Overview
Corning on Tuesday projected second-quarter core sales of about $4.6 billion, a figure that falls short of the Wall Street consensus of $4.63 billion compiled by LSEG. The announcement highlighted a divergence in the company’s end markets: persistent weakness in consumer electronics is damping volumes for specialty glass products, while demand tied to data-center infrastructure continues to lift its optical communications business.
Recent trading reaction
The company’s guidance drove a notable market response, with shares of the Gorilla Glass maker dropping more than 10% in premarket trading following the update.
Quarterly performance and segment detail
For the first quarter ended March 31, Corning reported core sales of $4.35 billion, which surpassed analyst estimates of $4.26 billion. Adjusted earnings were 70 cents per share, compared with expectations of 69 cents.
Within its business mix, the glass innovations segment - encompassing display and specialty materials - posted net sales of $1.42 billion in the quarter, a 1% increase versus the prior period. That modest gain reflects softer global smartphone demand and slower replacement cycles for consumer electronics, factors that have pressured volumes for Corning’s specialty glass products.
By contrast, the optical communications division benefited from increased investment in data centers. Net sales in that segment were $1.85 billion for the quarter, ahead of analyst projections of $1.7 billion. The company indicated that its fiber-optic products are seeing stronger traction as operators expand capacity.
Contracts and strategic customers
Corning noted it has signed long-term agreements with two hyperscalers to help meet connectivity needs for high-capacity data centers. These partnerships are described as similar in purpose to a previously announced $6 billion deal with Meta disclosed in January, and are intended to support the rising connectivity demands of large-scale data-center operators.
Implications
The company’s results and guidance illustrate a split outlook across end markets: steady momentum in optical communications driven by data-center spending, offset by continued softness in consumer-facing display and specialty glass demand. Management’s revenue forecast for the second quarter, slightly below consensus, underscores the near-term drag from consumer electronics even as other parts of the business expand.
Note: The article reports Corning’s published sales and earnings figures, its guidance for the upcoming quarter, segment-level net sales, and announced hyperscaler agreements as stated by the company.