Image source: The Motley Fool.
Nov. 24, 2025 at 4:30 p.m. ET
Need a quote from a Motley Fool analyst? Email pr@fool.com
Management highlighted that AI-driven demand and secular industry innovation produced double-digit order and revenue growth across both major business segments in Q4 fiscal 2025. Keysight (NYSE:KEYS) expects momentum to continue in core markets, with newly acquired assets accelerating growth in software, services, and precision navigation offerings. Tariff cost headwinds are expected to be mitigated faster than guided, and the company projects 2026 revenue expansion above its long-term 5%-7% target when excluding acquisitions. Segment leadership stated that the integration of acquired businesses will take twelve to eighteen months to fully realize profit margin improvements, resulting in "mild" EPS dilution early in the year before earnings benefit accrues. Keysight's financial model enables sustained high free cash flow, supporting large-scale capital returns and continued investment in R&D and product innovation.
Satish Dhanasekaran: Good afternoon, everyone. And thank you for joining us today. Keysight delivered outstanding fourth quarter results exceeding the high end of our guidance. Orders grew 14%, revenue increased 10%, and EPS rose 16%. This was a strong finish to a year of building momentum. Full-year orders and revenue rose 8%, and EPS increased 14%, surpassing our expectations and our long-term model. Keysight's leadership and differentiated solutions continue to drive demand across our markets. Our portfolio is enabling major innovation waves shaping our markets: AI and accelerated compute, non-terrestrial networks, 6G, next-gen semiconductors, and defense modernization.
We enter our fiscal 2026 with a strong solutions roadmap aligned to our customers' priorities, a healthy pipeline of sales opportunities across our end markets, and a broader set of capabilities. In Q4, we advanced our software-centric solution strategy with the acquisitions of Spirent, Synopsys Optical Solutions Group, and ANSYS PowerArtist. We're excited about the talent, the technology, and the expanded customer value we can bring to the marketplace. Our operating model continues to generate strong free cash flow, providing us the flexibility to invest in the organic growth of the business, pursue select strategic acquisitions, and return capital to shareholders.
In fiscal 2025, we achieved record free cash flow of $1.3 billion while investing in R&D, completing three acquisitions, and returning approximately $375 million through buybacks. Since the start of 2023, we have repurchased over $1.5 billion of shares or approximately 45% of free cash flow. Today, I am pleased to announce that our board has authorized an additional $1.5 billion share repurchase program supporting our ongoing capital return. Turning to business segments, the Communication Solutions Group orders grew for the sixth straight quarter, delivering double-digit order and high single-digit revenue growth for the full year. Wireline orders and revenue grew double digits both in Q4 and for the full year, setting a new record for the business.
AI infrastructure build-outs and rapid upgrades to the technology stack are driving greater design emulation and test intensity across multiple vectors. Our solutions span the entire workflow from silicon design to system validation and secure deployments. Rapid scaling of AI workloads is accelerating new designs across the technology stack from compute to networking interconnect, memory, and power. These transitions require redesigns across AI silicon, DSPs, switches, and transceivers, all of which are enabled by Keysight Solutions. Optical speed refresh cycles are also gaining momentum, moving from the 400 gig to 800 gig to 1.6 tera. In Q4, we collaborated with Broadcom to validate next-gen 1.6 terabit networking silicon and custom AI accelerators.
Keysight's silicon photonics solutions continue to drive advancements in CPO and LPO technologies of the future. With the breadth of Keysight's portfolio spanning physical layer solutions and AI emulation solutions built on technologies acquired from Ixia, we're making a meaningful contribution to the entire ecosystem. We're also capitalizing on robust demand from the scaling AI supply chain, including rack and cluster components, interconnects, and AI accelerators. Additionally, Keysight is actively involved with industry leaders and a growing number of consortia shaping the future of AI infrastructure. At the Open Compute Project Conference, we partnered with Meta to demonstrate large-scale validation of GPUs and networking prior to deployment into clusters.
The recently launched Keysight AI Data Center Builder won the Data Center Innovation Best Product Award at the European Conference on Connectivity in October 2025. Turning to wireless, orders and revenue grew high single digits for the full year and outperformed expectations driven by ongoing standards evolutions, non-terrestrial networks, and early 6G research. We saw steady 5G demand continue with releases eighteen and nineteen of the standard, which included enhanced uplink, advanced MIMO, and energy efficiency applications. Momentum increased in non-terrestrial networks, where we are engaged with industry-leading players to advance direct-to-cell connectivity and new LEO designs.
Spirent's best-in-class precision location simulators expand Keysight's offering by providing the accuracy and the realism needed to enable the next generation of positioning, navigation, and timing use cases. In 6G, the industry is shifting from pure research to early pre-standards designs. We are engaged with market-defining customers and are well-positioned to intercept the industry's priorities. We doubled our 6G collaborations over the past year, partnering with customers on several new applications, including channel sounding, network modeling using digital twins, FR3 spectrum, and advanced MIMO phased antenna design. In aerospace, defense, and government, we generated record orders while revenue increased by 8% for the year.
