NEW YORK, Feb 2, 2026, 14:53 (ET) — Regular session
- After a volatile session, Amphenol shares nudged up, clawing back some losses from last week’s drop.
- The key question remains: how much of 2026’s growth stems from acquisitions, and how much is driven by core demand.
- A broad rally in U.S. AI-related and industrial stocks lifted sentiment throughout the sector.
Amphenol shares climbed roughly 1.2% to $145.85 in afternoon trading Monday, bouncing between $141.02 and $148.36 earlier in the session.
This move is significant as Amphenol’s shares have grown volatile despite a standout quarter, with lingering doubts about the quality of its growth—how much is organic, acquired, or merely timing-related.
Last week, the connector and cable maker reported record results for both the fourth quarter and full year, with quarterly sales hitting $6.4 billion and adjusted diluted earnings at $0.97 per share. It projects first-quarter sales between $6.90 billion and $7.00 billion, alongside adjusted earnings of $0.91 to $0.93 per share. That forecast factors in roughly $900 million in sales from the recently acquired CCS business. CEO R. Adam Norwitt said, “We are pleased to have closed 2025 with record fourth quarter and full-year sales.” (Amphenol Investors)
In January, Amphenol closed its acquisition of CommScope’s Connectivity and Cable Solutions business. The company projects the deal will bring in around $4.1 billion in sales by 2026 and boost earnings per share by about $0.15, excluding acquisition-related costs. Norwitt highlighted that the acquisition enhances Amphenol’s fiber optic interconnect capabilities for IT datacom and communications networks. (Amphenol Investors)
Still, the stock took a hit after the results. Evercore ISI’s Amit Daryanani called the beat not “big enough,” and Barclays’ Guy Hardwick flagged the first-quarter outlook as possibly “not enough relative to expectations,” Barron’s reported. (Barron’s)
Wall Street rebounded sharply Monday, lifting the S&P 500 to fresh all-time highs while the Nasdaq gained ground as well. Investors responded to stronger factory data and returned to AI-focused stocks. Tim Ghriskey, a senior portfolio strategist at Ingalls & Snyder, highlighted “positive surprises” in earnings reports. On the data front, the ISM manufacturing PMI climbed to 52.6 in January — its first reading above 50 in a year, signaling expansion rather than contraction. (Reuters)
Peers also climbed. TE Connectivity rose roughly 1.9%, while Eaton jumped nearly 2.5% in afternoon trading.
Amphenol remains below Friday’s close of $144.08 despite Monday’s bounce, still clawing back from a 3.7% slide. The stock trades roughly 13.8% under its 52-week peak of $167.04, reached on Jan. 27, according to MarketWatch data. (MarketWatch)
Brokerage price targets climbed following the earnings report. Seaport Global bumped its target to $210 from $200. Citigroup also raised its target, moving it to $180 from $175, according to an MT Newswires piece featured on MarketScreener. (MarketScreener)
The risk for bulls is straightforward: if demand falters — particularly in data-center and network spending — the stock could take another hit. Investors are already questioning how much of the recent surge is tied to deals. Any hiccups in integration or a weaker margin profile from the big CCS acquisition would put the narrative to the test.
Traders are now focused on whether orders remain steady in IT datacom and if the CCS segment boosts profits as Amphenol has projected. MarketBeat shows the next earnings release is estimated for April 22, though the company hasn’t confirmed an exact date. (Marketbeat)