Investors sold of out electronics component maker Sanmina (SANM 0.47%), and it wasn't hard to figure out why. The company posted fiscal second-quarter results that, while not bad, included guidance that fell notably short of analyst expectations. For this transgression, the market punished it by sending its share price more than 5% lower on the day. The S&P 500 index, meanwhile, did relatively well with "only" a 1.6% decline.

A mixed fiscal second quarter

For the quarter, Sanmina's net sales amounted to $1.83 billion. This was not only down from the $2.32 billion of the same period a year ago, it was lower than the consensus analyst estimate of $1.88 billion.

Non-GAAP (adjusted) net income also headed south, falling to $73.9 million ($1.30 per share) from the year-ago profit of $95.1 million. Yet this bettered the average pundit projection of $1.25 per share.

Sanmina said that its results were affected by macroeconomic uncertainty, but sounded a hopeful note on the immediate future. It quoted its CEO, Jure Sola, as saying that, during the second quarter, "We started to see positive movement in some end-markets that have been notably depressed for the last few quarters."

NASDAQ: SANM

Sanmina
Today's Change
(0.47%) $0.33
Current Price
$70.85
Arrow-Thin-Down

Key Data Points

Market Cap
$4B
Day's Range
$70.01 - $73.17
52wk Range
$57.52 - $91.12
Volume
124,308
Avg Vol
443,402
Gross Margin
8.41%
Dividend Yield
N/A

Weak guidance

Sola added that Sanmina was hopeful that it would see improvements in the fundamentals sequentially through this fiscal year. Its guidance didn't necessarily reflect that -- the company is expecting revenue of $1.8 billion to $1.9 billion for this current (third) quarter, with adjusted net income coming in at $1.22 to $1.32. Both ranges were under the consensus prognosticator estimates of $1.97 billion and $1.36, respectively.