Marvell Technology shares took investors on a wild ride Tuesday evening, initially dropping 5% before rocketing 14% higher once CEO Matt Murphy laid out the company’s growth plans.
Marvell Technology, Inc., MRVL
The chipmaker posted third-quarter adjusted earnings of 76 cents per share on revenue of $2.08 billion. Analysts had expected 74 cents per share on revenue of $2.07 billion.
Data center revenue reached $1.52 billion, growing 38% from last year. The segment makes up most of Marvell’s total sales and came in just above Wall Street’s $1.51 billion estimate.
Murphy credited “strong demand for our data center products” for the quarter’s results. The company projected fourth-quarter earnings of 79 cents per share, plus or minus 5 cents, matching analyst forecasts.
Revenue for the current quarter is expected at $2.2 billion, plus or minus 5%. Analysts were looking for $2.18 billion.
The muted guidance initially spooked investors. But Murphy delivered a surprise during the earnings call.
The forecast excludes the pending Celestial AI acquisition. Murphy said the company expects roughly $10 billion in total revenue for next fiscal year.
Shares surged nearly 10% in premarket trading Wednesday, building on the after-hours gains. The stock had been down more than 15% for 2025 before the earnings report.
Marvell announced it will acquire AI startup Celestial AI in a deal valued at $3.25 billion. Celestial shareholders will receive $1 billion in cash and 27.2 million Marvell shares worth $2.25 billion.
The acquisition gives Marvell access to photonics technology. This approach uses light instead of electrical signals to connect AI chips with memory chips.
Big cloud companies plan to install photonics technology in 2027 or 2028 for large-scale applications. Marvell expects meaningful revenue from Celestial starting in the second half of fiscal 2028.
The company projects Celestial will hit $500 million in annualized revenue by Q4 fiscal 2028. That figure should double to $1 billion by Q4 fiscal 2029.
Marvell helps Amazon and Microsoft build custom AI chips, according to JP Morgan analyst Harlan Sur. The company competes with Broadcom and Nvidia in the custom chip space.
As part of the Celestial deal, Marvell issued a warrant to Amazon. The agreement lets Amazon buy up to $90 million worth of Marvell stock, about 1 million shares, based on its purchases of photonic products through 2030.
The exercise price sits at roughly $87. The deal is expected to close in the first quarter of 2026.
Marvell’s custom chip business is projected to grow 20% next year. Murphy said the company doesn’t expect major quarterly swings in custom chip revenue.
UBS analyst Timothy Arcuri rates Marvell as a Buy with a $110 price target. He believes most customers are diversifying their chip suppliers, using multiple GPU and ASIC vendors.
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