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DATE

April 22, 2026, 8:30 a.m. ET

CALL PARTICIPANTS

  • Chief Executive Officer — Terrence Curtin
  • Chief Financial Officer — Heath Mitts
  • Head of Investor Relations — Sujal Shah

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TAKEAWAYS

  • Sales -- $4.7 billion, representing 15% growth on a reported basis and 7% organic growth year over year, led by broad-based expansion across both business segments.
  • Orders -- $5.3 billion, up more than $1 billion year over year, achieving a book-to-bill ratio of 1.12 and record-setting order momentum in all segments and regions.
  • Adjusted Earnings Per Share (EPS) -- $2.73, a 24% increase year over year, above prior guidance.
  • Operating Margins (Adjusted) -- 21.7%, expanding by 130 basis points over the prior year, attributed to volume leverage and operational execution.
  • Free Cash Flow -- $1.3 billion year-to-date, with nearly 100% returned to shareholders and continued support for future investments.
  • Dividend -- Quarterly cash dividend raised by 10% per Board approval, utilizing robust free cash flow.
  • Q3 Guidance -- Projected sales of $5 billion (up 10% year over year) and adjusted EPS of approximately $2.83 (up 17% year over year).
  • Industrial Segment Orders -- Up 40%, with over 70% of order growth attributed to this segment; every business within posted double-digit order growth.
  • Digital Data Networks (DDN) Business -- Orders increased over 60%, and AI revenues projected to be $150 million higher than guidance given 90 days ago, driven by increased order momentum in the second half.
  • Industrial Solutions Segment Sales -- Grew 27% (17% organically), with standout performance in digital data networks (nearly 50% growth), Energy (60% including acquisition, 11% organic), Automation and Connected Living (8% organic), and Aerospace and Defense (5% organic).
  • Industrial Solutions Segment Operating Margin -- Expanded by 260 basis points to nearly 22% due to volume gains and operational performance.
  • Transportation Segment Sales -- Up 5% overall; Automotive up 2% reported but down 4% organic; Commercial Transportation up 21% reported, 17% organic; Sensors up 2% reported, down 3% organic.
  • Transportation Segment Operating Margin -- At nearly 22%, reflecting continued operational resiliency.
  • CapEx -- Raised to approximately 6% of revenue this year, almost entirely for AI program ramp-up in DDN, tied to specific customer awards.
  • Acquisitions -- Recent acquisition of RampPhotonics technology to strengthen passive optical connectivity offerings, building capability for both copper and optical architectures.
  • Adjusted Effective Tax Rate -- 21% in Q2, with Q3 expected at 23% and full-year forecast of approximately 22%.
  • Free Cash Flow Conversion -- Company continues to target 100% conversion for the full fiscal year.
  • AI Revenue -- DDN AI revenue expected to approach $2.4 billion this year, following elevated program ramps in the latter half.

RISKS

  • Terrence Curtin said, "we are seeing increased inflationary pressures across certain input costs such as oil-based resins and freight charges driven by higher energy costs and broader geopolitical tensions," highlighting ongoing inflationary headwinds managed by pricing and productivity strategies.
  • Commercial automotive sales declined 4% organically. North American auto production was noted as "a little worse" than anticipated, although content growth partially offset market weakness.
  • Organic growth in the Energy segment showed some deceleration. Terrence Curtin attributed this to "pauses" in clean energy projects and regulatory elements affecting market timing.

SUMMARY

TE Connectivity (NYSE:TEL) reported strong top- and bottom-line results for the quarter, with double-digit reported sales and EPS growth, supported by broad-based order momentum and margin expansion across all business segments. Management detailed that orders, backlog, and revenue growth were anchored by accelerating demand in AI data networks, continued investment in grid hardening, and sustained momentum in commercial transportation, while also noting sequential increases in CapEx to support program ramps. The company explicitly announced a technology acquisition (RampPhotonics) aimed at strengthening passive optical connectivity, providing additional clarity on its multi-architecture data strategy and expanded addressable market. Both near-term and longer-term targets for earnings and cash conversion remain on track, with strategic investments and shareholder returns supported by robust free cash flow.

  • Management emphasized continued high order momentum in April, stating, "the order momentum continues to be very strong. We have not seen any demand negative impacts due to orders at all since the conflict broke out."
  • "copper will continue to be the workhorse in the rack" with the expectation of a hybrid solution, as management described, "it's not copper or optical, it's copper and optical."
  • CEO Curtin provided additional detail on growth durability in Energy: approximately 60%-67% of the business is tied to utility and grid hardening, with double-digit expansion in both industrial and data center sub-segments, and high single-digit growth in clean energy.
  • The company confirmed its M&A pipeline remains active, focusing on targeted bolt-ons to enhance growth opportunities, while maintaining disciplined capital allocation between acquisitions and buybacks.
  • Heath Mitts stated that the increase in CapEx over the past couple of years is almost entirely due to ramping the AI programs within the DDN business, and those are tied to very specific programs.
  • TE Connectivity noted order lead times and backlog have extended, with customers scheduling further out to secure capacity, especially in AI and data-related solutions.