In an increasingly competitive global security and defense landscape, we're seeing strong customer engagement for defense modernization, enhanced deterrence capabilities, and operational readiness. Opportunities are expanding for Keysight as traditional primes, direct government entities, and a growing contingent of neoprimes and defense technology companies invest in emerging technologies in space and satellite, autonomous systems, and advanced antenna designs. This quarter, we secured key wins with US prime contractors to accelerate automated device verification. Our advanced component analysis capabilities are enabling fast phased array antenna over-the-air characterization for space, radar, and tactical communication. We won a deal from a US prime contractor for multiple solutions spanning high-performance spectrum analysis, signal generation, and network analysis for radar and air defense applications.
In Europe, momentum remains strong, as multiple primes invest in radar, EMSO, and space applications. Ministries of Defense in allied nations are leveraging our wideband signal recording capabilities to capture field data for lab analysis. With decades of leadership across RF, digital, and optical technologies, plus new federal-focused capabilities from Spirent, Keysight is well-positioned to capture growing defense demand. Now moving to the Electronic Industrial Solutions Group, orders and revenue both grew in Q4 and for the full year. In our general electronics business, orders grew for the fifth consecutive quarter and were up high single digits in Q4 and double digits for the full year, led by strength in the broad electronics supply chain, digital health, and education.
AI-related innovation and investment fuel demand for our differentiated solutions for high-speed PCB, interconnect, and component test. In digital health, interoperability, connectivity, and latency challenges in the medical device and systems workflow are driving investment. Advanced research spending in semiconductor, 6G, quantum, and photonics initiatives is also continuing at a steady rate, particularly outside of the US, where we benefit from our global scale and local engagement. In semiconductor, the pace of innovation and investment remains robust. Our semi-business delivered solid order and revenue growth this quarter, driven by steady demand for wafer test and lithography solutions, as AI-driven capacity expanded for leading-edge nodes, high-bandwidth memory, and silicon photonics.
As lithography and foundry customers expand their own advanced packaging offerings, we're enabling them to achieve unprecedented levels of precision and accuracy. Our deep collaboration with the world's leading foundries and integrated device manufacturers, as well as their respective customers, allows us to identify and address their end-to-end needs from early R&D to wafer fabrication. This year, we saw robust growth in silicon photonics. The investments that we initiated two years ago are allowing us to capture this inflection. While geopolitical and policy uncertainties remain, the outlook for semiconductor capacity and investment and new technology roadmaps remains positive in 2026. In automotive, despite mixed headlines, we continue to empower customer innovation, and demand has largely stabilized.
We're also expanding into new opportunities in grid modernization, where our combination of physical layer power, protocol layer, and network expertise is a differentiator. Our portfolio of solutions spans software-defined vehicles, EV charging, grid, and manufacturing. In-vehicle network compliance and security remain customers' priorities, as well as the design and test of new sensing architectures and optical connectivity. The recent acquisition of the Optical Solutions Group expands our photonics portfolio as interconnect and photonics complexity increases across the next generation of industrial and automotive applications. We continue to advance our go-to-market and customer engagement model to deepen long-standing strategic relationships while acquiring new customers and opportunities as the global supply chains shift.
Over the past year, our teams executed over 150 strategic engagements with market-defining innovators while expanding our customer base with more than 3,000 new logos. Our Keysight World events reached thousands of customers globally. We actively participated in industry events such as Mobile World Congress and European Microwave and over 30 standards bodies with industry leaders. We continue to maintain life cycle engagement with our customers through our growing services business, which has reached record revenue fueled by robust demand for KeysightCare premium offerings. In summary, fiscal year 2025 marks a return to growth, and as we look ahead, we're encouraged by the momentum in our business and end markets.
The technologies reshaping our world directly match Keysight's strengths, and we're leaning in with our first-to-market solutions, customer collaborations, and operational discipline. Even in an uncertain environment, we're confident in the fundamentals of our business model and in our ability to deliver long-term shareholder value. I'll now turn it over to Neil to discuss our financial performance and outlook in more detail.
Neil Dougherty: Thank you, Satish, and hello, everyone. Fourth quarter revenue of $1.419 billion was above the high end of our guidance range, up 10% on a reported basis or 9% on a core basis. Orders of $1.533 billion were up 14% on a reported basis or 12% on a core basis. Fourth quarter results included $22 million in orders and $11 million of revenue from the recently completed acquisitions, while currency added $4 million to orders and $7 million to revenue. Looking at our operational results for Q4, we reported a gross margin of 64%, operating expenses of $539 million, and an operating margin of 26%.
We generated $331 million of net income and delivered earnings per share of $1.91, which increased 16% year over year. Our weighted average share count for the quarter was 173 million shares. For the full year, Keysight generated revenue of $5.375 billion, up 8% as reported or 7% on a core basis. Gross margin was 65% and operating margin was 26%. FY 2025 earnings per share of $7.16 was up 14%. For the year, Keysight delivered core operating leverage of 39% inclusive of tariff impacts. Moving to the performance of our segments, the Communications Solutions Group generated fourth quarter revenue of $990 million, up 11% on a reported basis or 9% on a core basis.
