Amkor Technology (AMKR) announced plans to offer $1 billion in convertible senior notes due 2031, targeting qualified institutional buyers through a private placement. The stock was trading around $71.41 at the time of the announcement, near its 52-week high of $79.23.
Amkor Technology, Inc., AMKR
The notes will mature on July 15, 2031, with interest paid semi-annually. Initial purchasers have the option to pick up an additional $150 million within 13 days of issuance.
Amkor can redeem the notes for cash starting May 15, 2029, if its stock price exceeds 130% of the conversion price for a set period. The redemption price equals the principal plus accrued interest.
The company plans to use the proceeds to fund capped call transactions, which are designed to limit dilution from any note conversions. The rest goes toward general corporate purposes and capital expenditure.
Noteholders can convert under certain conditions, with Amkor settling in cash and, if applicable, common stock. The exact interest rate and conversion terms will be set at pricing.
The offering comes fresh off a strong Q1 2026 earnings report. Amkor posted EPS of $0.33 against analyst estimates of $0.23, a beat of roughly 43%. Revenue came in at $1.68 billion, up 27.5% year-over-year and ahead of the $1.63 billion consensus.
The earnings beat triggered a round of upward revisions from Wall Street. Needham raised its price target from $65 to $90 and kept a Buy rating, citing revenue and gross margin outperformance.
Morgan Stanley lifted its target from $45 to $69 but held an Equal Weight rating. B. Riley Financial moved its target from $65 to $70, maintaining a Neutral stance — a target that sits just below the current price.
The average analyst rating sits at Hold, with a consensus price target of $62.75. Four analysts rate the stock a Buy; seven have it at Hold.
It hasn’t been all buying. Insiders sold a combined 42,500 units of stock over the last 90 days, worth roughly $2.1 million. EVP Mark N. Rogers sold 5,000 units at $59.43 in mid-April. Director Guillaume Rutten sold 20,000 units at $48.80 in late February.
Corporate insiders still hold about 26.4% of the company. Institutional investors own 42.76%.
The stock carries a P/E ratio of 47.15 and a beta of 1.94. Its 50-day moving average sits at $51.53, well below the current price, reflecting the sharp post-earnings move higher.
Amkor’s debt-to-equity ratio is 0.28, with a current ratio of 2.27, pointing to a solid liquidity position heading into the capital raise.
Q2 2026 guidance also came in above Needham’s estimates and market consensus, according to the firm’s post-earnings note.
Analysts forecast full-year 2026 EPS of $1.62. Revenue grew 12.7% over the last twelve months to $7.1 billion.
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