New York, February 4, 2026, 20:53 EST — The market has closed.
Teradyne, Inc. shares dropped 4.9%, ending Wednesday at $269.07, erasing some of the gains from their recent post-earnings surge. The stock fluctuated notably throughout the session, hitting a low of $263.20 and a high of $295.29. (Investing)
The pullback arrives as investors rethink how long the company can sustain AI-driven demand without the typical fluctuations in chip spending. Teradyne projected first-quarter revenue between $1.15 billion and $1.25 billion, with adjusted earnings per share ranging from $1.89 to $2.25—both surpassing Wall Street estimates compiled by LSEG. (Reuters)
Teradyne’s forecast sparked a jump exceeding 20% in after-hours trading Monday, thrusting the stock back into the high-multiple “AI trade” that’s seen wild swings this week. Moves like this hardly tolerate a weak order cycle or hesitant buyers. (Reuters)
Fundamentally, the company reported a 44% jump in fourth-quarter revenue to $1.083 billion, driven largely by $883 million from its Semiconductor Test segment. CEO Greg Smith pointed to AI-driven demand in compute, networking, and memory as the growth catalyst. He forecasted year-over-year gains across all business units in 2026. (Teradyne, Inc.)
Teradyne submitted a Form 8-K to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, attaching the earnings release as an exhibit. The filing was signed by CFO Michelle Turner. (SEC)
Some sell-side voices are pulling back. Northland downgraded Teradyne from “outperform” to “market perform,” citing valuation concerns, even as it raised the price target to $270. Analyst Gus Richard flagged semiconductor testing as a cyclical business and expressed doubts that the trend has shifted for good. The firm highlighted the stock’s high price-to-earnings ratio, a classic valuation metric. (Investing)
Timing was off. Wall Street dropped again Wednesday, as investors grew wary of high AI-related tech valuations. Advanced Micro Devices plunged 17%, while Nvidia also slipped. (Reuters)
Teradyne’s drop came amid uneven shifts in nearby test and measurement stocks: Keysight dropped 2.45%, Cohu fell 3.63%, but Fortive surged 10.63%, according to MarketWatch data. (MarketWatch)
The bigger threat for Teradyne investors is straightforward: expectations have climbed, and demand for test equipment can drop fast if chipmakers halt spending or delay product ramps. Following this week’s volatility, traders might jump on any sign of a slowdown in AI rollout as a cue to sell off chip stocks.
Investors are zeroing in on Teradyne’s ability to meet its first-quarter guidance and watching for more analysts to issue valuation-driven downgrades or raise their price targets. According to the company’s calendar, shareholders on record as of Feb. 13 will get a quarterly cash dividend of $0.13 per share, payable March 13. (Teradyne, Inc.)