Commercial communications revenue of $660 million was up 12%, driven by continued strength in wireline and growth in wireless. Aerospace, defense, and government achieved revenue of $330 million, an increase of 9%. Altogether, CSG delivered a 66% gross margin and a 27% operating margin. The Electronic Industrial Solutions Group generated $429 million in revenue, an increase of 9% on a reported basis or 8% on a core basis, with growth in semiconductor and general electronics. EISG delivered a 60% gross margin and a 25% operating margin. In FY 2025, software and services accounted for approximately 37% of Keysight revenue, while annual recurring revenue was 29% of the total.
Moving to the balance sheet and cash flow, we ended the quarter with $1.9 billion in cash and cash equivalents, generating cash flow from operations of $225 million and free cash flow of $188 million. During the quarter, we deployed $1.7 billion for acquisitions. We also repurchased 595,000 shares at an average price of approximately $168 for a total consideration of $100 million. Full-year share repurchases totaled $375 million or approximately 30% of the $1.3 billion in free cash flow generated this year. Now turning to our outlook, for 2026, we expect revenue in the range of $1.53 billion to $1.55 billion, representing 19% year-over-year growth at the midpoint. Excluding the recent acquisitions, this guidance assumes 10% year-over-year revenue growth.
We expect Q1 earnings per share to be in the range of $1.95 to $2.01 based on a weighted diluted share count of approximately 173 million shares. Keysight enters FY 2026 with a strong backlog and a robust sales funnel. As a result, we expect FY 2026 revenue growth, excluding acquisitions, to be at or above the high end of our 5% to 7% long-term target. The recently completed acquisitions of Spirent, the Optical Solutions Group, and PowerArtist are expected to contribute approximately $375 million of revenue in FY 2026.
We are working to realize in excess of $100 million of synergies and other operational efficiencies across Keysight, even as we sustain critical investment in R&D to ensure Keysight's expanded product portfolio intersects the growth opportunities in our markets. The acquisitions are expected to be accretive to Keysight's earnings twelve months post-close, while this implies some mild dilution in FY 2026, we expect the strength of our core business to enable FY 2026 EPS growth at or above our long-term 10% target. Now a few additional modeling considerations for the year. As expected, Keysight enters FY 2026 having fully mitigated the impact of tariffs implemented in April.
We now expect the August tariff increase to be fully mitigated in Q1, one quarter earlier than previously communicated. These expectations are reflected in our guidance. At current debt levels, annual interest expense is expected to be approximately $110 million. Capital expenditures are expected to be approximately $160 million, and we are modeling a 14% non-GAAP effective tax rate for FY 2026. In closing, we ended our fiscal 2025 with outstanding results and expect the momentum to carry into 2026. Technology innovation is driving demand for high-performance solutions across a broad range of industries. With our differentiated portfolio, technology leadership, and durable financial model, we are well-positioned to deliver sustained revenue and earnings growth.
With that, I will now turn it back to Paulina for the Q&A.
Paulina Sims: Thank you, Neil. Victoria, will you please give the instructions for the Q&A?
Operator: Of course. To withdraw your question, please press 2. Our first question comes from the line of Mehdi Hosseini with SIG. Your line is now open.
Mehdi Hosseini: Yes. Thanks for taking the question. Looking to the new fiscal year, Satish, how do you see the wireless trending? It has been kind of depressed for the past few years. And I'm just wondering if there's any catalyst on the horizon that gets you excited, or should we assume FY 2026 would be similar to the last year just as trending sideways. I don't have a follow-up.
Satish Dhanasekaran: Yeah. Well, thank you, Mehdi. You know, we're quite pleased with the results in '25 across all our segments and just this return to growth across all our regions that we saw this quarter. Specific to commercial communications, we're equally excited about the opportunities that we have in next-gen connectivity, compute, semiconductor, and we see a plethora of these technologies that we can really make meaningful contributions and grow our portfolio. Specific to your question on wireless, obviously, wireless exceeded expectations this year, in part driven by stabilization in 5G, which is normalized, and then some of the advanced technology areas that we've made investments in, starting to show some early results. Even prior to 6G hitting inflection.
So I would say, you know, we are optimistic about the wireless growth into 2026. But even ahead of the 6G inflections that may occur in the later part of the decade.
Mehdi Hosseini: Okay. And a quick follow-up as we look into the adoption of 1.6 terabyte per second wireline, would there be an additional growth acceleration for Keysight? Would there be any upgrade? And I'm asking the question because speed is to the extension of Keysight, and we get to those data rates. I wonder if there's any upgrade or pricing that would help with a higher growth rate. Any color would be great.
Satish Dhanasekaran: I think, you know, we really, as you know, Mehdi, our strategy has been to develop first-to-market solutions, which offer our customers greater value and the higher technological complexity. It really plays to our strength. And with regard to the wireline, there's a plethora of inflecting technologies across the entire AI stack, including the networking one that you referenced. We're well-positioned to continue the momentum into 2026.
