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If You Invested in Texas Instrument (TXN)

Semiconductors & Related Devices · Semiconductors · NASDAQ
$1,000 invested 1 Year Ago
$1,067
+6.7% total 6.7% CAGR
Bought on Mar 26, 2025 at $184.49
$1,000 invested 5 Years Ago
$1,046
+4.6% total 0.9% CAGR
Bought on Mar 26, 2021 at $188.20

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$1,000 Investment Over Time

TXN vs S&P 500

Year-by-Year Returns

TXN annual performance
Year Start Price End Price Annual Return Cumulative
2017 $73.58 $104.44 +41.9% +41.9%
2018 $105.57 $94.50 -10.5% +28.4%
2019 $94.45 $128.29 +35.8% +74.4%
2020 $129.57 $164.13 +26.7% +123.1%
2021 $162.22 $188.47 +16.2% +156.1%
2022 $190.60 $165.22 -13.3% +124.5%
2023 $163.21 $170.46 +4.4% +131.7%
2024 $169.26 $187.51 +10.8% +154.8%
2025 $186.95 $173.49 -7.2% +135.8%
2026 $177.52 $196.77 +10.8% +167.4%

About Texas Instrument

Semiconductors & Related Devices · NASDAQ

Texas Instruments Incorporated (Nasdaq: TXN) is a global semiconductor company that designs, manufactures and sells analog and embedded processing chips. According to the company’s own descriptions in recent news releases, its semiconductors serve markets such as industrial, automotive, personal electronics, enterprise systems and communications equipment. The company is based in Dallas, Texas, and its shares trade on Nasdaq under the symbol TXN.

Core business and product focus

Texas Instruments states that it generates the vast majority of its revenue from semiconductors, with the remainder from its well-known calculators. Polygon data notes that Texas Instruments is the world’s largest maker of analog chips, which are used to process real‑world signals such as sound and power. The company also has a leading market share position in processors and microcontrollers used in a wide variety of electronics applications.

TI’s own descriptions emphasize two main technology areas:

  • Analog chips – used to process real‑world signals and support functions such as power management and signal conditioning.
  • Embedded processing chips – including processors and microcontrollers that act as the computing and control elements inside electronic systems.

End markets and applications

In multiple news releases, Texas Instruments describes its chips as serving several key end markets:

  • Industrial applications
  • Automotive systems, including advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS) and software‑defined vehicles (SDVs)
  • Personal electronics
  • Enterprise systems
  • Communications equipment

The company also highlights that its semiconductor technology is used in areas such as advanced mobility, smart homes and digital health, energy infrastructure, robotics and data centers, as showcased in its demonstrations at CES 2026.

Automotive and autonomous driving focus

Recent announcements show Texas Instruments expanding its automotive portfolio. The company introduced the TDA5 high‑performance computing SoC family, which it describes as offering power‑ and safety‑optimized processing and edge AI to support up to Society of Automotive Engineers Level 3 vehicle autonomy. TI also unveiled the AWR2188 single‑chip, eight‑by‑eight 4D imaging radar transceiver to help engineers simplify high‑resolution radar systems, and the DP83TD555J‑Q1 10BASE‑T1S Ethernet PHY to extend Ethernet to vehicle edge nodes.

According to TI, these devices join its broader automotive portfolio for next‑generation ADAS and SDVs. The company states that these semiconductors enable quicker AI decisions, comprehensive perception and a unified in‑vehicle network, helping automakers bring higher levels of autonomy across vehicle models.

Business segments and financial reporting

In its third quarter 2025 financial results, Texas Instruments reports its operations in segments including Analog, Embedded Processing and Other. The Analog and Embedded Processing segments reflect the company’s core semiconductor focus. The company’s Form 8‑K filings reference non‑GAAP measures such as free cash flow and ratios based on free cash flow, which TI says provide insight into its liquidity, cash‑generating capability and the amount of cash potentially available to return to shareholders, as well as insight into its financial performance.

