Microchip Technology Q4 FY 2026 Revenue Beats Consensus With Data Center Wins

Microchip Technology Q4 FY 2026 Revenue Beats Consensus With Data Center Wins

Analyst(s): Brendan Burke
Publication Date: May 11, 2026

Microchip’s Q4 FY 2026 results point to a recovery phase moving into a higher-volume operating model as customers and channels return to run-rate buying. Management emphasized data center connectivity wins, improving customer reengagement, and tighter supply conditions that may influence lead times and allocation planning.

What is Covered in This Article:

  • Microchip’s Q4 FY 2026 financial results
  • Data center connectivity design wins
  • Inventory normalization and reengagement
  • Supply tightness and lead times
  • Guidance and Final Thoughts

The News: Microchip Technology (NASDAQ: MCHP) reported Q4 FY 2026 net sales of $1.31 billion, up 35.1% year-on-year (YoY), compared with street revenue consensus of $1.26 billion. Non-GAAP gross margin was 61.6% (including $46.6 million of capacity underutilization charges). Non-GAAP operating income was $400.9 million, or 30.6% of net sales. Non-GAAP net income was $327.3 million. Non-GAAP diluted earnings per share (EPS) was $0.57.

“Our March quarter results significantly exceeded our expectations, with revenue of $1.311 billion coming in above the high end of our guidance and increasing 10.6% sequentially and 35.1% year over year, reflecting broad-based improvement across Microchip’s business,” said Steve Sanghi, Microchip’s President and Chief Executive Officer.

Microchip Technology Q4 FY 2026 Revenue Beats Consensus With Data Center Wins

Analyst Take: Microchip’s quarter reads as a mix of cyclical rebound and company-driven execution, with management tying performance to inventory correction completion, stronger bookings, and customer reengagement. The earnings call placed unusual weight on distribution dynamics and relationship repair, suggesting Microchip is trying to protect long-cycle design positions while the upturn strengthens. Data center commentary centered on expanding content per system and multi-year ramps, with PCIe Gen 6 switching and retimers positioned as near-term catalysts. Supply tightness themes returned, but management framed constraints as manageable rather than demand-limiting for the guided growth rate.

Data Center Connectivity and System Content Expansion

Management described momentum across three data center product families: storage controllers, memory controllers, and PCIe switching, with design wins translating into higher content per system and longer production ramps. Microchip reported six PCIe 6 switch design wins before volume release, which management characterized as earlier-than-typical in the product cycle, with production ramp expected to start at the end of the June quarter.

The company also entered the PCIe retimer market with a companion die strategy tied to Gen 6 switches, aimed at reducing implementation complexity by sourcing both components from one supplier. Management said it already secured a major OEM design win for the retimer on an upcoming Gen 6 platform and displaced a competitor in that socket. Microchip also pointed to benchmark outcomes for its SmartRAID NVMe accelerator, citing up to 3x read and write performance versus a leading competitor and positioning it as a contributor to higher XPU utilization. These moves indicate Microchip is prioritizing attach opportunities where platform adjacency can compound into broader connectivity share.

Recovery Plan Execution and Customer Reengagement

Management positioned its nine-point recovery plan as largely complete, with remaining emphasis on continuing inventory reduction and further improvement toward long-term non-GAAP margin targets. The company said inventory fell to 185 days at quarter end, down materially from prior cycle highs, and management expects inventory to move toward a 130 to 150 day target range through growth and manufacturing control. Management attributed above-seasonal demand to three drivers: distribution restocking after inventory correction, renewed customer buying after excess inventory burn, and improving end markets, with particular strength cited in Aerospace and Defense and data center.

The company stated that customer count increased by several thousand, framed as evidence of reengagement and improved relationships following the COVID-19-related friction. Management also suggested that competitive pricing and policies are prompting some customers to shift share back toward Microchip in the current upturn. Microchip is using the recovery narrative to reinforce that the demand lift is not concentrated in a single pocket and that design positions can convert as buying normalizes.