Operator: Great. Thank you so much for your questions. Our next question comes from the line of Samik Chatterjee with JPMorgan. Your line is now open.
Samik Chatterjee: Yep. Thank you. Thank you for taking my questions, and congrats on the strong outlook here. Satish, you mentioned sort of the order acceleration through the year, but still when I take out the acquired business and the contribution there, there was a significant acceleration quarter over quarter from July to October.
Maybe if you can just sort of go ahead and into details there a bit in terms of how much of that was attributable to maybe more wireline and specifically related to production use cases, to R&D, and what sort of the driver of the significant acceleration because it seems like you're not only sort of confident about the order outlook here, but you also have visibility into the pipeline of that remaining robust? And I have a quick follow-up. Thank you.
Satish Dhanasekaran: Thank you, Samik. Yeah. Very pleased with the results in quarter four. And I may want to start by saying, clearly, revenue outperformance was driven by broad order strength that we saw, with both our CSG and EISG businesses growing double digits this quarter. And we also are quite pleased with the broad nature of the strength. All our regions grew. And it's pretty broad. And the areas that we have really been focusing on the portfolio with our growth initiatives have really kicked into early gear. Is the way I would characterize this. And then when we look ahead at the pipeline, you know, we see a very robust pipeline.
Obviously, our visibility, sixty to ninety days, is pretty good. And we see a robust set of pipelines that we can go execute. We're also seeing the underlying demand, whether it is the volume of the pipeline or the velocity of the pipeline or the conversion rate, the sort of metrics that we track, including the quality of the pipeline, they're all trending up. So we feel good about this, and we reflected that in our guide.
Samik Chatterjee: Okay. And maybe quickly, just for Neil. Neil, you outlined the synergy expectation here. Can you just give us a bit more details in terms of how to think about what sort of required for the acquisitions to go from EPS accretive to potentially the operating margins of those acquired businesses being similar to the corporate average or being operating margin accretive in the future?
Neil Dougherty: Yeah. Absolutely. So as I said in their prepared remarks, we're working to generate a $100 million of run rate synergies and other operational efficiencies across Keysight. Certainly, the majority of that, the large majority of that is coming from synergies as we integrate these acquisitions. You know, those of you that have covered Keysight for a while will know that our integration is complete, and we do a thorough integration that tends to take us on average twelve to eighteen months to complete. And a significant driver of cost synergies for us is when we get systems aligned. Getting these acquisitions into our ERP environment is a big driver, and that does take time.
So think as you think about FY 2026, relatively low realized synergies in these first few quarters until we can get to that cutover point. And then later in the year, I think you'll see a step function improvement in terms of synergy realization. Within a longer tail of smaller synergy realization into 2027.
Operator: Thank you for your questions. Our next question is from the line of Andrew Spanola with UBS. Your line is now open.
Andrew Spanola: Thank you. I wanted to ask a question on the wireline business. Generally, when we think about your R&D business, it sort of runs in front of the actual deployment of the hardware by a few years. And we think about 16 coming in 2030, it needs to be spending in '27. So I'm wondering how should we think about wireline? A lot of the hyperscaler build is going on pretty actively right now, and we're really just starting to see your wireline business pick up in the last few quarters. So I'm wondering what's different about the timing on the wireline business, the hyperscalers?
And what does that tell us about maybe the visibility and the longevity of this spend?
Satish Dhanasekaran: Yeah. I'd say there's a good question, Andrew. I'd say there's a couple of things going on. There's a couple of things going on. Obviously, the AI cluster and infrastructure build-outs are occurring, driven by the hyperscaler spend. You know, so the entire supply chain is sort of locking in grid and trying to deconstrain a constrained supply environment. So there's some of our impact, positive impact, to our business from that dynamic. But the longer-term overarching theme is the underlying waves of technology across the entire stack, all the way from compute to memory to storage to the infrastructure itself.
When it all comes together, I think we're making significantly bigger contributions and participating in that secular long-term trend from an R&D perspective. And so we feel good about both these opportunities in the short and medium term.
Operator: Thank you for your question. Our next question comes from the line of Atif Malik with Citi. Your line is now open.
Atif Malik: Hi. Thank you for taking my question. I have a question for Satish here. Satish, NVIDIA announced a $1 billion strategic investment in Nokia, developing AI-powered networks for future 6G RAN infrastructure. And I heard you still say that the latest part of this ticket for 16. In terms of the adoption, like, why wouldn't it be faster if the AI guys are supporting faster adoption of 6G? Just kind of help us out. Has anything changed with respect to your view on the inflection in 6G?
Satish Dhanasekaran: Yeah. This is a good question. I think when we think about any big technology role, such as a generational role, we start to look at what the standards are. And that's often a good mile marker for how deployments will occur. And so when we think about the standardization, we're thinking twenty-eight, twenty-nine-ish time frame when that process comes to some level of maturity before global deployments may occur. But specific to our portfolio, we're quite excited by the new opportunities the changing technology stack presents itself. I'll have Kailesh make a couple of comments on some of the collaborations that we're currently engaged in that we feel like will result in meaningful upside to the company.
