New York, Feb 3, 2026, 14:47 EST — Regular session
- Teradyne shares jumped roughly 11% to $277.63 in afternoon trading, buoyed by better-than-expected quarterly results and a robust forecast for the March quarter.
- Chip-test equipment maker forecasted first-quarter revenue between $1.15 billion and $1.25 billion, exceeding Wall Street expectations.
- Cantor Fitzgerald kept its Overweight rating and $270 price target, describing the quarter as “a significant beat and raise.”
Teradyne Inc (TER.O) shares surged 11.3% to $277.63 on Tuesday, driven by a quarterly profit and revenue forecast that blew past analyst estimates.
This move is significant since Teradyne is near the forefront of the AI supply chain. When chipmakers and cloud companies ramp up data center expansions, they usually invest first in testing equipment that certifies new chips before delivery.
Teradyne projected first-quarter revenue and adjusted earnings that beat Wall Street expectations late Monday, driven by strong demand for AI compute and memory chips. The company highlighted that growing AI chip complexity and accelerated production schedules are pushing chipmakers to boost spending on test gear. Shares jumped over 20% in after-hours trading following the announcement. (Reuters)
Teradyne posted fourth-quarter revenue of $1.083 billion and non-GAAP earnings of $1.80 a share in its latest earnings release. CEO Greg Smith attributed the quarter’s performance to “AI-related demand” driving gains in compute, networking, and memory sectors. He also highlighted expected year-over-year growth across its businesses in 2026. (Teradyne, Inc.)
Looking ahead to the March quarter, the company projected revenue between $1.15 billion and $1.25 billion, with adjusted earnings per share ranging from $1.89 to $2.25. Reuters referenced an LSEG consensus that expects $934.5 million in revenue and $1.26 in adjusted EPS. (Reuters)
Cantor Fitzgerald’s C.J. Muse held firm on an Overweight rating with a $270 price target, calling the results “a significant beat and raise.” The firm highlighted strong AI-driven demand in networking, compute, and memory as key growth drivers. (Investing)
Teradyne produces automated test equipment—machines that verify the quality and reliability of semiconductors before they’re integrated into phones, servers, or other devices. Its client list includes Qualcomm and Texas Instruments, Reuters reported. (Reuters)
A regulatory filing revealed the company submitted its quarterly results in a Form 8-K on Monday. (SEC)
The bar has clearly been raised. A slip in AI-driven capital spending—or a delay in the shift from busy chip factories to new equipment orders—might pressure a stock that’s already priced for faster growth.
Investors now turn to management and analysts for clues on how long the AI-fueled order surge might last, and if it will extend from compute into memory and networking sectors. Attention will also be on Teradyne’s presence at key industry gatherings, such as SEMICON Korea on Feb. 11 and the Chiplet Summit on Feb. 17, searching for new signs of demand. (Teradyne)