Supply Tightness, Lead Times, and Pricing Posture

Management said lead times are rising across many products, with constraints spreading beyond isolated areas into substrates, subcontracting capacity, and foundry nodes. The company stated that expedited requests increased materially compared with a few quarters ago and framed that as consistent with low customer inventories. Management acknowledged that substrate constraints are affecting data centers, connectivity, networking, and automotive products, while describing delinquency levels as higher but below the crisis conditions seen in prior shortages.

On pricing, management emphasized a customer relationship-first stance and said it has not executed a broad-based price increase, preferring targeted, customer-by-customer actions if input costs warrant it. The company framed gross margin progress as increasingly tied to reducing underutilization charges rather than needing pricing action to reach long-term targets. Management also stated it can work the supply system to obtain incremental wafers when needed, but it cannot scale output abruptly quarter to quarter. This posture suggests Microchip aims to gain share during tightening conditions while relying on utilization and mix to do most of the margin work.

Guidance and Final Thoughts

For the June 2026 quarter (Q1 FY 2027), Microchip guided net sales of $1.4 billion to $1.5 billion, implying 11.0% sequential growth and 35.3% YoY growth at the midpoint. Management guided non-GAAP gross margin of 62.25% to 63.25%, non-GAAP operating expenses of 28.75% to 29.25% of sales, and non-GAAP EPS of $0.67 to $0.71. The company tied the outlook to a stronger backlog, bookings momentum, including the largest booking month in almost four years, and early stages of distribution restocking, while continuing to ramp front-end and back-end operations. Management also signaled expectations for improved cash generation and debt reduction in the June quarter and indicated fiscal year 2027 capital expenditures of about $100.0 million. The setup implies Microchip expects broad participation across end markets, not a single-segment surge, as it pushes toward its longer-term operating model.

See the full press release on Microchip Technology’s Q4 FY 2026 financial results on the company website.

Declaration of generative AI and AI-assisted technologies in the writing process: This content has been generated with the support of artificial intelligence technologies. Due to the fast pace of content creation and the continuous evolution of data and information, The Futurum Group and its analysts strive to ensure the accuracy and factual integrity of the information presented. However, the opinions and interpretations expressed in this content reflect those of the individual author/analyst. The Futurum Group makes no guarantees regarding the completeness, accuracy, or reliability of any information contained herein. Readers are encouraged to verify facts independently and consult relevant sources for further clarification.
Disclosure: Futurum is a research and advisory firm that engages or has engaged in research, analysis, and advisory services with many technology companies, including those mentioned in this article. The author does not hold any equity positions with any company mentioned in this article.
Analysis and opinions expressed herein are specific to the analyst individually and data and other information that might have been provided for validation, not those of Futurum as a whole.

Other Insights From Futurum:

Microchip Q3 2026 Earnings Signal Mix Shift to Networking and Data Center

Tenstorrent’s Galaxy Blackhole: Can RISC-V Processors Expand Fast Inference Globally?

Can AMD’s Edge Silicon Scale to the Trillion Dollar Orbital Opportunity?

Author Information

Brendan Burke, Research Director

Brendan is Research Director, Semiconductors, Supply Chain, and Emerging Tech. He advises clients on strategic initiatives and leads the Futurum Semiconductors Practice. He is an experienced tech industry analyst who has guided tech leaders in identifying market opportunities spanning edge processors, generative AI applications, and hyperscale data centers. 

Before joining Futurum, Brendan consulted with global AI leaders and served as a Senior Analyst in Emerging Technology Research at PitchBook. At PitchBook, he developed market intelligence tools for AI, highlighted by one of the industry’s most comprehensive AI semiconductor market landscapes encompassing both public and private companies. He has advised Fortune 100 tech giants, growth-stage innovators, global investors, and leading market research firms. Before PitchBook, he led research teams in tech investment banking and market research.

Brendan is based in Seattle, Washington. He has a Bachelor of Arts Degree from Amherst College.