Kailesh Narayanan: Thank you, Atif. See, we are working with operators, to your point, in helping them evaluate how GPUs and AI accelerators can be deployed in RAN environments. We have a solution portfolio that we have launched recently that allows them to model concurrent RAN and AI workloads in partnership with NVIDIA and an ecosystem of US operators. Recently, we also launched a solution to bring the concurrent exploration of compute as well as connectivity infrastructure using some of our wireline as well as wireless portfolio. All of this is exciting and is enabling the industry to further the 6G standard forward.
Operator: Thank you for your question. Our next question comes from the line of Rob Mason with Baird. Your line is now open.
Rob Mason: Yes. Good afternoon. My first question was going to direct to Satish. I was curious if you could just speak to the positioning business that you did acquire with the Spirent acquisition. It does look like that's, you know, really new capability that you bring into the portfolio. You made mention of it some in the aerospace defense commentary, but I'm just curious how you see that technology layering across the portfolio applicability and where do you think Keysight's relationships can add incremental value to that capability.
Satish Dhanasekaran: Yeah. Thank you, Rob. Great question. I'm very happy to answer it, as you can probably sense. You know, positioning is a crown jewel, right, inside the Spirent portfolio. Very unique capabilities with regard to positioning, navigation, and time. And you might say, what does it do? What do the products really do? Well, it simulates and emulates satellite environments in the lab. I used to be an engineer at Motorola, and even dating back to my time as an engineer, I've used these tools, and I'm a big fan of these tools. Inside the Keysight environment, I think it takes a completely different upgraded opportunity set because of our different end market exposure.
I would just start with automotive being an example. You know, you start to look at autonomous systems, integrated sensing, and communication in the context of 6G, aerospace defense with jamming, spoofing, and a whole bunch of new considerations that the security environment now requires. Quite excited by it. It'll take us some time to get it all plumbed together into our solutions portfolio. But, you know, this has been a gap in our portfolio. And one we feel really good about embracing. I was just meeting with the team a week ago, and very excited, as you can say.
And maybe Kailesh can give you a little bit more color on some specific applications that we're already starting to build into our value proposition.
Kailesh Narayanan: Yeah. Thanks, Satish. And as the LEO and NTN now scale, we obviously see significant opportunities to offer additional value to our customer base. We're looking to bundling in some of these capabilities with our classic physical and protocol layer solutions. And clearly, this is an upside for us. Satish talked about NTN design activity gaining momentum. What this does is it enhances our portfolio that we already have from testing antennas on satellites to going into satellite constellation emulation, orbital emulation, channel emulation, and so forth. So plenty of applications here to bundle this capability into Keysight's portfolio. That's going to drive business both in our aerospace defense as well as wireless market.
Rob Mason: That's very helpful. Just as a follow-up, Neil, was going to see if you could provide a little help on maybe the cadence of how the M&A revenue contribution folds in this year? It just looked like the first quarter guided contributions above the run rate. I know Spirent, in particular, had more second-half weighted calendar second-half weighted revenue. But how should we think about the cadence for the year?
Neil Dougherty: Yes. The revenue from the acquisitions, first of rough estimates at this point, 75% into CSG, about 25% into EISG. From a seasonality perspective, it does skew a little bit more heavily towards Q1 versus the remainder of the year. We have that approaching 30% here in the first quarter and then with the remaining three quarters, you know, more or less equal to one another.
Now I would, the small caveat, we're obviously basing that on how these businesses behaved in their prior environments and recognize that, you know, particularly as we bring people onto our their Salesforce is onto our sales structures, are likely going to, you know, relatively quickly start to shift and start to align with Keysight. So we'll have to see how that plays out. But right now, we're modeling close to 30% in Q1 and relatively evenly thereafter.
Operator: Thank you for your questions. Our next question comes from the line of David Ridley-Lane with Bank of America. Your line is now open.
David Ridley-Lane: Thank you. Wanted to dive into that sort of commentary that you'll have 10 plus percent adjusted EPS growth even with the dilution. Very bright in sort of thinking, we're not talking about significant EPS? Dilution? Any way to sort of put some parameters on that?
Neil Dougherty: Yeah. I mean, I just I described it in the prepared remarks as mild, so I think you could think of on a percentage basis as low single digits.
David Ridley-Lane: And then the other, you know, the other question I had just on the contribution is that core commentary that you were talking about in terms of the organic revenue growth sort of fit with the historical sort of forty-ish plus percent incremental margins? Or how should we think about the contribution of the M&A synergy benefit versus your core incrementals is where framing up the entire fiscal year? Thank you.
Neil Dougherty: Yeah. So, obviously, Spirent is a company, a public company, so you could go look. You know, those businesses were, as we inherited them, were operating at profit levels that were lower than Keysight's. But we have committed that on a post-integration basis, we expect an accretive decrease site operating margin. So over that twelve to eighteen month period of time, we're gonna make a pretty significant increase in driving improved profitability in those businesses via this $100 million synergy and other efficiency capture. In the core businesses, I think 40% incremental is the right way to continue to think about our business.
