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DATE

Wednesday, April 29, 2026 at 8:30 a.m. ET

CALL PARTICIPANTS

  • Chief Executive Officer — Gregory Smith
  • Chief Financial Officer — Michelle Turner

TAKEAWAYS

  • Total Revenue -- $1.282 billion, up 87% year over year and 18% sequentially, setting a new company record.
  • Non-GAAP EPS -- $2.56, up 241% year over year and 42% sequentially, driven by broad AI demand across business segments.
  • Semi Test Segment Revenue -- $1.1 billion, surpassing $1 billion for the first time, up 26% sequentially and over 100% year over year, with SoC at $882 million, memory at $203 million, and IST at $27 million.
  • AI-related Revenue Exposure -- Nearly 70% of total revenue, versus about 60% the previous quarter, indicating intensifying AI adoption.
  • Gross Margin -- 60.9%, up 370 basis points sequentially, attributed to semi test volume, favorable product mix, and nonrecurring operational benefits.
  • Non-GAAP Operating Income -- $480 million and operating margin of 37.5%, both new records for the company.
  • Robotics Segment Revenue -- $91 million, up 32% year over year, achieving four consecutive quarters of sequential growth despite seasonality.
  • Product Test Revenue -- $80 million, up 8% year over year, led by defense, aerospace, and board test demand.
  • Memory Market Performance -- $203 million in memory revenue, flat sequentially and year over year, with strength in HBM and DRAM testing.
  • Major Customer Concentration -- Two specifying customers and one purchasing customer accounted for over 10% each of revenue during the quarter.
  • Cash and Investments -- Approximately $400 million at quarter-end, with working capital rising due to increased accounts receivable from revenue growth.
  • Capital Expenditures and Allocation -- Capex flat year over year, with expectations for increases in the next quarter tied to operations scaling and innovation.
  • Q2 Guidance -- Projected revenue between $1.15 billion and $1.25 billion; non-GAAP EPS guidance of $1.86 to $2.15; gross margin expected in the 58%-59% range; operating margins between 30%-32%.
  • Full-Year Target Model -- "We remain confident in the full year trajectory and our target model of $6 billion in revenue and $9.50 to $11 in non-GAAP EPS."
  • Key Product Launches -- Photon 100 for silicon photonics/co-packaged optics and Omnyx for server/tray board testing were introduced in the quarter.
  • Inorganic Activity -- Closed MultiLane Test Products joint venture (April 8) and acquisition of TestInsight (April 16), together using roughly $165 million in cash and funded by a credit revolver.
  • Merchant GPU Orders -- Received first multi-system production test orders in the merchant GPU category, with shipments and production scheduled for the current quarter.
  • AI Data Center Demand -- Data center devices made up 46% of auto and industrial revenue segment.

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RISKS

  • "This concentration also increases the risk that bottlenecks in other areas could shift demand for our products, which can lead to short-term demand peaks and valleys superimposed over long-term strong growth trend."
  • Guidance for the second half reflects "potential order lumpiness that could impact revenue timing across quarters or years," and limited visibility into second-half demand.
  • Management stated that "mobile appears a bit weaker, with memory pricing and availability affecting end market demand, especially outside the iOS ecosystem."

SUMMARY

Teradyne (TER 19.53%) reported all-time record revenue and non-GAAP profits, driven predominantly by intensifying demand for AI-related test solutions across all primary segments. Semiconductor Test revenues surged past $1.1 billion, now driven by compute and memory orders with mobile remaining flat, and AI applications comprising the majority of activity. Robotics achieved sequential quarterly revenue gains for the fourth straight quarter, revealing sustained momentum despite typical seasonal declines. The company debuted two major test platforms and expanded its product footprint through targeted acquisitions, reinforcing its midterm growth strategy. Management guided for a strong second quarter but noted possible volatility from concentrated customer exposure and limited order visibility beyond the near term.

  • Full-year targets remain unchanged after record first-half performance, but management flagged uncertainty in demand beyond Q2 due to "lumpiness" and short order cycles.
  • At roughly 75%, compute is the largest portion of our SoC product revenue. This continues the evolution of our test portfolio from being mobile-centric shifting to AI dominant.
  • Management does not expect a pronounced gross margin tailwind from auto or industrial recovery, as those business lines have converged on margins similar to other products.
  • Long-term market expansion opportunities in silicon photonics are projected at "$300 million to $700 million per year over the midterm," with current-year market size estimated near $100 million.
  • Teradyne's multisource manufacturing approach maintained 12-16 week lead times despite rapid volume growth, supporting customer flexibility amid supply chain challenges.
  • For merchant GPU, initial wins are expected to ramp gradually, with management guiding that low double-digit share is sufficient to attain the $6 billion target model.
  • Strategically, leadership emphasized a steady increase in R&D and technical OpEx investment proportional to revenue growth, as product innovation and complexity in AI and data center markets accelerate.

