Wolfspeed shares sink on going-concern fears, slowing EV sales hit annual revenue forecast
Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®
Posted on May 9, 2025
2 min readLast updated: January 23, 2026
Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®
Posted on May 9, 2025
2 min readLast updated: January 23, 2026
Wolfspeed's shares fell 23% due to going-concern doubts and slowing EV sales, impacting its annual revenue forecast amid economic uncertainty.
(Reuters) -Chipmaker Wolfspeed's shares fell 23% on Friday after it raised going-concern doubts and forecast weaker-than-expected annual revenue as it grapples with slowing electric-vehicle demand amid economic uncertainty.
The company is squeezed between sluggish demand in the industrial and automotive markets, while rival Chinese manufacturers such as Sicc Co and EpiWorld International are gaining ground with inexpensive wafers, which are thin slices of semiconductor material used to make chips.
Wolfspeed's customers are also grappling with tariff-induced uncertainty, with General Motors trimming its 2025 profit forecast, while Mercedes-Benz had pulled its earnings outlook for 2025.
Its departing CFO Neill Reynolds said in a post-earnings call that the company may need to pursue in-court options to renegotiate its debt and that "going concern" language could be added to the quarterly filing.
Wolfspeed included the risk of "substantial doubt about the company's ability to continue as a going concern" in another regulatory filing on Thursday.
The company will cut its senior leadership team by 30%, its executive chairman Thomas Werner said. It forecast 2026 revenue below market estimates.
Wolfspeed's shares have fallen about 33% so far this year, after losing about 85% of their value in 2024.
"Difficulties refinancing the debt, continued cash burn and slowing demand in materials increased the specter of bankruptcy and will depress the stock for the foreseeable future," Charter Equity Research said.
Wolfspeed was set to lose more than $150 million from its market value of $689.2 million, if losses hold.
It said it expects to receive $600 million of cash tax refunds during fiscal 2026 under the Chips and Science Act.
But the future of the Biden-era legislation that promised subsidies for domestic chip manufacturing remains uncertain after U.S. President Donald Trump's administration called on lawmakers to repeal the federal funding.
(Reporting by Jaspreet Singh in Bengaluru; Editing by Pooja Desai)
The main topic is Wolfspeed's share decline due to going-concern fears and slowing EV sales impacting revenue.
Shares are declining due to going-concern doubts and reduced demand in the EV market.
Wolfspeed faces challenges from economic uncertainty, competition from Chinese manufacturers, and potential debt renegotiation.
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