VSH is expanding its EV footprint with growing design wins, rising OEM demand and new production capacity that can fuel automotive growth through 2028.
VSH's sharp sell-off may offer a buy-the-dip opportunity as demand, backlog, margins and the Vishay 3.0 strategy point to improving fundamentals.
VSH's Vishay 3.0 strategy lifts revenues, margins and backlog as stronger demand and pricing actions support long-term margin expansion.
VSH's massive factory expansion is starting to lift margins, but profitability gains depend on demand keeping pace with rising capacity.
Does Vishay Intertechnology (VSH) have what it takes to be a top stock pick for momentum investors? Let's find out.
VSH is gaining automotive semiconductor share as EV platform wins, rising vehicle electronics demand, and OEM diversification strengthen long-term growth prospects.
Vishay Intertechnology (VSH) shares have started gaining and might continue moving higher in the near term, as indicated by solid earnings estimate revisions.
Vishay's industrial segment gains momentum in Q1 2026, with AI infrastructure, smart-grid demand, and power investments emerging as key growth drivers.
Vishay (VSH) reported earnings 30 days ago. What's next for the stock?
Vishay Intertechnology opens 2026 with a record $1.6B backlog and AI-driven orders -- yet tariffs and export uncertainty loom over the Vishay 3.0 growth push.
Vishay Intertechnology (VSH) is well positioned for growth across aerospace, defense, industrials, and data centers, but faces near-term macroeconomic headwinds. VSH ended Q1'26 with a $1.6B backlog for a book-to-bill ratio of 1.34x as well as double-digit top-line growth, signaling robust demand across its market verticals. Despite strong market momentum, elevated materials costs and trade tariffs threaten VSH's ambitious 2028 margin targets and justify a Hold rating.
Vishay's 294.8% YTD surge is backed by AI power demand, EV and industrial recovery, defense growth, and a rising backlog.