INDUSTRY GLOSSARY

  • UltraFLEXplus: Teradyne's advanced test platform for SoC and silicon photonics applications.
  • Photon 100: A new Teradyne system for testing silicon photonics and co-packaged optics at production scale.
  • Omnyx: Teradyne's new production board test platform for server boards and tray assemblies in data centers.
  • Magnum 7: Latest generation Teradyne memory tester for DRAM and HBM devices.
  • IST: System Test business unit focused on hard disk drive (HDD) and storage device testing.
  • SoC: System-on-Chip, advanced integrated circuits combining multiple functions onto one chip, tested by semiconductor test equipment providers.
  • HBM: High Bandwidth Memory, a type of memory used in AI and high-performance computing applications.
  • ATE TAM: Automatic Test Equipment Total Addressable Market, referring to total market opportunity for companies selling semiconductor test systems.
  • CPO: Co-packaged Optics, an emerging networking technology integrating optics and electronics for high bandwidth data centers.
  • ficonTEC: Global provider of active alignment equipment for silicon photonics assembly and testing; a Teradyne partner in CPO solutions.
  • SLT: System-Level Test, a process to test fully assembled semiconductor devices or modules.
  • ADAs: Advanced Driver Assistance Systems, automotive applications increasingly reliant on AI-enabled semiconductors.

Full Conference Call Transcript

Looking ahead between now and our next earnings call, Teradyne expects to participate in technology-focused investor conferences hosted by Bernstein, TD Cowen, Stifel and Bank of America. Our quiet period will begin at the close of business on June 12, 2026. Following Greg and Michelle's comments this morning, we'll open up the call for questions. This call is scheduled for 1 hour. Greg?

Gregory Smith: Good morning, with revenue of approximately $1.3 billion and non-GAAP EPS of $2.56, Teradyne delivered record results in the first quarter of 2026. Our previous high watermark was in the consumer-driven mobile peak of Q2 of 2021. In Q1 of 2026, our revenue was $200 million or 18% higher than that previous record. This new record comes from durable AI demand drivers and the continuing acceleration of our wafer to AI data center strategy. This strategy is delivering demand across Teradyne's portfolio. In Q1, AI-related demand accounted for nearly 70% of our revenue, up from about 60% in Q4 of 2025. Our strategy continues to be anchored across 3 broad trends: verticalization, electrification and AI.

Verticalization is the concentration of our business into extremely large vertically-integrated technology companies. The verticalization trend was cleared by 2024 and continues to accelerate. This includes companies like hyperscalers, but also huge AI ecosystem enablers like foundries, merchant compute, memory and networking companies. Many of these companies are customers of all 3 of our businesses: Semiconductor Test, Product Test and Robotics. And this product portfolio enables us to serve their needs from wafer to data center. While these massive customers are driving strong growth, it also means that the business is increasingly concentrated to these customers into a smaller number of very large ASIC and commercial device programs.

This concentration also increases the risk that bottlenecks in other areas could shift demand for our products, which can lead to short-term demand peaks and valleys superimposed over long-term strong growth trend. In other words, it's lumpy growth. The electrification trend continues. In the auto industrial segment, 46% of our revenue came from data center devices in the first quarter, which historically has been dominated by automotive and industrial devices. It goes without saying, AI is the dominant force shaping our business. We think about the opportunity presented by AI as 3 superimposed waves, each building on the one before it.

We are in the heart of the first wave, which focused on the build-out of general-purpose AI data center capacity. This was behind the massive increase in data center spend in 2025. In 2026, we are entering the second wave. While there is still huge investment in general-purpose AI data centers, these data centers are being augmented with compute silicon optimized for inference at scale. This wave will grow to a high run rate over the next few years. Still yet to come is the Edge AI physical AI wave. As the technologies for silicon packaging, memory and AI models improve, compelling use cases for AI at the edge will be emerging.

Obvious examples of this are self-driving cars, robotics, PCs, wearables and smartphones. These waves are broad-based, and we expect them to stack on top of each other, driving significant ATE TAM growth over the full midterm. Because of Teradyne's wafer to data center strategy and our historic strength in mobile, automotive and industrial, we are well positioned to ride each of these waves as they arrive. Back in our January call, we shared that we expected robust double-digit year-over-year growth. We still expect that the compute TAM and revenue will grow significantly from an already strong 2025 base. We're seeing healthy engagement with both networking and VIP compute customers, and our pipeline of new design wins remains robust.

Aligned with this momentum, I am pleased to share that we have received our first multi-system production test orders for merchant GPU in Q1. We expect these systems to ship, be installed and be in production in Q2. Customer engagement remains strong, and we are well positioned to capture further share as we bring up more devices on our platform. In automotive and industrial, we're seeing moderate but steady recovery in both TAM and revenue. There are signs of strength in automotive, primarily ADAS, and we're seeing increased demand for power going into AI data centers. As of now, mobile appears a bit weaker, with memory pricing and availability affecting end market demand, especially outside the iOS ecosystem.

Memory test demand appears to be even stronger than our view in January, with AI compute demand for both HBM and DRAM continuing to act as an accelerator. We're also beginning to see increasing flash test demand driven by SSD. The overall memory market is on track for solid TAM growth for the year, and we expect to gain low single-digit share. In 2025, our IST group expanded its HDD customer base and entered the SLT compute market. Now in 2026, IST is on track to deliver against this expanded opportunity. We're seeing strength in HDD, driven by greater than 20% annual exabyte growth fueled by AI.

This translates into longer test times per drive and a larger HDD TAM and revenue for Teradyne. In Robotics, we delivered our fourth consecutive quarter of sequential growth. This is particularly notable because Q4 is typically our strongest quarter and Q1 is typically down. We're seeing strong customer engagement across e-commerce, electronics manufacturing and semiconductor end markets. Robotics is a key part of our wafer to AI data center strategy, with robotic-assisted assembly test and data center operations. Our robots are being used in environmental sensing and data centers, and we recently demonstrated a complex physical AI work cell in partnership with Generalist as part of the recent NVIDIA GTC.