INDUSTRY GLOSSARY

  • DDN (Digital Data Networks): TE’s segment focused on data-centric connectivity products supporting AI, data center, and network growth.
  • AI Content/Revenue: Portion of segment revenue directly attributable to connectivity components for artificial intelligence architectures and systems.
  • Passive Optical Connectivity: Solution set for non-active, fiber-based data interconnects, excluding powered or switching devices (e.g., used for linking chips or racks in data centers).
  • Book-to-Bill Ratio: Ratio of orders received to units shipped and billed in the same period; a level above 1.0 signals strong demand pipeline.
  • Grid Hardening: Strategies and infrastructure investments enhancing utility grid resilience and reliability, often for distributed energy or storm readiness.
  • CPO (Co-Packaged Optics): Advanced data center technology involving integration of optical components directly with switching silicon to drive higher performance and energy efficiency.

Full Conference Call Transcript

Terrence Curtin: Thank you, Sujal. And also, once again, thank you, everyone, for joining us today. And as I normally do, before I jump into the slides, I do want to frame today's call around a few key messages. And I want to go back to November when we did our Investor Day, where we outlined how our strategy and business model are driving a broadening of growth across our portfolio while positioning us to deliver sustained margin expansion and double-digit earnings growth. The strategy we laid out, we believe, will drive ongoing value creation for our owners.

And it's based on the backbone is how we capitalize on the proliferation of data and power by providing leading interconnect products and technologies across our target markets to meet the evolving next-generation architectures of our customers. The results we're going to get into today and talk about our further evidence of our strategy is working. Last year, we delivered $1.4 billion of growth as a company. And this year, we expect to deliver well over $2 billion of growth, with the majority of our businesses growing double digits year-over-year. As we look at our second quarter results, we delivered strong financial performance with sales growth of 15% year-over-year and continued outperformance versus our key end markets.

We also delivered earnings growth of 24% in the quarter. When you underpin this performance, we continue to see strong order trends. In the second quarter, we had record orders of over $5 billion, which was growth of over $1 billion versus the prior year, with growth across both segments and in every business. As we expand sales, we continue to invest and scale the business to deliver consistent margin performance and earnings growth. The performance of our teams, combined with our global manufacturing strategy, are providing resiliency within a backdrop of an ongoing dynamic global environment, and this is reflected in the performance of both segments.

We expect our strong performance will continue and Heath will talk more about that when he gets into his section. So if you could, if you're looking at the slides, I'd ask you to turn to Slide 3, and I'll get into our second quarter results. as well as our outlook for the third quarter. Our second quarter sales were over $4.7 billion, with performance above guidance driven across our businesses. Sales grew 15% on a reported basis and 7% organically year-over-year. We saw orders increase to $5.3 billion and I'll provide more color on the order momentum on the next slide.

We delivered record adjusted earnings per share of $2.73, which was above our guidance and increased 24% versus the prior year. Our operating margins on an adjusted basis were 22%, and this was an increase of 130 basis points over last year due to the execution of our teams. We also continue to demonstrate our strong cash generation model with free cash flow of $1.3 billion for the first half of this year, and year-to-date, we returned nearly 100% of our free cash flow to shareholders while continuing to support investments for future growth. Also driven off of this strong free cash flow, in the quarter we announced that our Board approved a 10% increase to our quarterly cash dividend.

As we look to the third quarter, we are expecting third quarter sales to be $5 billion, which reflect an increase of 10% versus the prior year with year-over-year and sequential growth in both of our segments. We expect adjusted earnings per share to be up 17% year-over-year to around $2.83. So I'd ask if you could turn to Slide 4, and let me get into more details on the order trend momentum that we're seeing. As I mentioned, orders were $5.3 billion with a book-to-bill of 1.12. We saw orders growth in every business and in all regions on a year-over-year basis. and our order trends support the broadening of growth I've already talked about.

For the second quarter, over 70% of the company's order growth was in Industrial segment. Versus the prior year, Industrial segment orders grew 40% and essentially every business in the segment posted double-digit orders growth. In addition to the ongoing momentum in digital data networks where our orders grew over 60% in the quarter, we also continue to see continued momentum in Energy, Aerospace and Defense, as well as Automated and Connected Living. Turning to our Transportation segment orders. Our orders increased 13% versus the prior year, with year-over-year and sequential growth in all 3 of our businesses. Our order trends are supporting our growth and content outlook for the automotive business in the second half of the year.

And in commercial transportation, we're seeing continued recovery in the global market with organic orders that grew year-over-year in every region. So with that as an overview of orders, let me now discuss quarterly segment results, and I'll start with the Industrial segment on Slide 5. Our sales in the Industrial Solutions segment grew 27% in the quarter and 17% on an organic basis year-over-year. We are benefiting from the secular growth trends that we see in our digital data networks business as well as our energy business, where we continue to see significant demand tied to AI and energy grid investments along with continued growth in aerospace and defense and factory automation applications.

In our digital data networks, we had another standing quarter where our business grew nearly 50% year-over-year and sales were as we expected. We continue to win new programs with customers and the orders that we have received are building backlog into 2027. We now expect our AI revenues in fiscal 2026 to be about $150 million higher than our view 90 days ago, and this entire increase will be in the second half of the year and reflects the increased momentum that I talked about in orders. As we look out to the longer term, we are well positioned to continue to generate strong growth from AI applications.

