New York, Feb 6, 2026, 18:12 EST — After-hours
- Lam Research climbed roughly 8% in after-hours action, last seen near $231. Earlier, the stock moved in a $214 to $232 intraday range.
- Chip-linked stocks jumped, with investors zeroing in on major cloud companies ramping up their AI infrastructure budgets.
- Lam put out a $0.26 quarterly dividend. The calendar also notes a COO transition in March.
Lam Research (LRCX.O) jumped $17.6, or 8.2%, to $231.01 after hours Friday, with shares bouncing between $214.23 and $232.41 earlier in the day. The chip equipment company started the session at $220.95, following a $213.31 finish on Thursday.
AI stocks snapped back sharply, with traders piling in on hopes that surging cloud budgets will keep chipmakers humming. Amazon laid out plans to hike capital spending by over 50%—mostly targeting data centers and gear—and Alphabet rolled out a similar commitment earlier in the week. That news sent chip shares rallying, with the PHLX semiconductor index tacking on 5.7%. “There’s enough evidence that there’s real demand for AI products,” said Ross Mayfield, investment strategy analyst at Baird. 1
That pattern usually shows up fast for Lam. The company’s core business is etch and deposition tools—machines that carve and coat silicon. Investors often look to Lam, along with Applied Materials and KLA, for early clues on whether chipmakers are ramping up capacity for AI workloads.
Friday brought some stability to the broader macro environment. The University of Michigan’s latest survey put U.S. consumer sentiment at 57.3—a level not seen in six months. Still, the same report pointed out growing anxiety over jobs and the impact of tariffs on inflation. “We may have seen the trough in consumer sentiment,” said Oren Klachkin at Nationwide. 2
Lam announced Thursday it will pay a quarterly dividend of $0.26 a share, with the payout set for April 8 to holders registered as of March 4. The company noted that any future dividends still need board review and sign-off. 3
Lam, in a batch of corporate disclosures this week, named Cadence Design Systems CEO Anirudh Devgan to its board, according to an SEC filing. The company also locked in March 6 as the transition date for chief operating officer, with Sesha Varadarajan stepping in as Patrick Lord plans to retire. 4
Chief Executive Tim Archer, in a Form 4 filing, reported settling an equity award and now holds 1,203,939 shares directly following a transaction dated Feb. 4. 5
Lam last week projected third-quarter revenue at $5.7 billion, give or take $300 million, topping what analysts had penciled in and signaling solid demand for its chipmaking equipment. “Entering 2026, our expanding product and services portfolio is enabling the market’s transition,” Archer said at the time. 6
The trade cuts both ways. Cloud companies could pull back on spending once the AI buildout wave passes. Export restrictions, tariffs, or fresh supply-chain headaches? Those can quickly hit equipment demand, too. When that happens, high-multiple chip stocks don’t wait around — they can reprice sharply.
Now, attention turns to whether Friday’s action sticks when markets open Monday. Lam investors are eyeing two key dates: the March 4 dividend record, and the March 6 handover of COO duties.