You know, the one thing that you need to factor in is tariffs, which again, we're still lapping. They're still not fully in our run rate. But as you saw this year, we came very close to delivering to the 40% core incremental wall of absorbing tariffs in the second half. So it's the right way to think about our business, but the tariffs do provide a marginal incremental headwind.
Operator: Thank you for your questions. Our next question comes from the line of Mark Delaney with Goldman Sachs. Your line is now open.
Mark Delaney: Yes. Good afternoon. Thank you very much for taking my question. In your prepared remarks, you said that for the full year, you'd expect your revenue growth to be at or above the high end of the 5% to 7% target model. As you think about some of the different businesses, A and D, wireline, wireless, EISG, can you give us a better sense of which one do you think will grow at that level? Or above and any end markets that might grow a little bit slower and build up to that consolidated view that you provided?
Neil Dougherty: Man, yeah, I mean, I think Satish has already provided you some color on the markets. I think as you think about wireline, that we're clearly benefiting from the investment wave in AI. We would think that AI is positioned to, you know, be a significant growth driver for the company going forward. I think if you think about wireless, Satish has already commented, but I think, you know, we do see growth from where we are at these levels. So you could think about wireless growing in line with, you know, our targeted growth levels for commercial comms, which was 4% to 6%.
I think in the industrial businesses, I think the 4% to 6% is probably the right way to think about it with strength in semi and GEMS being offset by something kind of some continued questions in automotive is the way I would think about it.
Mark Delaney: That is helpful. My follow-up was on tariffs. Neil, you said you expect to fully offset the August tariff sooner than you previously expected. Can you just provide some more context to what's allowing Keysight to achieve that somewhat sooner? Thank you.
Neil Dougherty: Yeah. I mean, a couple of things. So first of all, you know, last quarter, we guided you to if you took our comments from May, added a number of comments from August, we guided you to an annualized tariff range of $150 million to $175 million. And now it looks like we're trending towards the lower end of that range. So I think that's a benefit. And then with the strength of our business, you know, our pricing and surcharging mitigations are ramping a little than expected, and we're going to be able to offset those tariffs again on a dollars basis one quarter ahead of what was previously communicated.
Satish Dhanasekaran: And the other part that I would add, Mark, is also we decided intentionally to honor all outstanding orders, pre-tariff that was in our backlog. So effectively, we've been, you know, some of the shipments have all gone out. And so our forward-looking exposure at zero tariffs, if you will, is much smaller now.
Operator: Thank you. Thank you. Thank you for your questions. Our next question comes from the line of Aaron Rakers with Wells Fargo. Your line is now open.
Aaron Rakers: Yeah. Yeah. Thanks for taking the questions, and congrats on the results. Neil, I wanted to ask you about the operating margin. I know this feels like a long time ago, but back at the Analyst Day in 2023, you talked about, you know, attaining a 31% to 32% operating margin. I think the initial target was by fiscal 2026. Given the operating incremental leverage that you're seeing in the model, you know, layering in, you know, the acquisitions that you're doing and driving, you know, accretion over time from that. How are you thinking about the achievement of getting to that 31% to 32%?
Is that something that you think we could see in fiscal 2026, or do you think that, you know, might still be a little bit farther out? And I have a quick follow-up.
Neil Dougherty: Yeah. No. I definitely think it's further out. In fact, you know, it was, you know, we took '26 essentially off the table when our business went into the downturn over the 23% to '24 period. Obviously, that was not something that we had contemplated when we made that commitment. Our business was operating at 29% operating margin when we made the 31% to 32%, you know, when we put that number out there. Since that time, obviously, we've seen a correction in our business. As we as evidenced this year. Business is returning to growth. We're back to delivering strong incrementals.
We have an incremental opportunity here with these acquisitions that we brought in as we realize value capture from those. I think all of those things will enable us to deliver strong profit, strong growth in profit, profitability, and earnings over the time frame. But it will take us a while to climb back from these current 26% levels to the levels we were contemplating when we were at 29% back in fiscal 2023.
Satish Dhanasekaran: Aaron, just to add to what Neil said, the fundamental tenets of our value creation that I laid out in terms of our business model and operating model remain intact, including the downside performance that we delivered during a downturn. So those fundamentals remain intact. Equally excited about the opportunities for driving growth and capturing upside in the market, including the value creation incrementals we can deliver from the acquisitions post-integration.
Aaron Rakers: Yep. Very clear. And then as a quick follow-up and just maybe more thematically, we talk a lot about 800 to 1.6 T. Starting to hear you guys talk a bit more about, you know, pervasively about silicon photonics. And I'm curious about what your thoughts are with regards to that. When do we expect to see the volume deployments from the market, appreciating you're on the R&D side? I'm just curious about how you see that because there's a lot of discussion around scale-ups, scale across networking and AI, and obviously, you're at the tip of the spear in some of those architecture shifts. Thank you.