With our broad portfolio of data and power connectivity solutions as well as our engagements with the key architects of this space. We expect the addressable market for our AI products to continue to grow, both near term and long term. We are innovating with our customers on their road maps and architectures and are making both organic and inorganic investments to strengthen our road map for both copper and the inflection point for optical solutions. During the quarter, we acquired a leading technology for passive optical connectivity solutions, strengthening our road map to offer customer solution for both copper and optical connectivity in the future.

As you would expect, we will continue to support our customers' architectures as they evolve. Now let me turn to the other businesses in the segment. And turning to Automation and Connected Living. We grew 8% organically year-over-year with growth in each region, and we continue to expect the momentum in the general and industrial markets to improve as we move through the year. In Energy, our sales grew 60%, including the Richards acquisition, where we're capitalizing on growth opportunities in the U.S. utility market. Organically, sales increased 11%, driven by year-over-year growth across 3 key application areas; the first being energy grid hardening, second being data center and the third being clean energy applications.

We continue to see increasing investment by our customers in grid hardening as utilities upgrade aging infrastructure and improve resiliency to support more distributed and reliable networks. In the data center, load growth is being driven by the significant build-out of power infrastructure to support AI where our connectivity solutions enable higher power density as well as reliability. And in clean energy applications, we continue to benefit from ongoing investment in utility scale solar, along with the supporting grid infrastructure required to integrate these energy sources. In our Aerospace and Defense business, our sales grew 5% organically driven by growth across both commercial aerospace and defense applications.

In these markets, we continue to see favorable demand trends coupled with ongoing supply chain improvements. These trends are supported by increased global defense spending and ongoing modernization efforts that require increased data connectivity and greater power requirements, along with ongoing production ramps in the commercial aerospace field. And lastly, in our metal business, sales grew sequentially as we expected, driven by the continued investment in growth in key therapy applications such as structural heart and electrophysiology. So turning to margins for this segment. Industrial segment adjusted operating margins expanded 260 basis points to nearly 22% and driven by the strong operational performance by our teams and the benefits of higher volume.

So if you could, let me move over to Slide 6, and I'll get into the Transportation segment. Our sales in the Transportation segment grew 5% in the quarter and were down slightly organically. We are delivering growth over market in both automotive and commercial transportation, reflecting our leading global position and customer co-creation model. And this is resulting in continued content growth across vehicle platforms. Our Auto sales grew 2% on a reported basis and declined 4% organically in the second quarter. Our market outperformance against declining Auto production was driven by content growth in Asia and Europe.

Year-to-date, we're averaging growth over market at the low end of our 4 to 6-point range and continue to expect content growth to be in this range for fiscal 2026 driven by our strong position and content opportunities across data connectivity in the vehicle, the electrification of the powertrain as well as electronification of the vehicle. Turning to Commercial Transportation. We saw 21% growth on a reported basis and 17% organically. We are seeing continued improvement in demand trends across regions with growth in Europe and Asia and stabilization in North America. Against this backdrop, we are delivering growth at significantly above the market driven by continued share gains from new program wins and increasing content per vehicle.

In our Sensors business, sales increased 2% on a reported basis and declined 3% organically, which was in line with our expectations. For the Transportation segment, the team delivered adjusted operating margins of nearly 22%, demonstrating our team's operational resiliency. So with that as an overview of our segment performance, let me hand it over to Heath will get into more financial details and expectations going forward.

Heath Mitts: Thank you, Terrence, and good morning, everyone. Please turn to Slide 7. For the quarter, we achieved adjusted operating income of over $1 billion and adjusted operating margins of 21.7%, driven by strong operational performance by our teams in both segments. GAAP operating income was $954 million and included $8 million of acquisition-related charges, $10 million of restructuring and other charges and $57 million of amortization expense. I continue to expect restructuring charges in fiscal '26 to be roughly $100 million.

Adjusted EPS was $2.73, and GAAP EPS was $2.90 for the quarter and included a $0.39 tax benefit primarily related to a settlement of prior period tax matters as well as restructuring, acquisition and other charges of $0.06 and amortization expense of $0.15. The adjusted effective tax rate was approximately 21% in Q2. We expect Q3 to be around 23% and the full year tax rate to be approximately 22%. Importantly, as always, we anticipate our cash tax rate to be well below our adjusted ETR. Now if you turn to Slide 8. This slide shows the growth and broadening that Terrence discussed along with the strength of our operating model with strong margin performance and double-digit earnings growth.

Sales of $4.7 billion were up 15% on a reported basis and up 7% on an organic basis year-over-year. Adjusted operating margins were 21.7% in the second quarter, expanding 130 basis points year-over-year. Adjusted earnings per share were $2.73, up 24% year-over-year, driven by sales growth and margin expansion. We continue to operate in a dynamic environment. Versus 90 days ago, we are seeing increased inflationary pressures across certain input costs such as oil-based resins and freight charges driven by higher energy costs and broader geopolitical tensions. We are managing these impacts through our proven playbook, including optimization of our factory footprint, targeted pricing actions and ongoing productivity initiatives.

In addition, our localization strategy around supply chain enhances resiliency by positioning us to manufacture close to our customers and respond quickly to changing conditions. Turning to cash flow. Cash from operations was $947 million, and free cash flow was $680 million. Through the first half of the fiscal year, free cash flow was a record $1.3 billion. We continue to expect our free cash flow conversion to be 100% this year. Before I turn it over to questions, let me reinforce that performance reflects strong execution in both segments.

