Shanghai, Feb 1, 2026, 08:31 (GMT+8) — Market closed
- Hua Hong Semiconductor’s Shanghai-listed Class A shares last closed at 155.10 yuan, up 0.38%.
- The company has set Feb. 12 for its 2025 fourth-quarter results release after the trading day and an investor briefing.
- A board meeting is scheduled the same morning to consider and approve the unaudited Q4 figures.
Hua Hong Semiconductor’s Shanghai-listed Class A shares (688347.SS) last closed at 155.10 yuan on Friday, up 0.38%, after trading between 149.33 and 160.03 yuan. The company said it will publish its 2025 fourth-quarter results after the trading session on Feb. 12 and hold an online and phone briefing from 17:00 to 18:00 local time. (Yahoo Finance)
Mainland markets are shut for the weekend, so Monday’s open is the next chance for investors to reset positions. For Hua Hong, the Feb. 12 timetable puts a hard marker on what had been a waiting game.
Quarterly numbers matter for foundries — contract chipmakers that manufacture wafers for customers — because small shifts in utilization and pricing can move margins quickly. Traders will be listening for comments on demand in autos, industrial and consumer gear, plus any sign of order pull-ins fading.
In a Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing Limited notice, the company said its board will meet on Feb. 12 at 10 a.m. to consider and approve publication of unaudited fourth-quarter financial results, covering the three months ended Dec. 31. “Unaudited” means the figures have not yet been checked by external auditors. (HKEX News)
The stock outperformed the wider market into the weekend. The benchmark SSE Composite ended Friday down 0.96% at 4,117.95. (Shanghai Stock Exchange)
Hua Hong is focused on specialty-process wafer foundry work, including power discrete, analog and power management and other so-called legacy nodes — older manufacturing technology still used in many industrial and automotive chips. (Reuters)
But the macro backdrop has softened. China’s official manufacturing PMI — a survey-based gauge of factory activity — slipped to 49.3 in January, below the 50 line that separates growth from contraction, while the non-manufacturing reading also fell, official data showed on Saturday. Ting Lu, chief China economist at Nomura, said “Beijing will have to do much more in coming months” to keep annual growth above 4.5% in 2026. (Reuters)
Before the Feb. 12 report, investors will watch Monday’s follow-through from the weekend PMI data and any policy signals from Beijing. The next clear catalyst for the stock is the Feb. 12 results release and management briefing.