New York, Feb 9, 2026, 13:22 EST — Regular trading hours.
- Marvell Technology climbed roughly 2.3% to $82.16, bouncing between $78.69 and $82.44 throughout Monday’s session.
- The chipmaker plans to release its fourth-quarter and full-year fiscal 2026 results on March 5, with a conference call scheduled for later that day. 1
- Chip and AI-infrastructure stocks bounced back, with Nvidia, AMD, and Broadcom joining the move higher. 2
Marvell Technology shares pushed higher Monday, with chip stocks catching a bid and the company locking in a date for its upcoming results.
This matters: Marvell’s next update lands soon, giving one of the sharper reads on data-center spend and the networking “plumbing” that keeps big AI clusters running — a supply chain segment that often appears stable, until it suddenly isn’t.
The rebound in the stock follows a volatile run for AI-related shares, with investors rapidly shifting focus between so-called “hardware winners” and the rest.
Marvell plans to report its fourth fiscal quarter and full-year 2026 results on Thursday, March 5, followed by a call at 1:45 p.m. Pacific. The call notice didn’t include any guidance.
Investors aren’t just dissecting last quarter’s numbers—they’re zeroed in on management’s take on demand, especially the outlook for cloud and carrier orders. The key question: are customers accelerating purchases, or are they hitting pause?
Marvell’s focus is on optical and high-speed interconnect—the hardware shuttling data throughout data centers. It doesn’t offer the marquee AI “training” chips, though its position near the spending cycle often means the stock trades in line with the sector.
Marvell wrapped up its purchase of Celestial AI last week, calling out the deal’s importance for optical interconnect technology aimed at “scale-up connectivity.” The company outlined a revenue trajectory that’s set to kick in years down the line. CEO Matt Murphy said the acquisition fits right into Marvell’s “long-term strategy” targeting connectivity in next-gen AI systems. 3
The broader market held its ground, edging up as bargain hunters reappeared following last week’s volatility. “It seems to be the traditional buy-the-dip by retail investors,” said Oliver Pursche, senior vice president and adviser at Wealthspire Advisors. 4
The AI trade isn’t moving in a straight line anymore. Software and services stocks just took a sharp dive, spurring debate about whether investors are shifting their views on where AI-related gains will actually show up — and that kind of churn can spill over to hardware names, even on days those stocks are in the green. 5
Coming up, traders will be watching U.S. January jobs numbers on Wednesday, then January CPI hits Friday—both could jolt rate outlooks. Marvell steps up March 5 with its results and call, shifting attention to the company’s own performance. 4