New York, Feb 13, 2026, 17:54 EST — After-hours
- ADI climbed roughly 1.8% on Friday, finishing close to its recent peak.
- Barclays bumped the stock up to Overweight and raised its price target to $375.
- Next week brings Analog Devices’ quarterly results, and investors are bracing for the numbers.
Analog Devices finished Friday up roughly 1.8% at $337.10, with shares hanging around that price in after-hours trading. That move added to a recent rally driving the stock close to its latest high.
Timing is key here. Traders are scrambling to figure out the next move in the industrial chip cycle. Analog Devices, for its part, supplies factory and infrastructure clients—demand from those buyers can lurch with shifts in the broader economy.
The stock, ahead of next week’s earnings, is acting less like its own narrative and more like a macro barometer. If the numbers impress, the rally probably stretches further. But any hint of caution—especially now, with expectations up—can spark a swift pullback.
Barclays’ Tom O’Malley bumped Analog Devices up to Overweight from Equal Weight, hiking his target to $375, up from $315. O’Malley cited the company’s outsized industrial exposure—calling it “by far” the highest in the analog sector—and described Analog Devices as a “quality name to own” while PMI numbers rebound. (TipRanks)
The stock finished Friday roughly 2% under its 52-week peak of $343.96—set just the previous day—during a session that saw little movement in the broader market. Texas Instruments climbed, Broadcom slipped; chip stocks are back to being sorted into winners and laggards. (MarketWatch)
Barclays highlighted the sector’s standout profitability, noting gross margins hovering near 70%, with operating margins between 40% and 45%. For Analog Devices, the firm said GAAP inventory was about 130 days—well below the 180-day average among peers. According to Barclays, a pickup in communications demand tied to the cloud could further boost the outlook. (Investing.com UK)
Analysts are looking for earnings of roughly $2.30 a share and revenue near $3.12 billion this quarter, according to a Nasdaq.com preview that pulled from consensus estimates. The question hanging in the air: does this point to a more widespread recovery, or has the market already factored in the bounce? (Nasdaq)
The stock dropped 1.7% in the previous session, then bounced back Friday. Shares haven’t exactly followed a straight path. (Yahoo Finance)
Even so, the bull thesis needs macro trends to cooperate. Should PMI numbers sputter, or if clients continue burning off inventory beyond what investors are counting on, orders could drag and it’s guidance—not this quarter’s results—that ends up hurting.
The next major event lands Feb. 18. That’s when Analog Devices drops its first-quarter fiscal 2026 numbers ahead of the U.S. open, with a conference call following later that morning. Industrial demand, communications momentum, and the pace of inventory normalization — investors will be listening for any shift in the company’s messaging. (analog.com)