In prior calls, we have often talked about the investments that we are making to capture growth opportunities coming from our wafer to data center strategy. In Q1, these investments have resulted in 2 significant new product introductions. The first is Photon 100, which is our platform for silicon photonics and co-packaged optics testing. The Photon 100 is based on our proven UltraFLEXplus tester and is bringing SiPho testing from lab to fab. I'll remind you that silicon photonics and co-packaged optics are in the very early stages of a ramp that will likely be substantial.

There is uncertainty about the timing and the slope of this ramp, but as optical interconnections are increasingly used for scale out and then scale up networking, it is going to be a big chunk of the total networking TAM. As this market grows, we also expect to bring significantly more efficient test solutions online, so it would be a mistake to linearly extrapolate from today's test strategies and economics. That being said, we expect that this is a meaningful TAM expansion opportunity, which could reach $300 million to $700 million per year over the midterm.

The second product introduction is Omnyx, which is a new production board test platform designed to address the unique set of test challenges for server boards and tray assemblies. This platform uses power, thermal, optical and TDR test capabilities from across all of Teradyne to enable earlier detection of defects that are plaguing the build-out of AI data centers. In addition, we continue to pursue inorganic opportunities to grow our business. Our MultiLane Test Products joint venture closed on April 8, and we believe this partnership will accelerate the development of high-speed I/O and data center interconnect test solutions, a critical test need as AI data centers transition from cable-based connections to back plane and mid-plan architectures.

Additionally, we closed the acquisition of TestInsight 2 weeks ago. TestInsight is the leading provider of test development tools that are used with our testers and competing platforms. This acquisition strengthens Teradyne's design to test software capabilities, enabling us to build a virtual test environment, which will reduce time to market for complex AI and networking devices. In summary, Q1 2026 was a record quarter for Teradyne. We're executing our strategy, capitalizing on secular growth drivers and delivering value for our customers and shareholders. Our team, especially our operations team and manufacturing partners, went above and beyond to hit this ramp, and I'm grateful for their hard work and skill.

We came into the second quarter with a lot of momentum and confidence that 2026 will be a strong growth year, and we are well on our way to achieving our target earnings model. With that, I'll turn the call over to Michelle.

Michelle Turner: Thank you, Greg, and good morning, everyone. Today, I will cover our first quarter financial results and our second quarter 2026 outlook. Starting first with Q1. First quarter sales were $1.282 billion with non-GAAP EPS of $2.56, both above the high end of our guidance range. Total company sales were up 87% from first quarter last year and up 18% sequentially from last quarter. Non-GAAP earnings per share was up 241% from first quarter last year and up 42% sequentially from last quarter. This represents a record financial performance for the company, driven by all things AI across all 3 of our business groups.

In the quarter, we continue to have 2 specifying customers and 1 purchasing customer greater than 10% of our revenue. Building on that, let's look a little deeper at revenue starting with Semi Test. Revenue was $1.1 billion, breaking the $1 billion threshold for the first time, up 26% sequentially from last quarter and over 100% year-over-year versus Q1 2025. The revenue breakdown within Semi Test was SoC at $882 million, memory at $203 million, and IST at $27 million. The key drivers were continued AI strength in compute segments and memory. At roughly 75%, compute is the largest portion of our SoC product revenue. This continues the evolution of our test portfolio from being mobile-centric shifting to AI dominant.

Within auto and industrial, revenue nearly doubled sequentially from a low base last quarter, driven by power management demand increases for AI data center build-outs. Mobile revenue was roughly flat with fourth quarter 2025 and remains a muted impact to our overall results with the increasing importance of compute in our SoC portfolio. Aligned with our strong top line performance, operationally, we have more than doubled our UltraFLEXplus shipments over the last 9 months while sustaining our 12- to 16-week lead times. Our multisource strategy, primarily leveraging contract manufacturers, provides ultimate flexibility for our customers while ensuring capacity continuity in today's dynamic environment. Moving on to memory.

Our memory business delivered another strong quarter of $203 million in revenue, relatively flat to our record last quarter, driven by robust HBM and DRAM test solution demand. We also successfully ramped the newest generation of our memory tester, Magnum 7. IST revenue of $27 million was relatively flat year-over-year, though we are seeing early indicators for potential growth, driven primarily by HDD in the second half and continuing into 2027. Product Test Group revenue was $80 million, up 8% year-over-year. Growth was led by sustained defense and aerospace demand and production board test. Robotics revenue was $91 million, up 32% year-over-year, representing our fourth sequential quarter of growth.

Our one sales team approach is delivering results with revenue strength across end market verticals and e-commerce, electronics manufacturing and semiconductors, including in AI data centers. Shipments associated with our large e-commerce customer increased sequentially and AI revenue increased to 15% of the quarter's sales. Now moving down the P&L. A confluence of positive factors delivered record earnings results, including peak AI-driven volume, favorable product mix and nonrecurring onetime benefits. Gross margin for the quarter was 60.9%, up 370 basis points sequentially, driven by strong semi test volume and product mix and nonrecurring operational impacts. OpEx declined sequentially from last quarter and was favorable to guidance, due primarily to the timing of nonrecurring engineering.

Non-GAAP operating income was $480 million, with an operating margin of 37.5%, both all-time financial records. Now moving on to capital allocation. Our capital allocation strategy remains consistent, and that is to maintain cash reserves to enable us to run the business and have dry powder for M&A. We ended the quarter with cash and investments of roughly $400 million. Working capital, predominantly in accounts receivable, increased in support of the revenue growth delivered in the quarter. Capital expenditures were flat year-over-year with the expectation that Q2 will increase, driven by continued investments in innovation and operations scaling. We paid $20 million in dividends in the quarter, and our share buybacks were de minimis.

