SKYWORKS SOLUTIONS, INC. (SWKS) Q3 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q3 FY25 delivered $965M revenue, non-GAAP gross margin 47.1%, and non-GAAP EPS $1.33; management said revenue, gross margin, and EPS all exceeded the high end of guidance. Broad Markets grew for a sixth consecutive quarter; Mobile ran above seasonal, aided by strong sell-through at the top customer and Android ramps.
- Q4 FY25 (September) outlook guides revenue to $1.00–$1.03B and non-GAAP EPS to $1.40 at the midpoint; non-GAAP gross margin ~47% ±50 bps; OpEx $235–$245M (with a 14th week adding ~$7M to OpEx); other income ~$4M; tax ~13%; diluted shares ~149.5M.
- Strategic actions: consolidating the Woburn facility into Newbury Park to lift fab utilization, lower fixed costs, and support long-term gross margin expansion; dividend raised 1% to $0.71/share.
- Demand drivers: momentum in Wi‑Fi 7 and auto (auto now tracking ~$60M/qtr), Google-led Android ramp (“up just under $100M”), and AI-related timing solutions (first clocks simultaneously supporting Ethernet/PCIe). These underpinned results and bolster the multi-quarter setup.
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Outperformed guidance: “Revenue, gross margin and EPS exceeded the high end of our guidance.”
- Mix and execution: Non-GAAP gross margin reached 47.1% on mix and cost discipline; operating margin 23.3%; FCF $252.7M (26% margin).
- Diversification momentum: Broad Markets posted its sixth straight quarter of growth with strengthening book-to-bill; auto tracking ~$60M/qtr with wins at BYD, Ford, Geely, and Nissan; Wi‑Fi 7 accelerating; AI data center timing portfolio expanding.
What Went Wrong
- GAAP profitability lagged: GAAP EPS $0.70 and GAAP gross margin 41.6% reflect elevated R&D and restructuring charges; GAAP operating margin 11.5% vs non-GAAP 23.3%.
- Customer concentration persists: Largest customer was ~63% of sales (mobile ~85% of that), keeping the narrative sensitive to single-customer dynamics and iPhone mix.
- OpEx up near term: Q4 OpEx guided to $235–$245M (includes ~$7M from a 14th week), tempering near-term EPS leverage despite revenue growth.
Financial Results
- Management stated revenue, gross margin, and EPS exceeded the high end of guidance this quarter.
- Wall Street consensus (S&P Global) was unavailable via our data tool for this quarter and next; we therefore cannot quantify beat/miss vs consensus.
Segment mix and customer concentration
Cash flow and capital returns
KPIs and other disclosures
- Automotive revenue run-rate: “around $60M a quarter,” up y/y.
- Android in June quarter “was up just under $100M” driven by a Google ramp.
- Effective tax rate: 11.2% in Q3.
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “Skyworks delivered strong results this quarter, fueled by an upside in mobile and sustained strength across broad markets… Revenue, gross margin and EPS exceeded the high end of our guidance.” — CEO Phil Brace
- “The first wave of AI‑capable phones is reaching scale… we believe this could drive an inflection in upgrade cycles, leading to a potential tailwind to volumes and content over time.” — CEO Phil Brace
- “We’re taking action to optimize our manufacturing footprint with the planned closure of our Woburn manufacturing facility… [to] drive higher fab utilization, lower fixed costs and improve overall efficiency.” — CEO Phil Brace
- “Our largest customer accounted for about 63% of revenue. Mobile represented 62%… up 8% y/y… Broad Markets… grew 2% sequentially and 5% y/y.” — Interim CFO Rob Schriesheim
- “Android revenue in the June was up significantly… up just under $100M… primarily related to our ramp with Google.” — VP IR Raji Gill
- “Automotive is now tracking around $60M a quarter… with programs at BYD, Nissan, Ford…” — VP IR Raji Gill
Q&A Highlights
- Content trajectory at top customer/internal modem: Management noted more content opportunity with an internal modem vs external; mix across models/geographies remains a determinant; overall tailwind as internal modem share rises.
- Android ramp visibility: Strong sequential increase tied to Google; expectation for continued growth into September.
- Seasonality and extra week: Extra week in September impacts OpEx by ~$7M, not revenue; December remains volatile historically; focus remains on execution.
- Manufacturing consolidation economics: Woburn-to-Newbury Park expected to be a multiquarter tailwind across utilization, CapEx, OpEx, and margins; timing specifics not disclosed.
- Infrastructure demand: Inventory digestion appears behind; orders improving with 800G/1.6T transitions benefiting timing solutions.
Estimates Context
- Wall Street consensus (S&P Global) for Q3 FY25 and Q4 FY25 was unavailable via our data tool at the time of analysis; we therefore cannot quantify beats/misses vs consensus. Management did state that Q3 revenue, gross margin, and EPS exceeded the high end of company guidance.
- Where estimates may need to adjust: Mobile outlook strengthened (mid-single-digit sequential growth guided for Q4), Android ramp was stronger than seasonal, Broad Markets on track for sequential and accelerating y/y growth; OpEx modestly higher in Q4 due to 14th week. These dynamics likely drive upward revisions to near-term revenue/EPS trajectories and sustained non-GAAP gross margin near ~47%.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Quality beat vs guidance with improving mix: non-GAAP gross margin at 47.1% and EPS ahead of guidance; margin structure supported by manufacturing consolidation and disciplined OpEx.
- Q4 guide constructive: $1.00–$1.03B revenue and $1.40 EPS (mid) with GM ~47% suggest sustained momentum through the iPhone cycle and Android ramps.
- Android/Google strength is a second engine: “up just under $100M” in June quarter provides diversification alongside the top customer.
- Auto/Data center catalysts building: Auto tracking ~$60M/qtr and AI-driven timing portfolio (Ethernet/PCIe clocks) expand Broad Markets with structurally higher margins.
- Capital returns remain robust: $430M returned in Q3; dividend up to $0.71; cash $1.34B vs ~$1.0B debt provides flexibility.
- Risk: customer concentration (~63% of sales) and competitive pricing remain central; management targeting content share gains via internal modem transition and higher RF complexity.
- Trading setup: Near-term catalysts include September-quarter execution vs guide, Android continuation, and updates on fab consolidation milestones; watch OpEx normalization post 14th week and any commentary on December seasonality.
Appendix: Additional Data Points
- GAAP vs non-GAAP reconciliation highlights non-GAAP adjustments (share-based comp, amortization of intangibles, restructuring), explaining divergence between GAAP EPS $0.70 and non-GAAP $1.33.
- Dividend payable Sep 16, 2025; record date Aug 26, 2025.