TLDR
- ON Semiconductor won a design deal with China’s Sineng Electric to supply hybrid power integrated modules (PIMs) for solar inverters and energy storage systems.
- The new modules use FS7 IGBT and EliteSiC technology, offering 32% higher power density and 8% lower power dissipation than previous versions.
- ON stock is trading 6.2% below its 20-day moving average and the RSI sits at 35.46, nearing oversold territory.
- Analyst consensus is a Hold with an average price target of $64.67, well above the current price.
- Next earnings are estimated for May 4, 2026, with EPS projected at 62 cents and revenue at $1.49 billion.
ON Semiconductor (ON) picked up a new design win Tuesday, landing a supply deal with Sineng Electric for its latest power modules. The stock edged up 0.93% to $56.18 in premarket trading.
ON Semiconductor Corporation, ON
The deal covers two of Sineng’s flagship products: a 430 kW liquid-cooled energy storage system and a 320 kW utility-scale solar inverter. ON will supply its F5BP hybrid power integrated modules — part of its FS7 IGBT and EliteSiC product line — for both platforms.
These aren’t minor spec bumps. The new modules deliver 32% higher power-to-weight performance, 0.1% better efficiency, and 8% lower power dissipation compared to earlier versions. Thermal resistance to the heatsink is also down 9.3%, which matters a lot for system longevity in outdoor energy environments.
Switching losses at the module level dropped 10%, which directly reduces conversion losses in the final system. For large-scale solar and storage operators, that kind of efficiency gain adds up over the lifetime of a project.
Jianfeng Sun, from Sineng Electric, said the partnership pushes forward power density and conversion efficiency at the utility scale. ON’s Sravan Vanaparthy noted the modules let operators increase output and cut lifetime costs without needing to expand system footprint.
That last point is key for project developers working within fixed land or enclosure constraints — squeezing more kilowatts out of the same physical space is a real commercial advantage.
Technical Picture Under Pressure
Despite the news, ON’s chart isn’t exactly singing. The stock is sitting 6.2% below its 20-day simple moving average of $59.90 and 3.7% below its 100-day SMA of $58.31.
The RSI is at 35.46 — neutral, but nudging toward oversold territory. The MACD is at -1.3095, below its signal line of -1.1280, keeping bearish momentum in place. Key resistance is at $60.00, with support around $55.00.
The stock is still up 36.79% over the past 12 months and sits closer to its 52-week high of $73.76 than its low of $31.04. The valuation carries a P/E of 191.9x, which is a premium number relative to semiconductor peers.
Analysts and What’s Next
The analyst consensus is a Hold, with an average price target of $64.67 — roughly 15% above current levels. Barclays initiated coverage in February with an Equal-Weight rating and a $75 target. JP Morgan and Citigroup both raised their targets in the same month, to $70 and $68 respectively.
Next earnings are penciled in for May 4, 2026. The Street is looking for EPS of 62 cents — up from 55 cents a year ago — and revenue of $1.49 billion, up from $1.45 billion in the year-prior quarter.
ON carries a 9.17% weight in the First Trust NASDAQ Clean Edge Green Energy Index Fund (QCLN) and a 3.48% weight in the SPDR S&P Semiconductor ETF (XSD).







