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All Stocks (124)

Company Market Cap Price
ELTK Eltek Ltd.
PCBs are a type of electronic component; Eltek's output qualifies under Electronic Components as a broader categorization of its products.
$57.05M
$8.49
+3.41%
LAZR Luminar Technologies, Inc.
Sensors and electronic components are integral to the LiDAR hardware Luminar sells.
$56.11M
$0.82
+3.04%
SYPR Sypris Solutions, Inc.
Electronic Components manufacturing aligns with Sypris Electronics' product mix and assemblies.
$49.05M
$2.13
-0.47%
AIRG Airgain, Inc.
Airgain has historically designed embedded antennas and connectivity components, aligning with direct production of electronic components.
$48.33M
$4.13
+0.73%
UEIC Universal Electronics Inc.
Electronic Components: sensors, RF/IR control modules and related hardware used in devices.
$44.28M
$3.31
+0.91%
SODI Solitron Devices, Inc.
Solitron designs, manufactures and sells electronic components, i.e., general semiconductor components.
$41.85M
$21.50
CVU CPI Aerostructures, Inc.
Electronic components and subsystems for pods and radar systems.
$37.01M
$2.83
+3.66%
IPWR Ideal Power Inc.
Electronic components category representing semiconductor devices and related components.
$33.40M
$3.99
+2.57%
MOBX Mobix Labs, Inc.
Electronic components and discrete parts forming Mobix’s core products.
$25.32M
$0.48
+6.06%
IEHC IEH Corporation
IEH designs and manufactures electronic components, specifically high-reliability Hyperboloid connectors used in defense, aerospace, and space applications.
$23.60M
$10.00
LEDS SemiLEDs Corporation
LED chips and related semiconductor components are manufactured/sold, placing the company in the electronic components category.
$19.73M
$2.40
+8.37%
NSYS Nortech Systems Incorporated
Electronic Components manufacturing/assembly as part of EMS offering.
$18.97M
$7.14
+2.73%
RCON Recon Technology, Ltd.
Electronic Components: design and supply of specialized sensors and hardware components used in oilfield automation.
$18.86M
$1.32
+9.30%
SPRS Surge Components, Inc.
Directly distributes electronic components and hardware used in electronics.
$17.23M
$3.16
ELSE Electro-Sensors, Inc.
Electronic Components: sensors and related hardware components used in the monitoring systems.
$15.90M
$4.69
+1.96%
WIMI WiMi Hologram Cloud Inc.
Provides electronic components and hardware used in devices and systems.
$14.29M
$2.86
-0.69%
IZM ICZOOM Group Inc.
Directly sells electronic components, including semiconductors, discrete devices, passives, optoelectronics, and related design tools.
$12.08M
$1.04
+6.12%
TAIT Taitron Components Incorporated
Directly markets and supplies electronic components to customers as a primary business line.
$7.17M
$1.21
HIHO Highway Holdings Limited
HIHO produces electric/electronic components and subassemblies as part of its product portfolio.
$5.02M
N/A
MKDW MKDWELL Tech Inc.
Electronic Components: As a vehicle electronics manufacturer, MKDWELL produces or sources electronic components used in automotive hardware.
$4.73M
$0.18
-0.27%
LOBO Lobo EV Technologies Ltd.
LOBO designs and manufactures electronic components for its EV hardware.
$4.21M
$0.54
+0.22%
CCTG CCSC Technology International Holdings Limited Ordinary Shares
Interconnect components fall under electronic components, reflecting the hardware nature of their offerings.
$2.35M
$0.21
+1.15%
GCLWW GCL Global Holdings Ltd Warrants
Electronic Components: IT hardware components distribution aligned with Ban Leong's product mix.
$755700
N/A
WLDS Wearable Devices Ltd.
The Mudra devices incorporate electronic components and sensors, aligning with Electronic Components.
