TLDR
- Tower Semiconductor beat Q1 2026 earnings estimates, posting adjusted EPS of $0.65 vs. the $0.55 consensus
- Q1 revenue hit $413.6 million, up 15% year-over-year, beating the $408 million estimate
- Q2 revenue guidance of $455 million topped analyst forecasts of $436 million — a potential company record
- Tower signed $1.3 billion in silicon photonics contracts for 2027, with $290 million in customer advance payments already received
- TSEM stock surged over 17% on the news, hitting a 52-week high of $267.42
Tower Semiconductor had a strong Tuesday. The Israeli chip foundry dropped a clean earnings beat, issued a record-setting quarterly revenue guide, and announced $1.3 billion in AI-related chip contracts — all before the market could catch its breath.
Tower Semiconductor Ltd., TSEM
TSEM stock jumped more than 17% in early U.S. trading, hitting a 52-week high of $267.42. The broader market was flat, with the S&P 500 down 0.11% and the Nasdaq barely positive, so this was all Tower.
Q1 2026 revenue came in at $413.6 million, up 15% from the same period last year, and just ahead of the $408 million estimate. Adjusted earnings per share of $0.65 beat the consensus of $0.55 by 10 cents.
Gross profit grew 52% year-over-year to $111 million. Operating profit nearly doubled, rising 96% to $65 million from $33 million in Q1 2025.
For Q2 2026, Tower guided revenue of $455 million, plus or minus 5%. Analysts had expected $436 million. If hit, it would be a company record.
The bigger story, though, is silicon photonics. Tower signed $1.3 billion in contracts for 2027 revenue from its largest silicon photonics customers — chips that use light rather than electrical signals to move data, making them well-suited for AI data centers.
$1.3 Billion in Locked-In Revenue
Customers didn’t just sign on the dotted line — they paid $290 million upfront to secure production capacity. They’ve also committed to larger orders for 2028, with additional advance payments due by January 2027.
CEO Russell Ellwanger said the company is “confident in our path toward achieving our financial model targets of $2.8 billion in annual revenue and $750 million in net profit in 2028.”
Those targets are no longer just aspirational. The backlog is building.
Credit Upgrade Adds to the Momentum
S&P’s Maalot reaffirmed Tower’s “ilAA” credit rating and raised its outlook from stable to positive — a quiet but meaningful endorsement of the company’s trajectory.
Tower’s chips serve automotive, industrial, consumer electronics, and communications markets, but it’s the AI data center demand that’s driving the current momentum.
In March, rival GlobalFoundries sued Tower, alleging the company infringed 11 patents related to chip manufacturing for smartphones and other electronics. That litigation is still ongoing.
Tower ended the session at a fresh 52-week high, with the stock’s move driven entirely by company-specific news rather than any broader sector tailwinds.
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