Photronics stock falls again as PLAB slumps after earnings, chips tumble

Photronics stock falls again as PLAB slumps after earnings, chips tumble

June 5, 2026

New York, June 5, 2026, 16:01 EDT

  • PLAB dropped almost 7% late Friday with chip stocks broadly lower.
  • The stock is still under pressure. Revenue and adjusted profit for the fiscal second quarter both missed.
  • Investors are watching delayed chip-design launches, weaker guidance and new shareholder law firm investigations.

Photronics Inc (PLAB) kept falling Friday, with shares slipping another $2.19, or about 7%, to $29.33 in the latest session. The move stretched losses after the company’s earnings, as chip stocks came under pressure. The stock touched $28.87 at its low for the day. Market cap was close to $1.71 billion.

Photronics was already looking for support after its May 28 results, so the timing is key here. The company makes photomasks—these are high-precision quartz or glass plates imprinted with tiny circuit patterns, used in making chips and flat screens.

Philly chip stocks tumble, drag Nasdaq. Reuters said the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index dropped 8.1% earlier Friday, which helped push the Nasdaq down 3.1%. The slump followed a strong U.S. jobs print, with investors rethinking the Fed’s rate moves. “Another reason” to expect a rate hike, Peter Cardillo at Spartan Capital Securities told Reuters. Reuters

Photronics’ trouble is narrower. Second-quarter revenue came in at $209.9 million, off 0.5% from a year ago and down 6.7% from last quarter. Integrated-circuit revenue dropped 5% year over year and slid 11% from the previous quarter. Flat-panel-display revenue gained 13% on the year.

GAAP earnings landed at 54 cents a share. The company reported non-GAAP earnings of 42 cents, which strips out some items like currency impacts. Wall Street was looking for 53 cents on an adjusted basis and $216.7 million in revenue, according to Investing.com.

Photronics Chairman and CEO George Macricostas said the market has “supportive long-term drivers and several temporary headwinds.” The company pointed to delayed design releases, high chip-fab use, tight memory supply, OEM cost controls and geopolitical uncertainty. Macricostas said the “long-term demand environment remains strong” and said Photronics is investing in the U.S. and Korea. Photronics, Inc.

Photronics’ outlook failed to settle investors. The company sees third-quarter revenue between $207 million and $215 million, operating margin in a range of 18% to 20%, and non-GAAP diluted earnings of 39 to 45 cents a share. The forecast points to no fast recovery from the ongoing design-delay issue.

Craig-Hallum dropped its price target on PLAB to $42 from $48 but maintained its Buy rating after earnings, Investing.com said. The firm called out short-term trouble in integrated circuits and some pushed-back design releases, but also noted initial signs of a pick-up in chip-design activity in May.

Photronics management is making the rounds with investors again. The company said it joined Bank of America’s Global Technology Conference in San Francisco on June 4, with plans to appear at the East Coast IDEAS Conference on June 10, D.A. Davidson’s Technology & Consumer Conference on June 11, and Singular Research’s Las Vegas Invitational on June 15.

Photronics trades in a small corner of the market, so it doesn’t line up with the big semiconductor equipment firms, but selling spread anyway. ASML’s U.S. stock slid 5.4%. Nova dropped 7.5%. Advanced Energy was also off 7.5% late Friday.

Legal notices came in again. Hagens Berman said Thursday it started looking into Photronics after the May 28 stock drop. Johnson Fistel said Wednesday it is checking into possible securities-law claims around the company’s demand, margins, and outlook. Both are only investigations, not any findings.

But the bear case is straightforward: if fabs stay busy and memory supply remains tight, chipmakers could hold off on new designs, leaving photomask demand muted for longer than PLAB management hopes. If that happens, the new site in Allen, Texas and firmer display orders may not be enough to make up for softer IC business anytime soon. A larger chip-stock valuation reset could weigh on PLAB, even with the company in the black.

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