Diodes Incorporated (DIOD) Earnings

Diodes Incorporated is expected to report next earnings on August 6, 2026 (in NaN days), with a consensus EPS estimate of $0.60. DIOD has beaten EPS estimates in 10 of its last 12 reported quarters (average surprise +15.1% over the last four).

Next earnings
Aug 6, 2026in NaN days
EPS est $0.60 · Revenue est $435M
Track record
Beat EPS in 10 of 12 quarters
Avg surprise +15.1% (last 4 quarters)
Earnings history
Report dateEPS estEPS actualSurpriseRevenueRev. surprise
May 7, 2026$0.35$0.43+24.0%$405M+2.3%
Nov 6, 2025$0.38$0.37-2.6%$392M+3.2%
Aug 7, 2025$0.24$0.32+33.3%$366M-4.8%
May 8, 2025$0.18$0.19+5.6%$332M+2.7%
Nov 7, 2024$0.39$0.43+10.3%$350M+1.1%
Aug 8, 2024$0.27$0.33+22.2%$320M+1.2%
May 9, 2024$0.31$0.28-9.7%$302M-1.2%
Aug 4, 2022$1.74$1.90+9.2%$501M-0.1%
May 4, 2022$1.54$1.75+13.6%$482M+0.1%
Feb 9, 2022$1.45$1.60+10.3%$480M+0.7%
Nov 3, 2021$1.39$1.47+5.8%$471M+0.9%
Aug 5, 2021$1.12$1.20+7.1%$440M+0.0%

Source: company filings + earnings calendar. For informational purposes only — not investment advice.

Earnings call summary

Q1 FY2026 · May 7, 2026

AI summary of management’s prepared remarks and analyst Q&A. For informational purposes only — not investment advice.

Management highlights

- Pricing trends: Q1 pricing stabilized mainly due to product mix change, with overall market prices showing stabilization or upward trend across end market segments. - Europe and market improvement: Real demand as indicated by POS, where channel inventory (in dollars and weeks) decreased, Q1 achieved 3.5% growth vs typical 5%-6% decline, no restocking behavior seen.

Guidance

Look forward to reporting continued progress on next quarter's conference call.

Segment performance

Not specifically mentioned in detail

Risks & headwinds

Not discussed in the transcript

Analyst Q&A

  • Q: David Williams asks about pricing trends and Europe market improvement.

    A: Emily responds on pricing stabilized due to product mix, and Europe has real demand with decreased channel inventory and Q1 growth