Satish Dhanasekaran: Yeah. I'll have Kailesh make some comments, and then maybe Jason can follow up on the silicon photonics as well.
Kailesh Narayanan: Yeah. You, Satish. Clearly, there is a scale element to it. Right now, the demand is up for high-speed silicon optics, interconnects, accelerators, custom silicon, and so forth. And this is driving both design and R&D activity that we're enabling as well as validating many of these racks that have lots of GPUs, complex cabling, interconnect, and networking. We're participating in validating those as well. So there's a scale element. And your question about the speeds, clearly, we're seeing a design refresh that is occurring throughout the network. And this is occurring at a faster pace. We are seeing concurrent activity in 400 G, 800 G, 1.6 Tera. The 1.6 terabit wave is still ahead of us.
We demonstrated this year solutions to enable 1.6, 3.2. As we outlined in our prepared remarks, we enabled Broadcom with their 1.6 terabit silicon. And what's interesting is there are multiple challenges that the industry is facing right now. Some customers are pushing speed. Others are pushing a decrease in power at the same speed. Yet another group of customers is working on improving density at the same speed, and all of this is occurring concurrently, driving a lot of R&D activity and design emulation intense test intensity. We're able to enable the industry with.
Jason Carey: Thanks, Kailesh. So I think he gave you a very robust overview of what's happening on the R&D side, and the beauty of Keysight is we have the ability to address customers' workflows all the way from R&D, you know, into validation and into manufacturing. And so certainly seeing the benefit of AI-driven investments come through in some of our semi businesses, where foundry investment, as you know, Aaron, has been happening on the front end this year. We've sold a double-digit number of systems, you know, to foundry customers on the silicon photonics side.
I would say it's still early days, and we expect continued growth next year from silicon photonics as capacity continues to expand and move, like you said, from R&D to commercial production.
Operator: Thank you for your questions. Our next question comes from the line of Mia Marshall with Morgan Stanley. Your line is now open.
Mia Marshall: Great. Good. Thanks. And congrats on this quarter. A couple of questions for you. Just in terms of the strength that you saw in aerospace and defense, could you speak to, you know, is this kind of the broadening of budgets that you had been expecting out of some of kind of the allies? Is this new program? Just kind of a little bit of where you saw that strength. And then maybe as a follow-up, noted kind of the positive uptick in the auto orders year over year. And so just wondering where you're starting to see some green shoots on the auto side. Thanks.
Satish Dhanasekaran: Yeah. We'll answer that, Meta. I was expecting you to ask me to size my AI business, but I was ready to do that. But since you asked me, I'm gonna skip forward to the aerospace defense business. So, record bookings this year built backlog, again. And I think it's a year where with considerable noise in the system, I just say in the quarter one, you know, we had this entire situation with administration change. We knew that was gonna be a challenging situation for our business. And I also predicted that things would improve as the year went by, and it did.
And then, as we look at Q4, we had the situation with continuing resolution, you know, spending environment from a direct government was a bit more moderated. But our prime contractor business was good. And I also we saw strength in Europe, in particular, I think this whole deterrence, and the associated technologies, our portfolio is well-positioned with that. And then, defense technology in general with neoprimes and others coming up with faster, more nimble platforms, are adopting Keysight solutions as well. So we feel good about our portfolio and the future focus. As we have said before, this is one of those businesses that is quite easier sort of to call on a long-term basis.
Really tough to call on a quarterly basis. But, our pipeline looks solid as we go into 2026. I'll have Jason make some comments on automotive.
Jason Carey: Hi, Meta. Thanks for the question. Yes. So you know, as we move through this year, we saw our automotive and energy business reach some level of stability at current levels. While orders were still down for the full year as we expected, they did grow year over year in Q4. We benefited, frankly, from a fairly soft compare last year. In Q4, but it was great to see that all subsegments of the business grew across software-defined vehicle, our electric vehicle, ESI, and even on the manufacturing side, small amount of growth. So investment's happening more in the software-defined vehicle space and vehicle network, advanced connectivity, advanced sensing and radar, as well as continued healthy chip design software renewals.
Within the quarter were healthy. And we're seeing on the EV and grid side, charging and grid simulation activity and solutions are really customer priorities. And then even in the manufacturing, some capacity investment side to software-defined vehicle electronics. And a few new customers within the quarter. So good to see things stabilize from here. We're not following an inflection, but, you know, we'll see how things progress here going into FY 2026.
Operator: Thank you for your questions. Our next question comes from the line of Tim Long with Barclays. Your line is now open.
Tim Long: Thank you. Satish, I wasn't gonna ask about scaling the AI business, but it sounds like you'll answer it. So let's start with that one. If you don't mind, maybe just give us an idea of when you look at wireline and semis and kind of the overall business, kind of what's it doing for you? And then secondly, if you could just talk about software and services, 37% on a year. I think in the slideshow, it says going up another 300 basis points. With the M&A. So it gets you to 40%, a pretty healthy number. What's the outlook for moving that with the M&A and kind of the way things are going? In AI and software overall?
