Celestica posted a strong first quarter by every measurable standard — and the market still sold it off hard.
The electronics manufacturing company reported Q1 adjusted earnings per share of $2.16, topping the Wall Street consensus of $2.07. Revenue hit $4.04 billion, clearing the $3.95 billion estimate.
That’s a clean double beat. So why is the stock down?
The drop appears to be a case of elevated expectations meeting reality. When a stock has run up strongly heading into earnings, even a solid quarter can trigger a sell-off if investors feel the easy gains are already priced in.
Celestica Inc., CLS
Celestica’s Q2 outlook was also above estimates. The company guided for adjusted EPS of $2.14 to $2.34, versus the $2.13 consensus. Revenue guidance of $4.15 billion to $4.45 billion also came in ahead of the $4.17 billion estimate.
The company went further and raised its full-year numbers. Full-year adjusted EPS guidance was lifted to a range of $8.75 to $10.15, compared to the prior consensus of $8.96. Annual revenue guidance was raised to $17 billion to $19 billion, well above the $17.46 billion analyst estimate.
Those are not small revisions. The top end of the revenue range represents a meaningful step up from what the street had penciled in.
Celestica also bought back 0.1 million common of its stock for $20 million during the quarter.
Despite all of this, CLS fell roughly 14.7% to around $360.13 on Tuesday, according to Benzinga Pro data. That’s a sharp move lower for a company that just beat on every line.
The sell-off suggests investors are less focused on what just happened and more focused on what comes next. Celestica operates in markets tied to data centers and industrial technology — areas that have seen strong demand but also growing scrutiny around sustainability of that growth.
When expectations are already high, beating them isn’t always enough.
The Q1 report was released after the market close on Monday. By Tuesday morning, the stock was already under pressure, dropping sharply at the open and continuing lower through the session.
At $360.13 as of the time of writing, CLS is trading well off recent highs. The stock had carried a GF Value estimate of $96.93 before the drop — listed as significantly overvalued — which may have added to selling pressure as some investors used the earnings as an exit point.
The result is a reminder that in markets running hot on high expectations, a beat doesn’t guarantee a pop.
At the time of publication, CLS was trading at $360.13, down 14.70% on the day.
The post Celestica (CLS) Stock Drops 14% Even After Beating Earnings — Here’s Why appeared first on CoinCentral.