As Greg mentioned, we closed on 2 important inorganic asset opportunities this month. On April 8, we closed on our previously announced MultiLane Test Product joint venture. The results of this business will be consolidated into the Product Test group, and our EPS will reflect our share of the results of this business. On April 16, we closed on the acquisition of TestInsight business, furthering our wafer to AI data center product penetration. Combined, these 2 deals used roughly $165 million of cash in the second quarter, which we funded via our credit revolver. Looking ahead to our second quarter guidance.

For the quarter, we expect revenue in the range of $1.15 billion to $1.25 billion and non-GAAP EPS of $1.86 to $2.15. Gross margins are expected to be in the range of 58% to 59%, normalized for peak volumes and onetime benefits. Operating expenses are expected to run at approximately 27% to 28% of second quarter sales. The non-GAAP operating profit rate is expected to be between 30% and 32%. Based on current customer order visibility, we continue to expect first half weighted revenue with approximately 55% to 60% of annual revenue expected in the first half.

This expanded range from 3 months ago recognizes the continued strong demand signals we are hearing from our customers, while also balancing potential order lumpiness that could impact revenue timing across quarters or years. For the year, we have line of sight to about $50 million in revenue for merchant GPU, but our visibility into the second half is quite limited with increasing contributions over the midterm period. So in closing, our teams delivered exceptional financial results, reflecting strong execution and robust demand across our portfolio aligned with our wafer to data center strategy. We remain confident in the full year trajectory and our target model of $6 billion in revenue and $9.50 to $11 in non-GAAP EPS.

I want to thank all of our Teradyne team members for their performance and operational discipline in delivering for our customers and shareholders. With that, we'll open the call for questions. Operator?

Operator: [Operator Instructions] And we'll take our first question from Timothy Arcuri with UBS.

Timothy Arcuri: Greg, I guess, my question is just on the back half of the year. So it's a bit of a disconnect. It sounds like the demand signals has anything gotten better over the past 3 months, but you're not raising guidance for the back half of the year. Is this -- this kind of came up on the -- on your competitor's call as well. So is this, to some degree, like factoring in some constraints that may be your downstream of your business? And I know you did talk about this, VIP stuff can be very lumpy. So maybe that's part of it. So if you can talk about that.

Michelle Turner: Tim, it's Michelle. I'll start, and then Greg can add some specifics from a customer perspective. So let me start with where we're at today. Q1 was an exceptional quarter, a record quarter. You heard that throughout our script for the company. When you look at our Q2 guidance, it's equally strong. So revenue of $1.15 billion to $1.25 billion. This represents about 84% year-over-year growth at the midpoint after coming off of a really strong Q1 of 87% growth. So as a result of the strength in the first half, we have expanded our first half revenue range to 55% to 60%. So this is a change from January where we've given a point estimate of 60%.

So when I think about the ranges, just to kind of round this, the low end of the range really reflects the potential for timing impact. So this is either lumpiness in terms of large customer ordering patterns or it could also be hiccups in the AI data center build out the ecosystem, if you will in terms of when our testers actually get accepted. So these dynamics, as you know, can impact revenue within the quarter or across your boundaries. And so that is part of the dynamic that's playing out in the second half.

When I think about the high end of the range, this really reflects continued strength that we're seeing from a demand perspective across compute, networking and memory. And then the other element I would add to this is in terms of visibility. So we talked in our January call around improved visibility from a customer ordering perspective. That is consistent with where we're at today. So historically, this business has had about 13 weeks of visibility. Coming into this year, we improved that. We can now see into another quarter out, although not as strong as the current quarter. And so we still do have some undefined parts as we think about Q4.

Gregory Smith: Yes. So -- and Tim, let me give you a little bit more color in terms of sort of how the first half, second half polarization breaks down by sort of group or technology. The part of our business that we believe is most first half weighted is VIP compute. And that's -- like we have pretty good visibility into the timing of programs associated with that and the specific customers that we have. We think that's like -- it's really, really strong in the first half of the year, and the next wave of that for the next generation of that technology is early '27.

It might start bleeding in or pulling into the end of 2026, but we really don't know about that. When you go from then to like networking, networking has started off very, very strong. And we think it's going to stay at a reasonably strong level through the year, but our visibility isn't as strong into the second half. And we've historically seen that sort of filling in more as time goes on. Like as you look beyond 2 quarters, you start to see that sort of -- that tending to go up, not down. So there's potential upside in the networking space.

When you look at memory, that, I think, is actually going to end up being more back half weighted than front half weighted. So that's a counter thing. And the stronger that memory gets, the more we're going to be able to trend towards that 55% end of the range that we gave. And then if you look beyond the Semiconductor Test part of this -- well, actually in Semiconductor Test, just to sort of finish the story around auto and industrial. Right now, data center is hot, hot, hot in that segment, and we expect that to continue.

What we're seeing and hearing from those customers is that the rest of their portfolio, that there are -- like there's reduced inventories and potential demand increases, but we haven't seen that translate into increased demand for capital equipment in the auto and industrial part of that beyond data center. So moving beyond that, getting into IST, we definitely think that's stronger second half than first half. But I mean we're talking about coming off of a base of $27 million in Q1. So there's a lot of upside to go before it really moves the needle at the enterprise level. Product Test similarly will be back-half weighted. But again, it's like a smaller percentage of the total.

