Analog Devices, Inc.·Technology
Analog Devices, Inc. designs, manufactures, tests, and markets integrated circuits (ICs), software, and subsystems that leverage analog, mixed-signal, and digital signal processing technologies. The company provides data converter products, which translate real-world analog signals into digital data, as well as translates digital data into analog signals; power management and reference products for power conversion, driver monitoring, sequencing, and energy management applications in the automotive, communications, industrial, and high-end consumer markets; and power ICs include performance, integration, and software design simulation tools for accurate power supply designs. It also offers high-performance amplifiers to condition analog signals; and radio frequency and microwave ICs to support cellular infrastructure; and microelectromechanical systems technology solutions, including accelerometers used to sense acceleration, gyroscopes for sense rotation, inertial measurement units to sense multiple degrees of freedom, and broadband switches for radio and instrument systems, as well as isolators. In addition, the company offers digital signal processing and system products for high-speed numeric calculations. It serves clients in the industrial, automotive, consumer, instrumentation, aerospace, and communications markets through a direct sales force, third-party distributors, and independent sales representatives in the United States, the rest of North and South America, Europe, Japan, China, and rest of Asia, as well as through its Website. Analog Devices, Inc. was incorporated in 1965 and is headquartered in Wilmington, Massachusetts.
Technology
Semiconductors
24,000
1980-03-17
1.19

WILMINGTON, Mass., May 21, 2026 /PRNewswire/ -- Analog Devices, Inc. (NASDAQ: ADI) today announced that the Company's Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer, Richard Puccio, will discuss business topics and trends at the Bank of America Global Technology Conference, located in San Francisco, California on Tuesday, June 2, at 10:00 a.m.
Texas Instruments' AI-driven data center surge and manufacturing scale give it an edge over Analog Devices in the race for analog chip dominance.

Analog Devices, Inc. (NASDAQ:ADI) reported stronger-than-expected fiscal second-quarter 2026 results and announced a $1.5 billion acquisition of Empower Semiconductor on Wednesday.

Analog Devices delivered strong Q2 results and robust guidance, but shares fell over 5% as short-term expectations adjust. Expected margin improvements have been gradually priced in, even though there were some early signs from a year ago. Management expects continued tailwinds from Industrial and Data Center demand which will continue to support the share price.

Revenue: $3.62 billion, up 15% sequentially and 37% year over year.Industrial Revenue: 50% of total revenue, up 20% sequentially and 56% year over year.Automot

Shares of Analog Devices (ADI) fell sharply on Wednesday despite the semiconductor company reporting stronger-than-expected fiscal second-quarter results and announcing a $1.5 billion acquisition aimed at expanding its artificial-intelligence power management business. The stock dropped more than 4% during the session after rallying roughly 53% so far in 2026 amid growing investor optimism around AI-related semiconductor demand.