$485633
$1.85
-3.14%
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# Executive Summary * Geopolitical friction, particularly U.S.-China trade policy, is the primary driver of strategic change in the Electronic Components industry, forcing supply chain regionalization and creating significant cost and market access risks. * Explosive demand from AI and high-performance computing is creating a powerful growth cycle for specialized semiconductor and interconnect suppliers, separating them from the pack. * The long-term electrification of automotive and automation of industrial sectors provides a durable, secular demand floor for high-value sensor, power, and connectivity components. * The industry is bifurcated: companies exposed to secular AI and automotive trends are outperforming, while distributors and those tied to consumer electronics face near-term headwinds from inventory normalization. * Profitability is diverging, with technology leaders commanding premium margins while others face pressure from rising geopolitical costs and raw material volatility. * Strategic capital allocation is focused on mitigating supply chain risk by diversifying manufacturing and capturing secular growth opportunities in AI and automotive. ## Key Trends & Outlook The Electronic Components industry is being fundamentally reshaped by geopolitical tensions and volatile trade policies, shifting the focus from cost optimization to supply chain resilience. The ongoing U.S.-China trade conflict has escalated, highlighted by China's September 2025 anti-dumping investigation into U.S. analog ICs, which directly threatens firms like Analog Devices (ADI) with significant China exposure. This regulatory pressure, combined with tariffs that have inflated component prices by 10-30%, forces companies to re-evaluate their manufacturing and sourcing strategies, impacting margins directly. In response, firms are actively diversifying their manufacturing footprints away from China, as seen with ADI's move to secure capacity in Malaysia through a strategic collaboration with ASE Technology, and Bel Fuse Inc. (BELFB) expanding into India. Government incentives like the U.S. CHIPS Act ($52.7 billion) and the EU Chips Act (€43 billion) are accelerating this multi-billion dollar realignment, creating a new competitive landscape where geography is as critical as technology. TE Connectivity (TEL) has successfully mitigated tariff impacts through sourcing changes and a localized production footprint, with over 70% of its production localized. Counterbalancing these geopolitical headwinds is the explosive demand from the AI and High-Performance Computing (HPC) boom. The build-out of AI data centers is fueling a massive appetite for cutting-edge components, from advanced semiconductors to high-speed interconnects and power solutions. This trend is the primary growth engine for technology leaders like Broadcom (AVGO), whose products are essential for AI infrastructure, allowing them to command premium pricing and capture outsized market growth. Broadcom's AI semiconductor revenue is expected to reach $5.1 billion in the third quarter of fiscal 2025, representing a potential 60% year-over-year increase. The most significant opportunity lies in the secular growth of automotive and industrial markets, where increasing electronic "content per unit" from electrification and automation provides a long-term, high-value demand stream for companies like TE Connectivity (TEL) and NXP Semiconductors (NXPI). The primary risk remains geopolitical escalation, which could trigger further supply disruptions, export controls on critical materials, or sudden loss of market access, posing an existential threat to companies with highly concentrated supply chains. ## Competitive Landscape The electronic components market is comprised of distinct but interconnected players, including manufacturers who create components, distributors who manage the supply chain, and specialized semiconductor firms who drive technological innovation. Highly-engineered, diversified component manufacturers, such as TE Connectivity (TEL), employ a core strategy of designing and manufacturing a vast portfolio of critical, often proprietary, components like connectors, sensors, and power products. These products serve a wide range of high-growth, high-reliability end markets including automotive, industrial, aerospace, and data communications. Their key advantage lies in being deeply embedded with customers, leading to high switching costs, while diversification across end markets provides stability and scale offers procurement advantages. However, this model requires significant R&D and capital investment and necessitates managing a highly complex global manufacturing and supply chain footprint. TE Connectivity's focus on harsh environment applications in automotive and industrial markets, combined with a localized manufacturing strategy, exemplifies this model's resilience. In contrast, broad-line component distributors like Arrow