The strength that we have in orders gives us confidence in the second half, and we expect to have over $2 billion of growth this year, which will be ahead of our through-cycle target. While we remain in a dynamic environment, we have established levers in place to expand operating margins and drive double-digit earnings growth per share. So with that, let's now open it up for questions.

Sujal Shah: Thank you, Heath. Eli, can you please give the instructions for the Q&A session?

Operator: [Operator Instructions] Your first question comes from Scott Davis from Melius Research.

Scott Davis: Can you talk about the...There is allergy attack here, but the $150 million bump up, when does that get shipped out?

Terrence Curtin: Yes, sure. Yes, sure. So let me talk about that, and I do hope you feel better from your allergies here, Scott. The $150 million, I think 1 thing -- and you're talking about the AI -- when we look at it, I think let's frame a little bit where our orders are in our DDM business, and we'll talk about that $150 million because year-to-date in our DDM business, we have $2 billion of orders. . And as we talked in the past few quarters, some of these orders are being scheduled out. And like you're always going to have -- when you have these programs, there'll be some lumpiness to them as programs ramp up and ramp down.

So with the momentum that we've seen in order, Scott, the $150 million that I mentioned about on the statements are things that relate to the second half. Part of it is ramping of programs we have, part of it is new ramps that are coming along, and it continues to show the momentum that we have in the space. So we do think with this additional $150 million -- $150 million of AI revenue in the second half, that will put our DDN AI revenue, which runs about 70% of total DDN approaching $2.4 billion, just a little bit below that, and the momentum continues.

And it will ramp in the second half -- and like we said, about all the businesses, we do expect all of our businesses to grow from the second quarter to third quarter. So just the story continues there, where we have good engagement, good program wins and continue to have strong growth in the AI space.. In the AI space.

Sujal Shah: Thank you, Scott. We have the next question, please.

Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Mark Delaney of Goldman Sachs.

Mark Delaney: Orders were strong again this quarter, a record high. You said it's strength across all businesses, but I'm hoping you could speak more on whether you think the momentum can be sustained and also what TE saw with business trends so far in April, especially in light of the geopolitical and supply chain volatility?

Terrence Curtin: No. Thanks, Mark, for the question. So a couple of things. Yes, you're right. I think when you look at this year, remember, we did $5 billion of orders in the first quarter, $5.3 billion in the second quarter. So we've stacked about $10 million of orders. So we built backlog, and in the first month since quarter end, the order momentum continues to be very strong. We have not seen any demand negative impacts due to orders at all since the conflict broke out. So we continue to see that strong momentum. And I think the broadening that I talked about in the script is it is really across the businesses.

When you look at the growth that we put up, which is 25% in this quarter, DDN was very strong at 60% order growth year-on-year. But if you look at the rest of the Industrial segment, essentially every business unit put up double digits. So we're continuing to have the strong momentum that we've had in energy that I mentioned, aerospace and defense, continues to build backlog. And those -- the lead time on those products are typically further out. So that's another one that's building backlog similar to what I talked about with AI.

And the one that in the Industrial segment probably a little bit later of an uptick is what we're seeing in factory automation in our automation control business. When you look at that business, and I mentioned it on the script, we had growth in every region. But when you're talking about growth in every region, you're really looking at both at high double digits across every region. So we continue to see momentum building up on that CapEx investment and certainly, what we see with ISM be constructive, I also think is a good supporting fact. And then the other thing, when you get to transportation, clearly, our view of production hasn't changed.

We've told you since the beginning of the year, we expect auto production to be slightly down. We still have that same view but our Transportation segment orders being up double digit, being led by commercial transportation, which is up a very strong double digit. And in Automotive, our orders were up mid-single digit. So showing the confidence we have around the growth in what is a production environment that I would say still isn't a positive production environment, but one that feels like it's just moving sideways and we benefit from our global position. So the order trends are broad.

They are across regions and some of the businesses that a year ago, so we would say might have been still cycling down. have come back in and really driving some of the growth that you see. And we do expect it to continue and the orders in quarter 3 to date through today, we're showing that.

Sujal Shah: All right. Thank you, Mark. We have the next question please.

Operator: Next question comes from Luke Junk of Baird.

Luke Junk: Terrence, maybe clicking a little bigger picture. Just hoping you could provide some updated perspective from your point of view on the copper versus optical debate in especially interested is just where you're leaning in to any related investments. You made the comment in the script about evolving with customers and also noticed you did an optical acquisition in March of RampPhotonics, if you could speak to that as well.

Terrence Curtin: Okay. Thanks, Luke, for the question. And we've had many discussions about this, but I do want to start just reiterating some things before I click down a little bit to where you asked to go. It's important to be where we play, we're very fortunate to have a bird's eye view that we work with our customers and what's happening in both the data chain and the powertrain when you look at what's going on, on the AI architecture. And we work closely with our customers, and we're aligned with their road maps.

The other thing that we talked about at Investor Day each customer has different architectures, and they have different opinions about when things will be introduced, whether it's in the power chain or in the signal data chain. And let's face it, we work very closely to make sure we're going to hit the inflection points that they are telling us.