And typically, our second half is much stronger in Robotics than the first half, but we've started this year at a really good run rate. And so we -- like the signs are encouraging, but we've learned to be very careful about predicting what's going to happen beyond lead time in the Robotics space. So does that help a little bit?

Timothy Arcuri: It does, Greg. Yes. I guess I just then wanted to ask you about the TAM for the year. So you didn't give us a TAM. I know Advantest is saying like low 9s for SoC and sort of low to mid-2s for memory, so kind of a total of like [ 11 5 ]. You've usually been pretty close to their number, a bit lower in memory and a bit higher in SoC. So is that total [ 11 5 ] for the year, is that like a reasonable TAM number for the year?

Gregory Smith: So bearing in mind how far off both Teradyne and Advantest were about the 2025 TAM when it was April. So make that the big asterisk on this answer -- that like -- because a lot changed last year, and the TAM strengthened significantly from the April view through the full year view. Now for 2026, there's 3 -- like just at a logical level, there are 3 possible things. One is that people have overcorrected in terms of estimating what the TAM is, people have gotten the TAM exactly right or it could follow the same pattern that it followed in 2025.

I would say that, like we are not talking about a TAM publicly because we feel really uncertain about which of those time lines we're living in. I don't think the numbers that Advantest gave are absurd, but I don't feel confident enough in our forecast to share them.

Operator: We'll take our next question from C.J. Muse of Cantor Fitzgerald.

Christopher Muse: I guess first question, and again, congrats on your first merchant GPU win. Curious how to think about the follow-through there? What kind of -- are the steps to try to ascertain a greater percentage penetration there? As well as how you're thinking about custom ASICs from here beyond your one very large customer?

Gregory Smith: Yes. So first on GPU. What we've said previously, I think, is the way it is going to -- is tending to play out. That the first project is the hardest project because it involves qualifying the test platform and converting all of the underlying libraries that support the testing. So that part of this project is behind us, and we are into the phase where that initial qualifying part can go into production. The next phase is what you could call the fast follower phase. So we're going to begin working on projects that are earlier in their life cycle, and that we will be able to complete more quickly than the first qualification project.

So those are projects that probably have a time line where we would be releasing into production late in this year. And so whether that capacity ramp starts to hit at the end of '26 or into '27 is an open question. And the thing that I want to caution is like the long-term view, over the midterm, we expect that a dual source customer is going to be managing share in that 30% to 70% range.

It's going to take us a few years to get there because there are so many different part types, so many different SKUs that as an incumbent platform, there's a lot of flexibility about what -- like if you need capacity for a particular device, you know that you have the solution for it on the incumbent platform. So during the fast follower, we're really competing on the basis of differentiation of the platform and an ability to serve spot demand more quickly than our competition. So we're trying to be very responsive. We're trying to get as many SKUs converted over to our platform as possible.

But I would expect it's going to take -- like it's going to take us a few years to get from low single digits in 2026 to sort of entering that 30% to 70% range over the midterm.

Christopher Muse: Very helpful. And then maybe a question on gross margins. You're taking a downtick here. And historically, the business has not been fixed cost. It's been much more product cycle driven. So curious what is precisely driving that downtick in June and how should we be thinking about modeling the second half of the year?

Gregory Smith: Hang on, like -- my colleagues have reminded me that I neglected the second half of your question about custom ASICs. So we'll take your gross margin question right after. I just want to hit the custom ASICs. So right now, there are 2 hyperscaler programs -- 2 compute hyperscaler programs that are at scale. If you include like Edge automotive, there are 3 hyperscalers that are at commercial scale and driving tons of volume for us or our competitor. We are actively competing for parts that have not yet ramped and also for dual-source status against the hyperscalers that have already ramped.

And the timing for that would be more 2027 than 2026, but stay tuned for news of that as we go on. And I'll pass it over to Michelle for the gross margin commentary.

Michelle Turner: Well, I think technically now, CJ has 3 questions now as a result of this, but we'll go with this.

Gregory Smith: But that's my error.

Michelle Turner: Yes. So from a gross margin perspective, we did have a really strong Q1. So 60.9%, again, another record for the company. And there were several favorable factors coming into play simultaneously that drove this. One was related to the AI demand. So really strong semi test volume, which was 87% of our overall portfolio within Q1. Along with that, we also had favorable product mix and some benefit from some nonrecurring operational benefits. So as you think about the shift from -- or the step down from Q1 into Q2, at the midpoint, that's about 240 basis points. About half of that is driven by the onetime nonrecurring kind of operational benefits that we had.

And then you couple that with what we're seeing from a mix perspective within Q2, this is somewhat of a normalization. The one thing I will highlight, however, is when you look at first half, overall margins will be around 59.7%. This is at the low end of our target model range. And so I think it's important to kind of keep in context that you should expect to see our margins move around a bit. They are lumpy like our revenue. We typically will see up to 400 basis points within a year. However, when you look year-on-year, it's a much tighter range. It's within like 200 basis points.

So some of this is noise just within the first half. That's how I would think about it from a modeling perspective.

Operator: We'll take our next question from Mehdi Hosseini with SIG.

Mehdi Hosseini: I also have 2. The first one has to do with how you have been managing quarterly guide? And your performance has actually been exceeding on a consistent basis. And with that as a background, my question to you is, are you seeing a consistent trend where late in a quarter, you get the rush order, you get the programs in line, and the last month of the quarter becomes the source of upside? Or is there something fundamentally different in the way you communicate with the Street? And I have a follow-up.

