jr. Day holiday, marking a key moment as earnings season ramps up. Chip stocks are back in focus. Expect thinner volumes this short week, which could lead to sharper price moves.
Texas Instruments serves as a bellwether for the “old economy” side of semiconductors—analog and embedded chips used in factories, vehicles, and industrial equipment. Investors are closely tracking whether orders are stabilizing or if clients continue to drain their excess stock.
Texas Instruments shares ended Friday at $191.58, up $2.46, or 1.30%, after trading as low as $190.07 and hitting a high of $192.47. Around 6.9 million shares were exchanged. 2
The broader market displayed volatile trading ahead of the long weekend. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq finished Friday largely unchanged, while the Philadelphia SE Semiconductor index gained about 1.2%. “Historically the middle part of January tends to be pretty choppy,” said Bruce Zaro, managing director at Granite Wealth Management. 3
Texas Instruments ticked up 1.3%, pulling slightly ahead of key analog peers, according to MarketWatch data. Meanwhile, Analog Devices and NXP Semiconductors both slipped 0.6%. 4
Texas Instruments produces analog chips that manage power and translate real-world signals into data, plus embedded processors used in cars and industrial equipment. Given this focus, its stock usually moves in line with factory and auto demand rather than the soaring AI sector.
Texas Instruments declared a quarterly cash dividend of $1.42 per share, payable on Feb. 10 to shareholders on record as of Jan. 30. 5
Texas Instruments has scheduled its Q4 and full-year earnings call for Jan. 27 at 3:30 p.m. Central. The webcast will feature Chairman and CEO Haviv Ilan, CFO Rafael Lizardi, and investor relations head Mike Beckman, the company announced. 6
The stock took a hit on Jan. 15, falling 2.24%, only to recover the following day. That rebound left it roughly 0.7% up over the past five sessions. 7
Texas Instruments warned that tariff uncertainty and weak analog demand have weighed on its outlook. Investors are keenly awaiting any change in that stance. 8
That upbeat tone in broker notes might fade fast if Texas Instruments flags a drop in industrial orders, softer auto demand, or more hesitant buying from clients. An uptick in bond yields would pile on pressure for chip stocks carrying high multiples.
Texas Instruments will report its earnings after the market closes on Jan. 27. 9