And I think the other thing that you've all heard very consistently from the broad merchant chip companies, is that copper will continue to be the workhorse in the rack and as many applications as possible due to the cost benefit, the power benefit, the reliability as well as where it's scaled to today to be able to meet their needs. And let's face it, we agree with that, and we hear it all the time, and we have a view that it's not copper or optical, it's copper and optical how do they play together in different structures.

So when you sit there and you think about optics coming in, it's going to come in more into the scale out first. let's face it, we are bigger in the scale up. What we do in rack is the bigger driver of what we do and where we focus. And so you're going to see more in scale-out, and we do think that you're going to continue to have a hybrid solution between copper and optical over time. As I said on the call, we do view the TAM where we play and the product technology we have are going to grow as this occurs both near term and long term.

And that means what happens in data as well as some power connectivity, and I know we get into that with some of you. You are right, and I mentioned it there, we did make a technology acquisition around what leading-edge optical technology that will be used to strengthen our passive optical connectivity road map. What we acquired is complementary to what we do in our portfolio and it enables advancements in high-density fiber array connections, and this really would connect an optical fiber to a CPO. And it really helps round out our road map.

And the key we have to do is make sure we productionize and scale these technologies to really make sure we support our road map as well as our customers' road map. And we really think with this technology, it's going to fit right in very nicely. And this is something we do all the time organically, via partnerships. Sometimes we make technology investments like this. So we really feel like the trends are only up to the right, like we've always told you with what we have. And clearly, I think this is all good news for us. What happens on that trade-off that our customers will make that will continue to drive TAM improvement.

So hopefully, that gives you some Flavor Luke.

Sujal Shah: Thank you Luke. May we have the next question.

Operator: Next question comes from the line of Amit Daryanani from Evercore.

Amit Daryanani: Thanks, good morning, everyone. Maybe I'll step away from the Banister a bit. You hope to see really less growth in energy and even the commercial transport segment. So I'm hoping, Terrence, if you could just talk a little bit about on energy, even ex Richard's organic growth is double digits, what are sort of the big segments you're involved in, and how durable do you think this growth can be longer term? And maybe you can have a comparable discussion on the commercial transport side because I think both those segments are growing much faster than most folks would expect.

Terrence Curtin: Thanks, Amit. And I appreciate you calling out some of the other markets. So first off, on energy, the investments we've made and where we're positioned, it is very important. It is focused around the majority of it is in the U.S. energy market. So anything we're talking about benefiting from is things all of you are experiencing every day. Increased utility investment related to capacity as well as hardening due to the low demand that you're going to get, and probably about 60% or 2/3 of what we do is around utility and grid hardening. So It is around that infrastructure side of it. .

And let's face it, where we plan undergrounding with our technology and the intelligence we bring, that market is growing high single digits, and we're growing faster than that due to the efforts of our team. Another important area that we do, what we call industrial is about 20% of the business, but this is where we're actually doing where energy is getting hooked up, could be a data center, could be into an industrial complex, from to be a semiconductor fab by you're bringing power in. And that's another area with what we're seeing around the CapEx that many of you write about is very key.

We're seeing very strong growth there as well, and we're growing double digits there as well this year. And then the third area, the balance of it is really where we positioned ourselves around clean energy and renewables. Up until a couple of years ago, that's what we talked to you a lot about. And we're still growing high single digit and there Certainly, there's been some policy elements that have slowed down some of that market. But with all the levers we have, we get really excited about the growth we have there to grow above market. And it's an area that we continue to get excited about how do we continue to deepen our position there.

Jumping over to commercial transportation. I do want to sort of say, this business is 1 that unlike what I just talked about, it is truly a global business. We're pretty even between North America, Europe and Asia. And what we've seen this quarter, last year, we were seeing strength that was coming out of Asia. It was coming out of Europe where you saw whether it was truck and bus, ag, construct and improving outside the United States, we're starting to see stabilization here, and we're seeing our orders pick up as people are reacting to the stabilization as well as looking forward to 2027 and the sales growth says it by itself.

You see the growth that was very strong in the quarter. The market probably grew globally in the quarter, 4%. So that outperformance was very strong with us growing well into the double digits. And it really comes into our position on next-gen vehicles as well as the trends we talked to you about in automotive all the time. We talked to you about data in the vehicle. We talk to you about powertrain and emissions that electronification piece, and we're seeing that. And in places like Asia where electrification of the powertrain is getting deeper and deeper into the various types of vehicles, we get a content uplift.

And in some cases, that content uplift and I know Aaron talked about this back at Investor Day, we could have on some vehicles up to $2,000 when you get to next-generation powertrains versus $400 today. So we see that strength. It's good to see the market stabilizing. And certainly, we saw it in the orders that were up very strong, as I mentioned. And we just think there are going to be things that are getting back to that broadening of growth that I talked about in the script.

Sujal Shah: All right. Thank you Amit. can we have next question please.

Operator: Next question comes from the line of Wamsi Mohan from Bank of America. .

Wamsi Mohan: The content growth in the 4% to 6% range for the year, that indicates a meaningful acceleration from this past quarter. Maybe you can share some color on what you're seeing that's going to drive that acceleration? And if you could just clarify for us the quarter-on-quarter order trend in DDN, I think you noted 60% year-over-year increase in orders. Wondering if you can characterize the sequential change in orders there, too.