Gregory Smith: I'll start. And Michelle, if you want to chime in with some additional color. When we sit down to do our guide, we try to give the very best view in terms of balancing the risks and opportunities that we see in the current quarter. And we are typically carrying some upside capacity that if we get quick turn orders, that we -- that -- like if we can help improve customer satisfaction by serving orders within lead time and we have the capacity to do it, we are going to do that. So in a strengthening demand environment we will tend to over-perform.

At the same time, we, like everyone else, are working really hard to solve the supply chain issues that come from ramping capacity. And so there are supply chain risks that our operations team does a great job solving. But when we go into the quarter, we don't know that we have a solution for all of those. The other thing that I'll say at a like minor level is we are still being quite cautious about Robotics. That we are seeing much improved -- like improved predictability and improved growth from that unit.

But we don't want to get ahead of ourselves in terms of -- assume that we are in like a bold new future there, we want to make sure that we really understand exactly what our funnel of opportunities looks like and our conversion rate. And like we're really happy about having 4 good on track quarters in a row, but we are still quite careful in terms of predicting like higher rates of growth against that business until we get a little bit further down the road.

Michelle Turner: And the only other thing I would add to that, to Greg's point about the supply chain variability, that's not just within Teradyne but also with our customers. And so to the extent, for example, all the parts of a test cell are not coming together, they're not looking to take our testers and install them. There could be slips that happened within the quarter. And so that could be either upside or downside in terms of how it plays out within a particular week. And so you'll see this sitting in our receivables at the end of Q1, where we shipped a lot of units that originally, we have been told to kind of push out.

So I think it's important to note that we're seeing variability not only on the order side, but also in terms of the supply chain from a customer perspective.

Mehdi Hosseini: Got it. And then since the last earning conference call, agentic AI has become the new buzz word. And there are a number of existing and the new semiconductor companies that are trying to capitalize on tokenization and offer a new kind of a CPU. And my question to you is given the fact that historically, [ x86 ] has been more of a -- driving more of an in-house test solution, and now you have a diversification of a CPU because of agentic AI. Does that also add a new layer of opportunity for you? Was that already embedded in your longer-term forecast? Or is this something new and could potentially provide some upside?

Gregory Smith: So I think of it more as providing potential upside than something that's in our plan. That we are testing primarily ARM-based CPUs for data center applications. I think we have active design-in opportunities that I expect to be able to convert in this space as well. I would add that in addition to sort of new demand for CPU in agentic, there's also a big trend towards this optimizing data centers for inference at scale.

I talked about that a little bit in the prepared remarks, that if you look at what NVIDIA is doing to try to decreased time to first token on inference and other players are doing, I think we have reasonable exposure to those types of devices as well. So as things shift towards more inference and more agentic, then I think we have potential long-term upside.

Operator: We'll take our next question from Shane Brett, Morgan Stanley.

Shane Brett: My first question is on networking. Regarding CPO and silicon photonics, can you talk about where you stand in terms of share now? And how do you anticipate your share tracking? I'm asking as your competitor announced that they received their first high-volume AT order for silicon photonics.

Gregory Smith: Thanks for the question. So our best guess, so far in 2026, that share is quite balanced between us and our competitor. And I think -- like the only difference is whether we're talking about single large orders or multiple smaller orders. But I think share is kind of balanced, and that's where we think things are right now. As -- but it's really early days that -- right now, there is -- there are very few end customers that are trying to ramp CPO into production. And the share split right now is mostly around which test insertion is being done by what companies.

And so our strength is primarily in the -- in insertion [ 2 ], where the -- where you're actually connecting electrically to a compound of wafer on the top for electrical and looking at light down in the bottom. We are in the process of releasing solutions for that in production. And we are working with partners to do that. So it's really kind of a 4-way partnership involving foundry, end customer, ficonTEC and Teradyne. We're working that with a team in Taiwan, Israel, Germany, North America to bring this technology to production. We think that it's -- this is a very important market.

And as -- like what -- the way we see this happening is that in '27, this is primarily going to be associated with scale-out kind of networking. The scale up networking is likely to be even higher volumed, but over a longer period of time like '28, '29. And we are going to be rapidly changing the efficiency of tests at all 4 insertions. And the balance of where things are going to be done across those foreign insertions is really going to be driven by the end economics. So if they are finding a lot of faults at a particular level, they will keep doing that test.

If they have very high yields, then they will look to see if they can eliminate that. But I -- like personally, I think efficiency is going to go up by like a factor of 10 over the next couple of years. And despite the fact that, that efficiency is going to get that much higher, I think that this is still going to be $300 million to $700 million worth of equipment once you get a few years into this midterm.

Shane Brett: That's really insightful. And for my follow-up, one of your auto industrial customers talked about a bit of a tester shortage on the earnings call. And while I was listening to that, my interpretation was, oh, there may be a fight among customers to get in the queue at Teradyne. Just where do we stand right now in terms of capacity and utilization? And how much capacity are we looking to expand over the next year or so?

Gregory Smith: So if that customer is having trouble getting testers, they're obviously not buying them from Teradyne. That we are able to serve the demand that we have, our capacity has ramped rapidly, where we have multiple contract manufacturing partners that are enabling our production. So we were surprised by that. We -- for this particular end customer, we have a very good relationship. And for the parts of their business that we serve, we're able to deliver the testers that they need and the lead time that they needed. So I think this is another reason that more and more customers are really looking at supply chain resilience, all the way back to their test equipment capital supplier.

