TLDR
- HIMX surged over 10% on March 11, 2026, closing at $9.15 on volume nearly 2.5x its daily average.
- The stock hit a 52-week high of $11.76 by March 12, posting a 19% gain for the week.
- Q4 2025 revenue came in at $203.1 million, beating estimates of $199.1 million.
- Growth in automotive display ICs and the WiseEye ultralow-power AI platform are driving investor interest.
- Management guided Q1 2026 as the likely trough, with a rebound expected from Q2 onwards.
Himax Technologies (HIMX) put on a show in mid-March 2026, surging over 10% in a single session and then pushing to a fresh 52-week high just days later. Here’s what happened and why investors took notice.
Himax Technologies, Inc., HIMX
On March 11, 2026, HIMX closed at $9.15, up $0.86 or 10.37% from the prior close of $8.29. The stock opened at $8.40 and hit a session high of $9.19. Volume came in at roughly 2.7 million — more than double the average daily volume of around 1.1 million.
By March 12, the momentum had carried further. The stock reached $11.32 during trading and touched a 52-week high of $11.76. That marked a 19% gain for the week and pushed year-to-date returns to nearly 12%.
The move follows a period of consolidation after softer 2025 results. Himax reported full-year 2025 revenue of $832.2 million, down 8.2% from 2024, weighed down by weak demand in smartphones, tablets, and traditional large-panel displays.
But Q4 gave investors something to work with. Revenue of $203.1 million beat analyst expectations of $199.1 million, rising 2.0% sequentially. Gross margin held at 30.4%, and earnings per diluted ADS came in at $0.036 — at the top end of guidance.
For the full year, net profit was $43.9 million, or $0.25 per diluted ADS. Gross margin improved slightly to 30.6%. Non-driver IC products — including automotive, WiseEye AI, and optics — grew 7% and now make up about 20% of total revenue.
Automotive and AI Driving the Story
Himax holds meaningful market position in automotive display ICs, covering traditional driver ICs, TDDI, timing controllers, and local dimming solutions. The automotive segment benefits from trends in digital cockpits, EVs, and ADAS, which carry higher average selling prices and better margins.
The WiseEye platform is the other piece of the puzzle. It targets always-on, ultralow-power AI processing for endpoint devices across smart home, surveillance, and automotive use cases. A showcase at Embedded World 2026 in Nuremberg put these capabilities in front of a wide audience and appeared to stoke investor interest heading into the March rally.
Himax also continues work in AR and smart glasses, using LCoS microdisplays and wafer-level optics. Partnerships with Vuzix and AUO on prescription-ready optical designs were shown at CES 2026.
What Management Said
Executives guided Q1 2026 as the likely trough for the year. Revenue is expected to decline 2.0% to 6.0% quarter-over-quarter, with gross margin roughly flat and earnings per diluted ADS projected between 2.0 and 4.0 cents.
Management pointed to lean customer inventories, new automotive projects entering mass production, and growing WiseEye contributions as the drivers of an expected recovery from Q2 onwards.
The forward dividend yield sits at around 4%, though amounts remain subject to board approval. Market cap is approximately $1.60 billion based on around 175 million ADS outstanding.
The next key date for investors is the Q1 2026 earnings report, expected in May 2026. InvestingPro has flagged the stock as appearing overvalued at current levels, with a P/E ratio of 29.83.