Electronics (ARW) act as critical intermediaries. Their core strategy involves aggregating millions of products from hundreds of suppliers and managing the supply chain for a vast, fragmented customer base, providing value through scale, logistics, and design support. While asset-light compared to manufacturers and benefiting from broad market reach, their key vulnerability is operating on low margins and being highly susceptible to inventory cycles and the bullwhip effect, with limited pricing power and exposure to general economic conditions. Arrow Electronics' business is a direct reflection of overall industry health and is currently navigating the headwinds of inventory normalization and slowing tech spending. Finally, technology-leading semiconductor designers, such exemplified by Broadcom (AVGO) and Analog Devices (ADI), focus on developing market-leading, high-value intellectual property (IP) for specialized semiconductor solutions such as networking, analog, and RF. These firms typically operate a fabless or "asset-light" manufacturing model, outsourcing capital-intensive production. Their key advantages include high gross margins due to IP ownership and strong pricing power, enabling them to capture growth from technology inflections like AI. However, they face vulnerabilities such as heavy reliance on a few key foundry partners and significant R&D investment to maintain leadership, making them susceptible to geopolitical risks affecting the semiconductor supply chain. Broadcom's dominance in networking and connectivity chips for the data center market showcases how technology leadership in a critical niche can drive exceptional profitability and growth. ## Financial Performance Revenue performance across the industry is splitting into two distinct camps, driven by exposure to secular growth versus cyclical headwinds. Companies benefiting from secular tailwinds in AI and automotive electrification are demonstrating high single-digit or double-digit growth, effectively overcoming broader macroeconomic softness. Broadcom (AVGO) exemplifies this trend, with its AI semiconductor revenue expected to reach $5.1 billion in the third quarter of fiscal 2025, representing a potential 60% year-over-year increase, fueled by robust demand from data center build-outs. {{chart_0}} In contrast, distributors and companies with significant exposure to consumer electronics are experiencing flat-to-declining results. Arrow Electronics (ARW) is a clear example of a company bearing the brunt of the inventory correction cycle, where customers are pausing orders to burn through existing stock, leading to weak near-term sales. Arrow's global components sales were down 21% year-over-year in the third quarter of 2024 due to this cyclical correction in inventory, though its Q3 2025 revenue showed a 13% year-over-year increase, indicating a gradual market recovery. Profitability is a function of business model, with a wide gap separating IP-driven technology leaders from volume-driven distributors. Technology leaders like Broadcom (AVGO) command premium gross margins, often exceeding 50%, due to their proprietary intellectual property and strong pricing power. This allows them to capture significant value from technological advancements, such as the AI boom. {{chart_1}} Conversely, distributors like Arrow Electronics (ARW) operate on razor-thin margins, which are particularly vulnerable during cyclical downturns and periods of inventory correction. While diversified manufacturers like TE Connectivity (TEL) maintain solid margins, these can be pressured by the necessity to invest in supply chain diversification and manage raw material price volatility. Capital allocation is increasingly driven by the strategic imperative to build more resilient supply chains. This is not a discretionary choice but a direct reaction to the clear political and trade risks currently reshaping the industry. Companies are prioritizing investments that diversify their manufacturing footprints and secure critical raw material access. Analog Devices (ADI) provides a prime example of this trend, with its strategic collaboration with ASE Technology to acquire ADI's manufacturing facility in Penang, Malaysia. This move aims to enhance supply-chain resilience and support future growth by expanding manufacturing capabilities and achieving greater operational flexibility and scale. The balance sheets of industry leaders are generally robust, reflecting years of strong cash flow generation, particularly among the high-margin semiconductor players. This financial strength is a key enabler, providing the flexibility to fund supply chain diversification, invest in research and development for next-generation technologies like AI, and weather near-term cyclical downturns. TE Connectivity (TEL), for instance, maintains a strong financial position that supports consistent investment in its diversified operations and returns to shareholders. {{chart_2}}

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