And that kind of strategy isn't something that is just solved by increasing capacity that -- what customers really need is to be able to get the capacity that they need when they need it for the parts that they are ramping. And you don't know how that demand is going to overlap at as a supplier. So I think it's -- I think the trend in the future is that for high-volume devices, we're going to increasingly see this trend towards multiple sourcing of test equipment. And overall, I see that as a real positive for Teradyne.

Operator: We'll take our next question from Krish Sankar with TD Cowen.

Sreekrishnan Sankarnarayanan: I have 2 of them. First one, on the silicon photonics. Michelle or Greg, you spoke about the $300 million to $700 million opportunity. I understand it's midterm. How big is the market this year? Is it like tens of millions of dollars this year? And along the same path, is the high contact being acquired by a Chinese entity an issue? Is it a nonissue for you? And then I have a quick follow-up.

Gregory Smith: Yes. So this year, we're probably looking at silicon photonics right around 100-ish, maybe a little bit less, maybe a little bit more. It's substantial, but it's pretty early days. With regards to ficonTEC, ficonTEC has been an independently operated unit of a Chinese corporation since 2021, I think. I mean, this is not a new thing. It is -- and our relationship with ficonTEC is with both the unit, which is in Germany and also the Chinese company that it's a part of RoboTechnik. We have a great relationship with the CEO there. And they are one of the absolute world-class providers of active alignment for silicon photonics assembly and for test.

That there are a lot of hard things that you need to do when you're building silicon photonics. One of the most difficult is achieving alignment in the assembly process for electro-optic modules or for CPOs. And ficonTEC is a -- is like one of the world leaders in that technology, and they are working to build their business in semiconductor capital equipment, the test part of it. And that is something that is a high priority for us, high priority for them. And I think that the press reports that came out are like they've been refuted by ficonTEC, and we don't see any evidence on the ground that it's at all true.

Sreekrishnan Sankarnarayanan: Great. That's very helpful. And a quick follow-up for Michelle. I know you gave some color on how to think about gross margins. But just visually thinking, as auto analog industrials cyclically starts rebounding, is it fair to assume that's a huge tailwind for your gross margin given those legacy eagle testers are pretty high margins?

Michelle Turner: So I think the short answer is no. When you think about kind of our full year expectations and what's really going to influence the end results even over the midterm, right? So we've given a target model of 59% to 61%. We're sitting at 60.9% in Q1. We expect the first half to be about 59.7%. I still think that's within the range. And auto -- and when you think about auto and industrial, it's not going to be the biggest swinger in terms of our overall margin portfolio. I'm just going to go back to just the tightness in our overall margins within 200 basis points year-on-year.

So when you use the words like huge or significant, I'd probably react to that a little bit. I do think it can be somewhat of a tailwind. But just given the size of it to the overall portfolio, I would say no, in terms of the significance.

Gregory Smith: Yes. I mean over the years, we've seen most of our product lines converging towards similar margins. And so it's -- I would not expect to see -- even if we saw us like a significant increase in the percentage of total revenue that's coming from auto and industrial, I don't think we'd see that as a big mover. Now the other thing to remember is that one of the things that goes into auto and industrial is ADAS. And so if you squint at an ADAS tester, it looks a hell of a lot like a VIP compute tester.

So the -- just because things are aggregating into particular end markets, it doesn't necessarily reflect the platform that's being sold to serve it.

Operator: We'll take our next question from Vivek Arya with Bank of America Securities.

Vivek Arya: Greg, on the GPU engagement, when we look at the large customer, the demand is clearly increasing. The number of queues across training and inference is going up. So I'm curious, what is the gating factor to getting to that, let's say, whatever, 20%, 30% market share? What is your share assumed in your $6 billion target model?

Gregory Smith: So let me start at the beginning. So the thing that is setting the time line to get to, say, 25% share of GPU is how efficiently we execute our fast follower strategy, how fast we can bring up test programs and test solutions for devices that are early enough in their life cycle that we capture a significant portion of the ramp. So that ultimately is the limitation. As time goes on, the ultimate phase of fast follower is something that I've referred to as tester agnostic development.

So what many of our customers are talking about in this space is that they really want to develop their test solutions against a -- like think of it as like a virtual test system. And by flicking a switch in software that they can target that towards our platform or towards another platform. When we get to that, then we are going to be in a world where it's much more about the differentiation on throughput and performance and availability than incumbency. And I think that we have certain advantages around test coverage for elements of the device. I think we have some advantages in terms of platform reliability.

I certainly think that we have some advantages in terms of responsiveness to demand. So -- and what we've seen -- like one of the reasons that we're -- that we feel like we know what we're talking about here is that this is basically the world that we live in, in high-performance memory. That -- we were later to market than our competitor when it came to HBM performance testing. But once we released a platform that delivered better economics and better performance, then we began to see significant share gains because the customer can choose which platform they're going to buy, and we were able to capture that.

As the AI accelerator world migrates more towards this idea where there are solutions existent on both platforms, then we think that we can compete on being able to get them the capacity that they need and getting the most parts out of each test cell because at the end of the day, it's like the limitations are turning into things like floor space and number of probers and handlers that they can buy. So having very productive test equipment is a potent advantage.

In terms of the -- the part of the $6 billion, I think that we are -- looking at -- I don't think we need to be much -- like we can get to this -- our model in the fast follower phase of this, where we're just doing specific part conversions. And I think we would only need kind of low double-digit share in order for us to hit our model.

