Supply-chain digitisation lifts Zebra Technologies outlook; 2026 revenue guidance 9%–13%
- • Zebra reported stronger-than-expected Q4 sales and forecasts 2026 revenue growth of 9%–13%. • Zebra's devices and edge-to-cloud software; data-capture demand and rising software/service attach rates boost recurring revenue. • Supply-chain normalization and better component availability let Zebra meet lead times while investing in real-time location services and asset-intelligence.
Supply-chain digitisation lifts Zebra’s outlook
Zebra Technologies reports stronger-than-expected fourth-quarter sales and issues a full-year outlook that top analyst estimates, with management forecasting 2026 revenue growth of 9%–13% compared with analyst expectations near 9.9%. The company attributes the guidance to sustained demand for automated data-capture hardware and increasing adoption of its software and services that help customers track assets, inventory and people across logistics, retail and manufacturing operations.
Zebra is leaning on a mix of rugged mobile computers, barcode and RFID readers, and edge-to-cloud software to secure multi-year deals with enterprises modernising warehousing and field operations. Management highlights rising attach rates for software subscriptions and professional services, which provide higher-margin recurring revenue and extend lifetime value beyond hardware sales. Customers facing labour shortages and the need for faster fulfilment continue to prioritise automation investments that integrate Zebra’s devices into broader warehouse execution and asset-intelligence systems.
The company’s outlook also reflects supply-chain normalisation and improved component availability that allow Zebra to meet customer lead times while managing pricing and costs. Management signals continued investment in product development for real-time location services and enterprise asset intelligence, positioning the firm to capitalise on growing interest in visibility platforms that tie physical operations to analytics and optimisation tools.
Rival moves underscore machine-vision momentum
Competitors in industrial automation are also advancing. Cognex reports stronger guidance and progress on AI-enabled machine vision, signalling growing market appetite for computer-vision solutions that complement barcode and RFID systems in automated inspection, robotics and guided fulfilment.
Hardware cost pressures remain a watchpoint across the sector
Meanwhile, broader hardware makers flag headwinds from rising component costs and margin pressure, with firms such as Cisco citing higher memory-chip costs affecting near-term profits. Industry watchers note that guidance and cost dynamics at technology and automation suppliers will shape capital spending cycles among retailers, logistics providers and manufacturers.