Are you thinking that we'll see a continued move upward in kind of the complexion of the business coming from the software and services side? Thank you.
Satish Dhanasekaran: Thank you, Tim. First, I would say that our wireline business had a record year, growing double digits this year. And, you know, if you look at the plethora of contributions that we're making towards next-gen technologies that are attributable to this entire AI ecosystem. And AI clusters and the additional infrastructure that's being built, I would say, you know, it's roughly half of our wireline business is seeing that impact because it's a broad, again, it's a broad set of portfolio of tools. We bring across physical and protocol layers of emulation. So and the wireline business of Keysight is, you know, if you look at the commercial communications, you know, it's a little under half of the business.
With wireless still being a little over half. So that sort of gets you to see it. And that part of the business is growing strongly with robust adoption from customers across the entire tech stack that we referenced before. The second part of the question is really about software and services, and this has been a focused area of strategy for us for a long period of time, and there's more upside for us as we move forward.
Obviously, the addition of the Optical Solutions Group and Spirent and the PowerArtist give us a meaningful uplift right away, but also the ability to continue to add more content and create life cycle value for customers and capture that value for the P&L. So we're quite excited by that as we look forward.
Operator: Thank you for your questions. Our next question comes from the line of Rob Jamieson with Vertical Research Partners. Line is now open.
Rob Jamieson: Hey, guys. Congrats on the quarter. Hey. So just wanted to touch on R&D and just some of the investments. Just approaching 19% of sales this year. First, just talk a little bit about where you're investing the most heavily, whether that's AI and data center or some of the 5G advanced stuff that we talked about last quarter. And then as we look ahead, actually think about R&D intensity going forward just with Experian, Optical Solutions Group, and PowerArt. You know, just given the software nature there and wanting to keep your competitive advantage, just how should we think about, you know, prioritization there going forward?
Satish Dhanasekaran: Yeah. Thank you. Well, first, I would say that, you know, we look at the entire portfolio, we have a cohesive portfolio of physical layer protocol layer emulations, and into applications such as the design space. And we see opportunities in the physical layer to refresh our portfolio of offerings. As the new technologies come in and customers are ready for adoption. So you're we're in between that refresh phase of investment right now. Over the next eighteen months, feel really good about the new product introductions that are, that we have that we're continuing to work on. And so you're seeing that not only in the traditional wireless, but also in different technology and in AI.
So you're seeing a little bit of increase in R&D spending associated with that. But I do believe that these products and solutions are gonna help us outperform our market. Under a range of conditions, so that's why we're doing it. With regard to, you, your point is well taken with regard to the software assets. They typically run north of our company average. And so I'll let Neil sort of help you with the modeling of it.
Neil Dougherty: Yeah. I mean, I think as we think about integration, as we said in some of our prior comments, the primary area is the focus are on leveraging our go-to-market, leveraging our back office. That being said, there may be some opportunities as we breathe need async in the portfolio to align and share some costs. But, you know, primarily, we're looking for leverage in other parts of the panel.
Rob Jamieson: Okay. That's helpful. Thank you. And then just free cash flow, just solid again this quarter. Anything to call out in terms of some of the drivers or levers there? And then as we look into '26, just how should we think about conversion, you know, for the full year? I know you've probably got some acquisition-related cash expenses, but would you still expect to be above, you know, that 90 plus percent long-term conversion rate that you're targeting?
Neil Dougherty: Yeah. I mean, I think we expect to continue to expect good conversion of non-GAAP net income into profitability or into free cash flow. That's how we track it. As you know, we do we will see some additional integration-related expenses that will put, you know, some pressure on free cash flow conversion during the year. But, again, I think if we step back and think about it from the grand scheme of things relatively, you know, a small proportion of the overall total, and therefore, we'd still expect strong free cash flow conversion next year.
Operator: Thank you for taking my question. Thank you for your questions. That concludes our question and answer session for today. I would like to turn the call back to Paulina Sims for any closing remarks.
Paulina Sims: Thank you, Victoria, and thank you all for joining us today. Have a good day. That concludes our conference call. You may now disconnect your line.
When our analyst team has a stock tip, it can pay to listen. After all, Stock Advisor’s total average return is 981%* — a market-crushing outperformance compared to 187% for the S&P 500.
They just revealed what they believe are the 10 best stocks for investors to buy right now, available when you join Stock Advisor.
See the stocks »
*Stock Advisor returns as of November 24, 2025
This article is a transcript of this conference call produced for The Motley Fool. While we strive for our Foolish Best, there may be errors, omissions, or inaccuracies in this transcript. Parts of this article were created using Large Language Models (LLMs) based on The Motley Fool's insights and investing approach. It has been reviewed by our AI quality control systems. Since LLMs cannot (currently) own stocks, it has no positions in any of the stocks mentioned. As with all our articles, The Motley Fool does not assume any responsibility for your use of this content, and we strongly encourage you to do your own research, including listening to the call yourself and reading the company's SEC filings. Please see our Terms and Conditions for additional details, including our Obligatory Capitalized Disclaimers of Liability.
The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.