Terrence Curtin: Sure. So let me get into Auto a little bit. So first off, on Auto, I do want to start with production, because it's not lost, there's headlines out there. And when we think about production, production how we saw it as we start the year hasn't changed. We expect there to be 88 million to 89 million units and when we started the year, we thought every market was going to be down slightly. Europe is up a little bit. Asia and China is exactly where we thought. North America is a little worse.

So when you look at it, the production environment is playing out as we want, certainly, some of the regional pieces are a little bit different, mainly in North America, being a little worse, Europe being a little stronger. . And when you look quarter-to-date, I mean, year-to-date, and we asked you not to look at quarters, we're running at the 4-point outperformance above production. And really, when you look at that, we were very strong in China right off the bat, continue to show that strong presence that we have. You're a nice growth over market, where it isn't where we were with in North America due to some of the cancellations you saw.

But overall, we're still in the range. And our results and orders continue to say we're going to be at the range. So as we look forward, those production assumptions and orders continue to be very strong, and it's around the drivers we talked about. In Asia, electric vehicle adoption continues, that's not changing as well as strong in the data connectivity side. And as you go into North America, we have some EV pressures that we've been dealing with.

But net-net, we feel good about where we are in the 4% to 6% at the lower end, and we expect to be there for the year and do expect first half versus second half, while production is going to be fairly flattish, if you compare halves that our automotive business will be up. On DDN, I don't have all the quarters in front me. But $2 billion is the first half orders that I mentioned. I also want to say we will have bumpiness. These are programs. It goes back to where we talked about. We're very excited that they're across a broad customer base.

We're growing across all the customers that are key and -- but we will have some lumpiness. And Wamsi, we can follow up later to your question. I just don't have it here in front of me.

Sujal Shah: All right. Thank you, Wamsi. Can we have the next question, please?

Operator: Next question comes from Christopher Glynn from Oppenheimer.

Christopher Glynn: Been around the portfolio pretty thoroughly. So just wanted to talk about capital and portfolio did a little bolt-on. Hasn't been much on divestiture for quite a while. I'm not sure how you view sensors, but just that and the weighting of acquisition pipeline versus buyback acceleration potential?

Terrence Curtin: Sure. Let me talk a little bit and then I'll also ask Heath to jump in. So first of all, similar, I think when you think about what we teed up in November at the Investor Day, nothing changed. We really like the portfolio I think what you're going to continue to see is the bolt-ons that we talked about, like I mentioned with Richards in the energy space, certainly, we did something in the DDN space around the technology acquisition, but it's more about playing offense than defense and pruning right now to really make sure we capitalize on the growth trends were we position ourselves. Heath, do you want to put on a little bit...

Heath Mitts: Chris, I'd say the pipeline is actually for M&A, it's actually -- it's pretty active right now. I mean there's a lot of things that we see either real time or that we anticipate coming to market here in the next 3 quarters. Some of those we're taking a very hard look at in terms of how they fit with us and where we can create value for our owners. There's other things that might be interesting, but there might be other people who are better owners for. So there's a level of interest there from our side outside of some of just the technology investment that Terrence mentioned.

And I guess I'd just say stay tuned because that strategy is never linear. We have to see when things come to market and when they make sense for us. But yes, it's a reasonable pipeline right now.

Operator: Your next to comes from Joseph Spak of UBS.

Joseph Spak: Just wanted to touch on -- just want to touch on margins for a second. I mean you mentioned some of the inflationary costs. And just given the velocity with how fast things moved, I wonder if that weighed it all in the quarter. But more importantly, for the next quarter outlook, you mentioned how in the past, you always do a good job internally and passing stuff on. But is that so I think that protects EBIT, but should we expect a little bit of margin pressure just on the math next quarter? And could you quantify that at all?

Heath Mitts: Joe, I mean, we've been dealing with different types of inflationary pressures, whether those are tariff related or certainly the metals that we've seen some pretty significant inflation on here for a while. Within the quarter that we just reported here in the second quarter, certainly, we've seen the oil-based derivatives increase. For us, that means resins, and we do buy a lot of resin. So we've seen those go up. We've seen freight and logistics costs go up as we move things around to our customers. So we do have a playbook. The team is pretty well conditioned right now that we don't get caught flat-footed when we see these things happening.

We're able to largely pass that through in terms of price or maybe some other things we can do with our customers logistically in terms of where they take receipt of things. But there is a little bit of noise in our absolute margins for sure on that. Now as we talked about at the Investor Day, we're still committed to our -- to getting at least 30% flow-through on the operating income side year-over-year. We were able to do that in both segments. And obviously, for the company, I think if you kind of think about what our guide implies, you'll still see that level of consistency as we work forward.

So when you're getting 30% flow-through, it does have -- and you're sitting at 22% margins, it does have that ability to move margins up. But I'd say both segments are operating well in this environment. But in terms of the headwind towards margins, there's a little bit of noise in there. And some of that's just the timing of when we feel those costs come in versus when the price is realized. But again, in absolute terms, I think that we're managing through it.

Operator: Question comes from the line of Joe Giordano of TD Cowen.

