TC
TE Connectivity plc (TEL)·Q3 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q3 FY25 delivered record net sales of $4.534B (+14% reported, +9% organic) and record adjusted EPS of $2.27; GAAP diluted EPS was $2.14. Adjusted operating margin reached 19.9% (+60 bps YoY) and orders were $4.5B, up YoY and sequentially .
- Results decisively beat Wall Street: revenue beat by ~$0.22B and adjusted EPS beat by ~$0.19; EBITDA also exceeded consensus. Momentum was driven by Industrial Solutions (DDN/AI, Energy) and resilient Transportation in Asia . Q3 vs consensus: Revenue $4.534B vs $4.316B*, Adjusted EPS $2.27 vs $2.08*, EBITDA $1.117B vs $1.047B* (Values retrieved from S&P Global).
- Management guided Q4 FY25 net sales to ~$4.55B (+12% reported, +6% organic) and adjusted EPS to ~$2.27; GAAP EPS ~$2.18. FX tailwind in Q4: ~$111M sales and ~$0.03 EPS YoY; tariff impact ~1.5% of sales with minimal earnings effect expected to be similar to Q3 .
- Catalysts: accelerating AI revenues (expected >$800M in FY25 with >$1B run rate next year), Industrial margins crossing 20%, and announced Investor Day on Nov 20 in Philadelphia .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Industrial Solutions strength: reported sales +30% and organic +21%, with DDN (AI) +84% reported and Energy +70% reported (+20% organic); Industrial adjusted operating margin expanded ~390 bps to 20.4% .
- Cash generation: CFO ~$1.187B and FCF $962M—both quarterly records amid robust operating performance; YTD FCF ~$2.060B .
- Management quote underscoring execution and AI momentum: “We delivered 14% sales growth and 19% adjusted earnings per share…capitalizing on the strong demand for artificial intelligence” . CEO also highlighted AI revenues expected above $800M in FY25 and above $1B next year .
What Went Wrong
- Transportation margin and Western demand: Transportation adjusted margin fell to 19.4% vs 21.2% prior year; Western auto production down mid-single digits pressured content growth despite double-digit Asia strength .
- Sensors and Medical softness: Sensors sales down YoY, reflecting western end-market weakness; Medical down 13% reported YoY in Q3 (inventory normalization) .
- Book-to-bill ticked below 1.0 at 0.99 (driven by seasonal auto production declines expected from Q3→Q4); management framed it as seasonal and embedded in guidance .
Financial Results
Quarterly Trend
Year-over-Year (Q3 FY25 vs Q3 FY24)
Q3 FY25 vs Wall Street Consensus (S&P Global)
Values retrieved from S&P Global.
Segment Breakdown (Q3 FY25)
Industrial Sub-Segments (Q3 FY25)
KPIs
Guidance Changes
Note: In April, management guided Q3 sales ~$4.30B and adjusted EPS ~$2.06; actual Q3 delivered $4.534B and $2.27—clear raise vs guidance .
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “We are pleased that we've delivered double-digit increases in both sales and adjusted earnings per share…quarterly records for our company.” — CEO Terrence Curtin .
- “AI revenues last year was $300 million. We now expect our revenue from artificial intelligence applications to be above $800 million in this fiscal 2025 year…and above $1 billion next year.” — CEO Terrence Curtin .
- “Adjusted operating margins were 20%, and they increased 60 basis points over last year…both segments are now essentially running at 20%.” — CEO Terrence Curtin .
- “Cash from operations was nearly $1.2 billion, and free cash flow was $962 million in the quarter…another year of free cash flow conversion well above 100%.” — CFO Heath Mitts .
- “The impact from tariffs in the third quarter was approximately 1.5% of sales with minimal earnings impact…expect [Q4] to be similar to Q3 levels.” — CFO Heath Mitts .
Q&A Highlights
- AI scaling and profitability: AI margin “a little bit above where the industrial segment plays,” with multi-customer hyperscaler ecosystem and >$1B run-rate next year .
- Industrial margins sustainability: footprint consolidation plus volume leverage support ≥20% margins at current volumes; energy and AI help mix .
- Book-to-bill and seasonality: Transportation book-to-bill below one driven by seasonal auto production decline (21M units in Q3 → ~20M in Q4); embedded in guide .
- Auto content vs market: Asia strong (11% growth on 4% production); Western production down ~5% pressures content; expect ~400 bps over-market in Q4 .
- Pricing/tariffs: Q3 tariff cost ~1.5% of sales with supply chain mitigation and selective pricing; Q4 assumptions similar .
Estimates Context
- Q3 FY25 beats: Revenue $4.534B vs $4.316B consensus*; Adjusted EPS $2.27 vs $2.08 consensus*; EBITDA $1.117B vs $1.047B consensus* .
- Q4 FY25 setup: Street at revenue ~$4.586B* and EPS ~$2.29*; company guides to ~$4.55B and ~$2.27 adjusted—slightly conservative vs consensus* .
- Estimate implications: Upward revisions likely for Industrial DDN/Energy growth and consolidated margins; Transportation estimates may stay cautious on Western production softness and seasonal Q4 auto decline .
Values retrieved from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- TEL’s Q3 FY25 was a clean beat on sales, EPS, and EBITDA with record cash generation—driven by Industrial strength (AI/DDN and Energy) and resilient Transportation in Asia .
- AI is now material and accelerating (>$800M FY25, >$1B run-rate in FY26), providing a secular tailwind to revenue growth and margins .
- Industrial margins crossing 20% appear sustainable given footprint actions and mix; watch continued volume leverage and execution in Energy and AD&M .
- Q4 guide implies continued double-digit EPS growth; FX tailwinds and tariff mitigation reduce macro risk, though seasonal auto production will weigh on Transportation .
- TEL remains a cash compounder (FCF conversion >100%); optionality for shareholder returns and bolt-on M&A in fragmented Industrial markets (e.g., Richards) .
- Near-term trading: favor strength into Q4 on AI/DDN momentum and strong FCF; monitor Western auto softness and any tariff policy changes .
- Medium-term thesis: secular exposure to data and power connectivity across autos, AI data centers, grid hardening, aerospace; balanced geographic footprint and localized manufacturing support resilience .