Related Insights
Intel Pours €5 Billion into Ireland to Feed the Xeon Surge
July 14, 2026

Intel Pours €5 Billion into Ireland to Feed the Xeon Surge

Brendan Burke, Research Director at Futurum, examines how Intel's €5 billion investment in Ireland to expand Xeon 6 manufacturing signals confidence in its foundry business and commitment to meeting surging...
FOXTRON's Adoption of Dimensity AX C-X1 Validates MediaTek's Automotive Ambitions
July 13, 2026

FOXTRON’s Adoption of Dimensity AX C-X1 Validates MediaTek’s Automotive Ambitions

Olivier Blanchard, Research Director at The Futurum Group, examines how FOXTRON's adoption of MediaTek's Dimensity AX C-X1 platform moves AI-defined vehicle ambitions from platform development into commercial automotive deployment....
Can UST and Claude Make Physical AI the Next Enterprise Standard?
July 11, 2026

Can UST and Claude Make Physical AI the Next Enterprise Standard?

UST integrated Anthropic's Claude into core engineering platforms, reducing chip validation cycles by 50-70% and training 20,000 engineers on AI-native operations across multiple sectors....
Micron's $250B U.S. Investment
July 10, 2026

Micron’s $250B U.S. Investment Finds Its Edge on Korea’s Memory Juggernaut

Brendan Burke, Research Director at Futurum, analyzes how Micron's accelerated $250B U.S. investment and $3B supply chain commitment outposition Korea's memory efforts, addressing structural chip shortages and domestic supply requirements....
SK Hynix
July 10, 2026

Will SK Hynix’s Record $26.5bn ADR Issuance Help Close Its Capex Intensity Gap?

Brendan Burke, Research Director at Futurum, analyzes how SK Hynix's $26.5bn ADR issuance aims to close its capex intensity gap against Micron and Samsung, positioning it as a strategic AI...
Mercor Bets on Real-World AI Training: Will Environments Decide the Next AI Leaders?
July 10, 2026

Mercor Bets on Real-World AI Training: Will Environments Decide the Next AI Leaders?

Mercor's acquisition of Deeptune strategically positions it in reinforcement learning infrastructure, addressing enterprise concerns about AI agent reliability and hallucination management in the booming $181.3B AI platforms market....

Book a Demo

Welcome

The vision behind everything in Futurum’s Custom Research practice is this: research should show you what is happening, what comes next, and what to do about it. It should be personal to each audience, easy for people to grasp, and structured so LLMs can reason over it accurately. And it should be fast and turnkey; you want answers now, not another project to carry for quarters.

Whether you are defining business, channel, or go-to-market strategy; evaluating vendors or justifying ROI; or commissioning research to fill an emerging market need, we have your back, with a program that answers your questions with the objectivity and credibility to drive real decisions.

To do it, we bring unmatched data to bear: Futurum research, surveys, and market projections; validated market feeds; ETR’s 15 years of insight from 10,000 technology decision-makers; G2’s buyer and user data; and what our analysts hear every day. Add leading primary collection, from AI-moderated voice interviews to surveys and analyst-led interviews, all turnkey, and every project comes out credible, nuanced, and actionable.

And we don’t just drop the results in your lap. For internal work, we provide analyst-led sessions, interactive dashboards, and a range of formats. For market-facing work, Futurum delivers turnkey activation and amplification that actually gets seen, by people and by LLMs, through our media and share of voice. This is research that moves decisions and markets.

We will meet you wherever you are, from a fast-turn brief to a multi-year program, and shape the work to your goals, timeline, and budget. The right program for your moment.

If any of this is useful, I would love to talk.

Benjamin Brown, VP Custom Research, Futurum Research

Benjamin Brown

VP, Custom Research · The Futurum Group

Newsletter Sign-up Form

Get important insights straight to your inbox, receive first looks at eBooks, exclusive event invitations, custom content, and more. We promise not to spam you or sell your name to anyone. You can always unsubscribe at any time.

All fields are required






Thank you, we received your request, a member of our team will be in contact with you.