Quick Overview
- Wall Street forecasts Q1 2026 EPS of $2.08 for TER, marking a 177.3% surge compared to last year’s $0.75.
- Teradyne exceeded Q4 2025 earnings expectations by 32.4%, delivering $1.80 per share versus the anticipated $1.36.
- The stock has soared 271.3% over 52 weeks, significantly outperforming the S&P 500’s 16.7% gain.
- A sharp 6.5% decline occurred on March 30 due to geopolitical tensions related to Iran raising supply chain worries.
- Analyst consensus stands at “Moderate Buy” with 17 firms covering TER and an average price target of $311.20.
Teradyne’s performance has been nothing short of spectacular. Shares have climbed approximately 61% since the start of the year and more than 271% across the trailing 52-week period, fueled primarily by robust demand for semiconductor testing equipment tied to artificial intelligence applications.
The company has consistently surpassed earnings expectations across its last four quarterly reports. During Q4 2025, Teradyne delivered earnings per share of $1.80, eclipsing the Street’s $1.36 estimate by 32.4%. Quarterly revenue reached $1.08 billion, substantially exceeding the projected $970 million and reflecting a 43.9% year-over-year increase.
As the Q1 2026 earnings release draws near, expectations are running high. Analysts anticipate EPS of $2.08, which would mark a dramatic 177.3% jump from the $0.75 reported in Q1 2025. While this represents an ambitious forecast, TER has demonstrated a consistent ability to exceed elevated benchmarks.
For the complete 2026 fiscal year, the Street projects EPS of $5.91, indicating 49.2% growth over fiscal 2025’s $3.96. Further ahead, analysts estimate fiscal 2027 EPS of $7.62, translating to 28.9% expansion.
The stock currently carries a P/E ratio around 89, which sits on the higher end of the spectrum. Over the past 12 months, shares have traded in a broad range from $65.77 to $344.92, illustrating the rapid shifts in investor sentiment as AI infrastructure spending accelerated.
Institutional ownership remains overwhelmingly strong. Approximately 99.77% of outstanding shares are held by institutional investors and hedge funds. Recent filings show several institutions have increased their positions, with Integrated Wealth Concepts raising its stake by 12.8% during Q1.
Wall Street’s Price Targets and Recommendations
The analyst community leans decidedly optimistic. Of the 17 analysts tracking the stock, 11 maintain a “Strong Buy” rating, one rates it “Moderate Buy,” and five recommend “Hold.” The consensus 12-month price target sits at $311.20, implying roughly 1.4% potential upside from present trading levels.
Multiple investment firms have upgraded their price objectives this year. Morgan Stanley established a $306 target. Goldman Sachs elevated its target from $230 to $300 alongside a “Buy” recommendation. Evercore increased its target from $200 to $280 with an “Outperform” designation. Cantor Fitzgerald adjusted its target upward from $240 to $270.
Robert W. Baird has similarly highlighted TER as possessing strong appreciation potential, contributing to the optimistic analyst sentiment heading into the earnings announcement.
Current Challenges
The trajectory hasn’t been entirely without obstacles. On March 30, TER experienced a 6.5% single-session decline. The selloff stemmed from escalating geopolitical concerns surrounding the Iran situation, which triggered broader weakness across semiconductor equities.
A particular concern centered on possible disruptions to helium supplies, a critical gas utilized in semiconductor manufacturing processes. Such supply chain vulnerabilities typically impact test-equipment manufacturers significantly, given their direct exposure to chip production cycles.
Teradyne also commemorated its 25th anniversary of Chinese operations this week, leveraging SEMICON China 2026 to introduce four advanced AI infrastructure and semiconductor testing solutions. This demonstrates ongoing commitment to a market that presents its own geopolitical challenges.
With a beta of 1.79, the stock exhibits considerable volatility. As Q1 earnings approach, market participants are carefully evaluating whether AI-fueled demand can support what remains, by most metrics, an elevated valuation.
