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Today is shaping up negative for BE Semiconductor Industries N.V. (AMS:BESI) shareholders, with the analysts delivering a substantial negative revision to this year's forecasts. Both revenue and earnings per share (EPS) forecasts went under the knife, suggesting analysts have soured majorly on the business.
Following the downgrade, the current consensus from BE Semiconductor Industries' 19 analysts is for revenues of €629m in 2025 which - if met - would reflect an okay 3.9% increase on its sales over the past 12 months. Statutory earnings per share are anticipated to fall 10% to €2.03 in the same period. Previously, the analysts had been modelling revenues of €708m and earnings per share (EPS) of €2.49 in 2025. It looks like analyst sentiment has declined substantially, with a substantial drop in revenue estimates and a considerable drop in earnings per share numbers as well.
See our latest analysis for BE Semiconductor Industries
Despite the cuts to forecast earnings, there was no real change to the €128 price target, showing that the analysts don't think the changes have a meaningful impact on its intrinsic value.
Of course, another way to look at these forecasts is to place them into context against the industry itself. We can infer from the latest estimates that forecasts expect a continuation of BE Semiconductor Industries'historical trends, as the 5.2% annualised revenue growth to the end of 2025 is roughly in line with the 5.3% annual revenue growth over the past five years. By contrast, our data suggests that other companies (with analyst coverage) in a similar industry are forecast to see their revenues grow 9.5% per year. So although BE Semiconductor Industries is expected to maintain its revenue growth rate, it's forecast to grow slower than the wider industry.
The Bottom Line
The most important thing to take away is that analysts cut their earnings per share estimates, expecting a clear decline in business conditions. Regrettably, they also downgraded their revenue estimates, and the latest forecasts imply the business will grow sales slower than the wider market. The lack of change in the price target is puzzling in light of the downgrade but, with a serious decline expected this year, we wouldn't be surprised if investors were a bit wary of BE Semiconductor Industries.