Texas Instruments - Texas Instruments reported an adjusted EPS of $1.27, slightly below expectations, with revenue at $4.42 billion, aligning with estimates. The Q1 revenue guidance is between $4.32 billion to $4.68 billion, which is better than market expectations [2][3] - Data center revenue surged 70% last quarter, indicating strong growth in this segment, which is becoming a new growth engine for the company. Management plans to break out data center revenue separately in future reports [3][4] - The industrial market showed recovery, with growth in the high teens percentage in Q4, driven by factory automation, industrial controls, and embedded systems. However, personal electronics revenue fell in the upper teens percentage [5] Starbucks - Starbucks reported an adjusted EPS of $0.56, which was below expectations, but revenue exceeded estimates at $9.92 billion compared to the expected $9.63 billion. The company is seeing a turnaround with traffic growth for the first time in two years [8][9] - Global same-store sales increased by 4%, and traffic grew by 3%, indicating positive momentum. The holiday season also contributed to strong sales, particularly with viral marketing efforts [10][11] - Despite some margin pressure due to turnaround costs and higher coffee prices, the overall sales and traffic growth are seen as key positive indicators for the company's future [9][10] AT&T - AT&T reported an adjusted EPS of $0.52, beating expectations of $0.46, with revenue at $33.47 billion, surpassing the anticipated $32 billion. The company added 421,000 new post-paid phone customers, in line with estimates [13][14] - The churn rate remained below 1%, indicating customer retention amidst a competitive pricing environment. The company also experienced growth in broadband, adding 283,000 new fiber customers [15][16] - However, the wireline business saw a decline of 7.5%, but overall growth in other segments helped offset this loss [16]
Wednesday Morning's Earnings: TXN & SBUX Miss, Guidance Signals Optimism