Inside the July Chip Market: TI, ST & NXP Earnings and Global Component Market Trends

Published on: September 8, 2025
  • TI released its Q2 earnings, but its Q3 outlook missed expectations.
  • ST signed a US $900 million acquisition agreement with NXP and issued its FY 2025 Q2 report.
  • NXP posted Q2 revenue of US $2.9 billion, with automotive making up more than half.

TI

TI’s Q2 revenue reached US $4.448 billion, up 16 % YoY—above the expected US $4.36 billion—and operating profit was US $1.563 billion, up 25 %. Analogue sales were US $3.452 billion (+18 %), embedded processing US $679 million (+10 %), and other businesses US $317 million (+14 %). Because of tariff uncertainty, customers pulled in orders early—especially in industrial segments and China—creating a temporary “over-heated” demand spike. Price-increase rumours also helped inventory digestion, but the effect is not expected to last. TI guides Q3 revenue at US $4.45 billion to US $4.8 billion, a cautious stance that misses consensus. Industrial is now the fourth of five end-markets to begin recovering, while automotive “has not yet recovered”; prolonged weakness could extend the destocking cycle. TI’s quarter-end inventory stood at US $4.8 billion (231 days), nine days lower QoQ.

ST

On 25 July, ST announced a cash purchase of NXP’s MEMS-sensor division for up to US $950 million (US $900 million upfront, US $50 million later). The unit generated about US $300 million in 2023 revenue, mainly from automotive-safety and industrial pressure sensors. Closing is expected in H1 2026, pending regulatory approval.

For FY 2025 Q2 (Apr–Jun), ST posted revenue of US $2.766 billion, down 14.4 % YoY, a gross margin of 33.5 %, and—after US $190 million in impairment and restructuring charges—its first quarterly net loss of US $97 million. Embedded-processing revenue was US $847 million (−6.5 % YoY) but edged up QoQ on strength in personal electronics and industrial; automotive lagged. ST expects Q3 revenue of roughly US$3.17 billion, implying about 15 % QoQ growth.

NXP

Q2 revenue totalled US $2.926 billion (−6 % YoY, +3 % QoQ); automotive chips generated US $1.729 billion (+3 % QoQ), exceeding 50 % of sales. Industrial & IoT brought in US $546 million (+7 % QoQ), mobile US $331 million (−2 % QoQ), and communications & infrastructure US $320 million (+2 % QoQ).Dependence on automotive leaves NXP highly exposed to tariffs and geopolitics. Management believes the long inventory correction in auto chips could finish by year-end, judging from Q2 stabilisation. However, U.S. auto tariffs and weak EV demand in Europe and the U.S. still pose risks. NXP forecasts Q3 revenue at US$3.05 billion to US$3.25 billion.

Manufacturer Updates

Market Trends

Analog Devices

  • ADI sees healthy bookings; low substitutability safeguards margins.
  • TI spot demand rose on price-hike rumours, but general-purpose parts remain locked in fierce price competition.

Logic Devices

  • ALTERA Cyclone and MAX series show simultaneous increases in spot demand and price.
  • XILINX will impose quotas on 16/20/28 nm parts, extending lead times; some Kintex-7 and Virtex-7 versions will be China-only.

MCU Devices

  • ST may lengthen automotive MCU lead times; STM32F103 spot demand is hot.
  • NXPautomotive MCU supply stays tight (32-bit MCU lead time about 20 – 26 weeks).
  • Microchip has a slight inventory build-up in 8-/16-bit MCUs.

Discrete Devices

  • Standard commercial discretes are stable, but special-purpose power devices face longer lead times and mild price rises; generic power-semiconductor price wars continue.
  • ONSEMI MOSFET lead times 12 – 16 weeks; forward pricing sensitive to tariffs.
  • VISHAYrectifier lead time is 14 – 22 weeks.
  • INFINEON MOSFET lead times trend longer at 12 – 22 weeks.

Passive Components

  • Demand from industrial automation, data-centre and other sectors continues to rise, and third-quarter delivery cycles are showing a lengthening trend.
  • Tantalum capacitors: lead times are tending to extend, with AVX currently at 20–28 weeks and Kemet/Yageo roughly 20–47 weeks.
  • MLCCs: the lead times of some products and suppliers will be extended; Kemet/Yageo and AVX are around 20–34 weeks, while TDK is about 20–22 weeks.
  • Connectors: most products are seeing a clear upward price trend; supply and material interruptions are increasing production pressure on connector components, and tariff-related factors are causing price volatility. Prices from TE / ITT / CONESYS all show an upward trend in the third quarter.

Memory Products

  • DDR4 shipments surge, spot prices climb, and OEMs may delay shutdown plans.
  • DRAM DDR4 shortages and price rises are likely to persist through year-end; SAMSUNG DDR4 8 GB and MICRON LPDDR4X 16 GB are the hottest parts.
  • NAND FLASH contract prices are projected to rise 5 – 10 % in Q3.
  • HBM: SAMSUNG’s entry into HBM could reshape supply; MICRON and SK HYNIX may face margin pressure and pricing adjustments.

Here is the monthly spot market analysis report from UniBetter. We hope this practical suammary and analysis of the chip spot market provides you with some assistance and value.

If you have any questions or spot material requirements, please feel free to contact us by phone or email: info@unibetter-ic.com

Please indicate the source when reposting.

Follow our column for monthly spot market insights, supply alerts, and expert analyses. Don’t miss critical updates—subscribe now!

#UniBetter #SemiconductorIndustry #ChipMarket #TechInnovation #IndustryAnalysts