Joseph Giordano: Just curious, like I guess this is somewhat data center, but it could be more broad, and I think you just touched on it a little bit. But when you see orders up as much as we're seeing and price cost still kind of lagging, like how do we think about like the price inherent in the orders versus the price that's coming through in P&L? Like is there a real lag there? Like are you kind of covered already in the kind of in the backlog? And Heath, just if there's any update on CapEx expectations for the year in light of the orders?

Heath Mitts: Yes. Joe, let me hit -- I mean, I'm not -- we haven't seen -- from an order perspective, we haven't seen people in any real activity or motivation to get ahead or pull things in. So -- and we're pretty tied in with both where we sell direct as well as with our distributor base on that front. So we haven't really seen any noise there in terms of people trying to get in ahead of a price increase.

The orders that we're seeing are really project-based and things that we've had in the pipeline that are coming and then where we see it come in from -- it's a little bit more hand to mouth from distribution, it's pretty consistent. So that has not been highlighted to us from our businesses as a major concern in terms of matching up when they're seeing the inflation versus when the price is going in. But there is always a little bit of natural timing there. On CapEx, we have taken our CapEx up this year. We talked a little bit about it in prior calls. You should expect CapEx this year to be to run about 6% of revenue.

That increase that we've had over the past couple of years is almost entirely due to ramping the AI programs within our DDN business. And those are tied to very specific programs. When we make capital investments, we have been awarded programs at that pace -- at those spots. And so we have some protection on that. We're not just out speculating where we need to make those big CapEx investments. So in some ways, that's a good indicator if I'm sitting in your shoes of what's to come in that space.

Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Guy Hardwick of Barclays.

Guy Drummond Hardwick: I think you said the AI business will be running at $2.4 billion this year. I assume that includes the cloud business, which I think was running like a $500 million last year. But my question is actually on the 30%, which is AI or cloud related. enterprise telecom, which potentially could be squeezed for or competing for dollars from -- for AI because of AI investments. So maybe you could talk about the trends in enterprise telecom and other IT.

Terrence Curtin: No. Actually, thanks, Scott, for the question. And what we've seen, and we talked a little bit last time, what we're seeing is we're actually not to the level of growth that we see in the AI side, but that spending is constructive. On the enterprise, telecom and wireless space as a collective, we are seeing nice growth there. It's not at the rates like I talked about 60%. But I would say how people are prioritizing that between those spends, I'm not sure I'm the best person to say for the broader market. But in our order trends, we are seeing nice growth, and it is growth in those other product categories or end market segments.

Operator: Next question comes from the line of Asiya Merchant of Citigroup.

Asiya Merchant: My question is around just tightness in components, whether it's memory or CPUs and even GPU and allocation. Maybe you could help us understand if hyperscalers, were they providing much better visibility as a result of the hyperscalers as well as your chip companies that you deal with, if they were just providing better visibility due to the supply chain issues? And if you're forecasting any more complexity as these programs ramp in the back half?

Terrence Curtin: Sure. No, thanks for the question. So first off, when you look at the product categories you're talking about memory, GPUs, CPUs, we don't buy that. So from our procurement, we don't buy that. Certainly, it's well known that memory is tight. And when I think about our business, which is important, what we're seeing for our customers, they are -- and you've heard me talk about in the orders, they are going out their orders a little bit to make sure capacity is reserved and on the ramps that they have coming. So that's built more backlog for us, as we've highlighted in the orders in DDM.

But net-net, we're not seeing availability issues on what we procure to make our products. Certainly, our customers continue to ask us to ramp and ramp quicker. So we're not seeing any slowdowns from our builds into our customer, our hyperscaler customers at all. If anything, as we've talked about with the $150 million, some of that is they're increasing their ramps. So clearly, memory is tight. You can go to the memory and see that. But net-net, we're not seeing any impact in any of our businesses yet.

And some of our customers are trying to do planning and they build buffer stock to make sure their supply is secure on those components, but we're not the closest to it.

Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Steven Fox of Fox Advisors.

Steven Fox: I just had one on the energy market. So the organic growth has slowed, still double digits. But I was curious, Terrence, you've talked about how energy can sort of be hand-in-hand with the growth you see in some of the data center markets. Are you seeing conversations with customers that there's a lag effect that maybe we see an acceleration in growth? Or is 10% type of the number we should think about? Can you just give us a sense for how energy looks maybe going out the next few quarters?

Terrence Curtin: Yes. No, Steve, I think what's important is please keep the framing of what I talked about, about, hey, 60-plus percent of this energy business is utility grid hardening, what is data center or industrial and then what is renewable. And I do think that the growth rate came down a little bit is due to the clean energy side where you have had some pauses. -- on what's happening in utility, grid hardening and the industrial/data center space, it's full steam ahead.

Now there is elements that you come into regulatory elements of when things get built and staged, but feel very good about where we are and feel like we'll be staying around this double digit for a while now with this build that we're seeing with probably the biggest lumpiness being in the clean energy space.

Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Samik Chatterjee of JPMorgan.

Samik Chatterjee: Terrence, if I can ask you to go back to the discussion around your capabilities that you're adding related to optical and on copper in terms of scale up. At the Investor Day, you had given us this AI rack representation and copper content or your content could be as much as $870 per chip. When you're engaging with your customers now and as you think about optical and scale up, is that going to be additive to the content opportunity that you outlined at the Investor Day? Or is it going to be part of that overall content that you presented at the Investor Day?

