Ceva (CEVA) reported its fiscal 2025 Q2 earnings on August 11, 2025. The results significantly missed expectations with a substantial widening of losses and a decline in revenue. The company posted a net loss of $-3.70 million, a 1172.9% increase from a $-291,000 loss in the same period a year ago. Revenue also decreased by 9.7% to $25.68 million, with no guidance raise observed.
Revenue Ceva's revenue in Q2 2025 fell 9.7% year-over-year to $25.68 million, driven by a contraction in both licensing and royalty streams. Licensing and related revenue totaled $15.02 million, while royalties contributed $10.66 million. The overall decline reflects softer demand across key segments and challenges in the lower-end smartphone market. The sequential growth in royalties and licensing activity, however, signals some stabilization in the business.
Earnings/Net Income Ceva's financial performance deteriorated sharply, with the company reporting a net loss of $-3.70 million in Q2 2025, a 1172.9% increase in losses compared to a $-291,000 loss in Q2 2024. On a per-share basis, the loss expanded to $-0.15 per share, representing a 1400% increase from a $-0.01 per share loss in the prior-year period. The widening losses reflect higher operating expenses and lower top-line performance, despite relatively stable gross margins.
The sharp deterioration in earnings indicates a poor performance in the quarter, with the company's losses expanding at a significant rate.
Price Action Following the earnings report, Ceva's stock price declined sharply. During the latest trading day, shares fell 8.49%, and the stock also dropped 1.39% over the most recent full trading week. The month-to-date decline stands at 8.06%, reflecting investor disappointment with the results and lackluster guidance.
Post-Earnings Price Action Review A strategy of purchasing
shares after a revenue increase quarter-over-quarter on the earnings release date has historically underperformed. Over the past three years, the strategy yielded a return of -11.84%, compared to a 45.70% return for the benchmark. The resulting excess return of -57.54% and a compound annual growth rate of -4.25% highlight the strategy's poor performance. The maximum drawdown of 0.00% further indicates the strategy's inability to withstand market volatility, making it a high-risk, low-reward approach.
CEO Commentary Amir Panush, Ceva's CEO and Director, expressed confidence in the company's market leadership in Edge AI, noting strong licensing execution with 13 agreements, including five first-time customers and four high-impact NPU deals. He highlighted the growing integration of AI in consumer devices and the increasing economic value of the AI-driven licensing model. Sequential royalty growth and a 21% sequential increase in consumer IoT shipments were also noted as positive indicators. Challenges include weaker smartphone demand at the lower end, but Panush expects growth from a major U.S. OEM using Ceva’s 5G technology. He remains optimistic about opportunities in AI, automotive, and infrastructure, calling the 20 billion shipped devices milestone a “launch pad” for future growth.
Guidance Ceva provided Q3 2025 revenue guidance of between $26 million and $30 million, with gross margins of 87% on a GAAP basis and 88% on a non-GAAP basis. The company expects operating expenses to remain similar to Q2 and anticipates stronger royalty growth in the second half of the year, driven by consumer IoT, Wi-Fi 6, and smartphone share gains at the U.S. OEM. Ceva reiterated its long-term goals of achieving double-digit non-GAAP net income growth compared to 2024 and expects sequential royalty growth as customers build toward the holiday season.
Additional News Recent industry developments include significant geopolitical tensions affecting trade dynamics and ongoing regulatory changes impacting global markets. In the technology sector, advancements in AI and robotics continue to gain traction, with the 2025 World Robot Conference showcasing cutting-edge innovations. Additionally, new government policies on personal consumption loans and fiscal incentives for the service sector are being implemented, potentially influencing investment flows. In the automotive space, major players like
and
are recalibrating strategies to compete with emerging domestic manufacturers, while companies such as
and
navigate U.S. export restrictions.
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