Calculators and education technology

Beyond semiconductors, Texas Instruments maintains an Education Technology division. In a joint release with ACT, this division is described as providing exam‑approved graphing calculators and interactive STEM technology. TI Education Technology is characterized as offering calculators and accessories that drive student understanding and engagement, with a focus on supporting real learning in classrooms. This aligns with Polygon data noting that the remainder of TI’s revenue beyond semiconductors comes from calculators.

Stated purpose and technology approach

Across multiple company news releases, Texas Instruments describes its core purpose as a passion to create a better world by making electronics more affordable through semiconductors. The company states that each generation of innovation builds on the last to make its technology more reliable, more affordable and lower power. TI emphasizes that this progression makes it possible for semiconductors to go into electronics everywhere.

Capital allocation and shareholder returns

Texas Instruments’ third quarter 2025 earnings release and related Form 8‑K highlight the company’s focus on cash generation and returns to shareholders. TI reports cash flow from operations and capital expenditures, and it discloses free cash flow as a non‑GAAP measure. The company also reports dividends and stock repurchases over trailing 12‑month periods. In a separate news release, TI announced a planned quarterly dividend increase and noted that this marks 22 consecutive years of dividend increases, describing the increase as consistent with its long‑term objective for dividends and its intent to return free cash flow to its owners over time.

Leadership and governance developments

In October 2025, Texas Instruments announced that its board of directors elected its president and chief executive officer, Haviv Ilan, to take on the additional role of chairman beginning January 2026, following the planned retirement of executive chairman Rich Templeton at the end of 2025. A corresponding Form 8‑K filing describes this leadership transition and notes that Mr. Templeton notified the board of his retirement and that the board appointed Mr. Ilan as the new chairman effective on that retirement.

Partnerships and ecosystem

Texas Instruments participates in partnerships that support the adoption of its technology. For example, Orthogone Technologies announced that it became a Texas Instruments Design Services Partner within TI’s global Design Services Network, leveraging TI’s Arm‑based processors, real‑time microcontrollers and analog technologies. In education, TI Education Technology announced a partnership with ACT to provide instructional resources and professional development focused on effective use of TI calculators during the ACT mathematics test.

Stock and regulatory reporting

Texas Instruments’ common stock trades on Nasdaq under the ticker TXN. The company files periodic and current reports with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, including Forms 8‑K that provide updates on earnings, dividend actions and leadership changes. These filings often incorporate the company’s news releases as exhibits and may include non‑GAAP financial measures alongside GAAP results, with reconciliations provided in the attached releases.

How Texas Instruments describes its role in electronics

In its own words, Texas Instruments positions semiconductors as central to making electronics more affordable and widespread. The company highlights that as its technology becomes more reliable, more affordable and lower power across generations, it enables electronics in areas such as vehicles, homes, infrastructure and industrial systems. Through its analog and embedded processing products, as well as its education technology offerings, TI presents itself as supporting both the underlying electronics and the learning experiences that help people use that technology effectively.

Market Cap
$171.7B
Current Price
$196.77
EPS
$5.45
Revenue
$17.7B
Net Margin
28.3%
View full TXN overview

Frequently Asked Questions

Texas Instrument investment returns

How much would $1,000 invested in Texas Instrument be worth today?

If you invested $1,000 in Texas Instrument (TXN) 10 years ago on 2016-03-28, your investment would be worth $3,481 today, representing a +248.1% total return, growing at a compounded rate of 13.3% per year (CAGR).

Has Texas Instrument outperformed the S&P 500?

Over the past 10 years, TXN returned +248.1% compared to +221.4% for the S&P 500, outperforming the benchmark by 26.8 percentage points.

What is Texas Instrument's average annual return?

The compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of TXN over the past 10 years is 13.3%, growing at a compounded rate each year. Individual years vary significantly — TXN's best recent year was 2017 (+41.9%) and worst was 2022 (-13.3%).

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