New York, Jan 18, 2026, 21:27 EST — Market closed
- Lattice Semiconductor shares fell 2.4% on Friday, missing out as the broader chip sector posted gains.
- Monday’s Martin Luther King Jr. Day holiday has U.S. markets closed, making for a shorter trading week ahead.
- Traders are focusing on new semiconductor earnings reports and any updates on demand for programmable chips.
Lattice Semiconductor shares slipped 2.4% to close at $83.22 on Friday, retreating before the U.S. market holiday Monday, when trading will be paused. (Yahoo Finance)
This shift is significant given chip stocks are already being pulled by early earnings season bets. Plus, with a holiday-shortened week, thinner liquidity can amplify price swings.
Lattice occupies a niche in the semiconductor space, and the coming sessions will hinge on how investors interpret demand cues from bigger players and the sector’s overall guidance tone.
On Friday, the stock swung between $81.50 and $87.13, with roughly 2.7 million shares changing hands, based on historical pricing data. (StockAnalysis)
On Friday, a semiconductor index rose 1.2%, despite Lattice closing down. “Historically the middle part of January tends to be pretty choppy,” noted Bruce Zaro, managing director at Granite Wealth Management. Anthony Saglimbene, chief market strategist at Ameriprise Financial, added that investors were just beginning the earnings season. (Reuters)
Lattice produces low-power field-programmable gate arrays, or FPGAs — chips that customers can reprogram after they’re manufactured — which find use in industrial, communications, computing, and various embedded systems.
Late last week, company filings caught some notice. A Form 4 — the SEC document for insider trades — revealed that the company held back 540 shares from Chief Accounting Officer Tonya Stevens to settle tax liabilities on vested equity awards. (SEC)
A separate Form 4 revealed a comparable tax-related share withholding for Erhaan Shaikh, senior vice president of sales, connected to vested restricted stock units. (SEC)
Competitive comparisons in programmable logic are often complicated, yet investors keep an eye on major players like Intel’s Altera unit and AMD’s Xilinx division for clues about spending trends.
But the setup works both ways. If sector guidance falls short or risk appetite cools, Lattice could take a hit just on positioning, even without any fresh company-specific news, following a volatile run in recent sessions.
U.S. markets reopen Tuesday. The big event ahead for chip stocks is Intel’s Q4 and full-year 2025 earnings, set for release Thursday, Jan. 22, after the close. (Intc)