Vivek Arya: And from my follow up, I just wanted to get back to the visibility question. AI is over 70% of your sales. But when we look at any other semiconductor company involved AI, logic or networking or memory, right, even the semi cap front-end players, they all claim to have great visibility, not just for this year, consistent sequential growth and then visibility even in 2027. And I'm curious, why is that not translating into stronger visibility for the testing part right? Because you guys are an important part of that supply chain also. So how come everyone else has great visibility and confidence, but we are not hitting that right from the testing side as much?

Gregory Smith: So I think that the point that Michelle made is really important, that the lead time for a tester is on the order of the same as the lead time for the actual wafer, not the wafer front-end equipment. And these are -- our customers are rapidly trying to build out capacity to be able to support all of the phases of production. And so where -- like at the end of the day, these customers are definitely leaning hard into produce -- into creating the front end capacity to increase the number of wafers that go through. But until they actually are seeing the wafers go through, they are holding back on the orders for the test equipment.

I mean we definitely are working against a long-term plan around capacity expansion for our products. We have an idea of our -- think of it as like a strategic forecast that we're working against, but that's very, very different from the level of commitment that we get from our customers around what they'll buy and when. And since the -- like testers are sold for particular devices and particular device ramps. Those ramps can move significantly if you have an issue with -- like if it's an ASIC, if the first silicon doesn't work, then that can inject a 2 quarter delay in a ramp, that would have a meaningful effect on the timing of our growth.

It wouldn't have a meaningful effect on the long-term growth that we'll achieve. So I think the front end is less lumpy, but growth in the front end inevitably leads to growth in the back end, it's just uncertain in the timing.

Operator: We'll take our next question from Jim Schneider with Goldman Sachs.

James Schneider: Relative to the CPO opportunity, I think you did a good job kind of outlining where you believe the market is going. Just kind of 2 follow-ups on that. One is, can you maybe level set us for where you expect your CPO revenue to land in terms of a range for this year, 2026? And then you talked about kind of a 4-way kind of tie-up for -- to pull off some of the second insertion solutions. Do you have any kind of plans or thoughts about how you might integrate that a little bit more under one roof in some way or another?

Gregory Smith: So I don't think we're publicly disclosing our expectations for 2026 revenue, mainly because there's so much uncertainty about where in the test flow the investment will go. So will they lean harder into insertion 2 or insertion 1 or insertion 3. So there's a lot of noise on that data right now. So we're not trying to make a prediction. The 4-way partnership is actually -- that's kind of the way the world works normally. That if you think about non-CPO devices, there's a fabulous specifier. There's a foundry, there's an OSAT. There's a handler or prober provider, and there's a tester provider and there's a probe card provider.

There's like -- there are a lot of -- there's a whole ecosystem that makes these test cells work. And we are a real strong advocate of this open ecosystem long term. We think that, that's what our customers want, and it's how we want to try and work. And we also want to make sure that all of the providers in this space, for probers, handlers, whatever, that they feel like we are being -- that we're treating people alike, that we're not showing favorites.

So what we're really trying to do is we're trying to lean hard into helping fight contact, build their capability in the semiconductor test equipment space, but we're acknowledging that they are the world experts in active alignment. So they're a great company. They know what they're doing. We want to help stand them up to be a great member of this ecosystem versus trying to integrate them [indiscernible].

James Schneider: That's helpful. And then just as a follow-up for Michelle. Clearly, the growth and margins and everything else are kind of turning out very well, and it seems like you will indeed probably get to your model at some point. Just from a philosophical standpoint, from an OpEx perspective, to the extent you do tend to grow on a multiyear basis a lot stronger, would you tend to believe that you could actually underpunch the OpEx intensity? Or would you -- you plan to develop more OpEx resources to R&D over time?

Michelle Turner: So the answer is yes. And so we've historically talked about growing OpEx at 50% of revenue, and we still believe in that model. We believe in investing back in the business. Particularly in today's environment as we think about the pain points in our kind of wafer to data center strategy, there's lots of opportunities for us to help our customers. So we're going to look for those opportunities to reinvest back in the business, which will impact OpEx.

And when we think about the short term, however, in the current year, in such a hyper-growth mode, we wouldn't expect that same translation to play out within 2026, but definitely over the midterm and the longer term, that's the aspiration that we would be driving to.

Gregory Smith: Yes. The only color that I'd add to that is there is such a high rate of technology change in this end market and so many interesting opportunities, like there is a ton of waste due to yield issues and quality escapes. It's kind of a perfect environment for a company that is delivering something to help other companies get to high quality. So we are -- like for a while, we were in a world where like the marginal utility of additional R&D spend was not that great. Like if you look back a few years. Now, we have just a really long list of great things that we can invest in that will drive long-term revenue growth.

So we're going to do our very best to constrain the growth of our G&A. We're going to do the very best that we can to manage the growth of our sales and marketing so that most of that is customer-focused technical investments, and we're going to lean into R&D because it's a target-rich environment.

Operator: This concludes our Q&A session. I'd like to now turn it back to our presenters for any additional or closing remarks.

Gregory Smith: Thank you, operator. So thanks, everyone, for joining the call. We are really looking forward to Q2, another really strong quarter. And I just want to reiterate our thanks to the team around the performance for Q1. It was -- we're calling 2026 the year of execution. And we are like hitting on all cylinders, the team is doing really, really well, and we appreciate you having the interest in the company.

Operator: Thank you. This concludes today's Teradyne First Quarter 2026 Earnings Call and Webcast. You may disconnect your lines at this time, and have a wonderful day.