Texas Instruments stock slips as traders digest AI data-center lift and new Q1 outlook
30 January 2026
1 min read

Texas Instruments stock slips as traders digest AI data-center lift and new Q1 outlook

New York, Jan 30, 2026, 11:38 EST — The regular session is now underway.

  • Shares of Texas Instruments dropped after initial gains faded, wiping out the rally fueled by its upbeat outlook
  • Company pointed to faster data-center expansion and forecasted Q1 results beating Wall Street expectations
  • Investors weigh AI-fueled gains against slumps in consumer electronics and steep factory spending

Texas Instruments fell 1.7% to $215.15 in late morning trading Friday, giving back part of the gains it made after its earnings report this week.

The pullback comes after TI’s rally late last week, driven by a first-quarter forecast that outpaced estimates and shed light on AI data-center demand. The company’s analog chips, responsible for power management and signal conversion—the behind-the-scenes but vital functions—keep servers running smoothly. 1

TI posted a year-over-year rise in data-center revenue for the most recent quarter and said it will start reporting data-center sales separately from now on. Investors saw this as a clear signal the company expects the segment to keep fueling growth through 2026. 1

For the March quarter, the company projected revenue ranging from $4.32 billion to $4.68 billion, with earnings per share forecasted between $1.22 and $1.48. This guidance surpassed many Wall Street estimates after a long stretch of cautious revisions in the analog chip space. 1

The stock swung sharply, jumping first on the positive forecast before selling pressure emerged. Investors questioned if the rally was fueled mostly by data-center demand or pointed to a broader rise in industrial orders, which make up a significant portion of TI’s revenue. 1

After the forecast, some analysts revised their stance, including one top firm stepping back from a bearish view. It pointed to firmer order trends and solid demand from data centers. 2

Thursday’s session ended at $218.97, extending the streak with volume that ran above average. The trading activity points to intense participation from both bulls and bears as they react to the latest outlook. 3

Peers drove the conversation. Texas Instruments (TI) competes directly with Analog Devices in the analog chip sector. Still, investors are increasingly grouping “AI plumbing” names with marquee compute stocks like Nvidia, even though TI’s core business centers on supporting parts, not processors. 4

But the risk isn’t gone. Some analysts warn the analog recovery is uneven, with pockets of weak demand and ongoing challenges in consumer electronics. Texas Instruments faces heavy U.S. manufacturing costs that could weigh on returns if revenue growth disappoints. 5

Another variable is the wider capex cycle: if spending by hyperscalers slows, the data-center surge that lifted TI’s outlook might evaporate quickly, pushing investors to refocus on the slower industrial and auto sectors. 4

All eyes are on whether TI’s “green shoots” actually lead to higher orders and improved margins this quarter. The upcoming earnings report, due around April 22, 2026, will give Wall Street a critical chance to gauge how far the company has come. 6

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