And maybe sort of how are you thinking about in 5 years' time, how does the mix between copper and optical look in that content opportunity in a scale-up domain?

Terrence Curtin: Thank you, Sameer. So first off, when you think about the technology acquisition we did and even what I said, this will help us in the scale-out element where we're not as strong because this is really where you get to where the fiber attached to the CPO for the scale-out. So that would be increased content versus what happens in the rack. And over time, this is going to migrate and what that migration rate is, is going to be very iterative with our customers as they make design constraints between the power chain and the data chain. And we even see that as inferencing is coming in how the architecture continues to move.

So when you sit there versus what we talked about, it's an increase of content that we have, and it's just the positioning that we're always going to be looking at to do in all of our businesses, not just EDN to say, how do we get deeper with our customers in their architecture. And this is a nice fill of a building block that we feel with what we can do with it and integrate it with what we do already. we'll be able to hit the inflection point that they're working on.

Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Colin Langan of Wells Fargo.

Colin Langan: A follow-up actually on the co-packaged optics. I mean if you don't sort of build out the fiber optics capability from where you are today, any way to frame the downside or the content loss if a customer switches from copper to a fiber optic solution?

Terrence Curtin: So Colin, the one thing I'm going to say, I'm going to go back to what I said in the script. It's very clear with the work we do with our customers, it's not going to be an or, it's going to be an end between copper and fiber. And that word, while it's a simple word, copper and fiber sounds like more important words, the end is the most important.

And even when we think about the copper TAM, even as optics gets introduced into scale out and how it could be a mix in the rack, our TAM and copper is going to continue to grow due to the power elements that you need, power connectivity goes up, where they will continue to keep copper within the rack as the workhorse. So those types of things, we still see TAM growth in copper. And then we're also going to benefit from the inflection points when it does occur of optical, we're really nicely positioned for it.

Operator: Next question comes from the line of William Stein of Truist Securities.

William Stein: In the industrial end market, I have sort of 2 related questions. The D&N piece, there's very clear growth in bookings, and I congratulate you on that. It's clear that you've got growth coming. But it was a bit surprising to have 2 sequential quarters of flattish revenue performance. I wonder if you can explain why the revenue hasn't been growing for the last couple of quarters meaningfully in that part of Industrial. And related -- perhaps related to that, this quarter, we saw segment revenue in Industrial grow, but op margin decline.

And I wonder if it's related to orders maybe ramping later in the year instead of now or maybe it's the recent acquisition you did in energy -- any help there would be much appreciated.

Terrence Curtin: First off, Will, on your first part of your question, the important thing is we're going to grow this year in DDN and AI by about $1 billion. Looking at things on quarters, and I know I say it in automotive a lot, and you're all probably rolling your eyes right now with me. You look at a quarter, there's different programs that ramp supply chain impacts. And I think the more important point is we've increased our revenue by another $150 million. We're going to be stepping up here in the second half.

And even the number we shared at Investor Day of the $3 billion, it continues to shift towards the left due to the momentum that we have. Heath, do you want to cover the margin side?

Heath Mitts: Yes. The year-over-year margins are up significantly. So I assume you're talking about the sequential margins. Listen, it's a similar answer to what Terrence just said. You're going to have -- always have a little bit of noise in any quarter. Sometimes that works in your favor, sometimes it sequentially evens out. We tend to look at margins on a year-to-date or rolling basis. I'd say if I think about anything that's specific to that, I mean, we have ramped no different than I talked about CapEx earlier with Joe's question. We have ramped some investments in our DDN business to support these programs.

So there's different times over a 90-day period that you might feel some of that pinch point a little bit more. But when I think about the full year or even where we are year-to-date, I feel good about both the margin performance as well as the flow-through on that organic revenue growth. So there's nothing that I'm I'll say, dwelling on relative to some kind of sequential move there.

Operator: Next question comes from the line of Shreyas Patil of Wolfe Research.

Shreyas Patil: Maybe just coming back to the discussion on CPO and optical. I'm just curious how big your optical business for AI applications is today and where you feel the need to further bolster via M&A, maybe on the transceiver side or DCI modules or things like that?

Terrence Curtin: Sure, A. I think that what's important is and in the pre remarks, we're going to stay in passives. So when you look at transceivers and things like that, I don't think that's where we add value in the supply chain. And really, when you look at what we're doing here, what TE does is how do you get the signal chain that's moving off the CPO would be the fiber attach, how do you get out to an optical backplane and really the technology we did helps our base around the fiber attach. Also, we are stronger within the rack.

So that's more -- that's going to be further out, but we do think this will get us into some scale-out options versus just scale up, which is more limited. But we will continue to look at via partnerships versus our organic development as well as what we just did to say how do we build it out. We really like how we're positioned with this building block we got in. to really make sure we can help our customers as they evolve their architecture. So thanks for the question.

Sujal Shah: All right. I want to thank everyone for joining us this morning. And if you have further questions, please contact Investor Relations at TE. Thank you, and have a nice day.

Operator: Today's conference call will be available for replay beginning at 11:30 a.m. Eastern Time today on the Investor Relations portion of the TE Connectivity's website. That will conclude the conference today. Thank you, and goodbye.