New York, June 2, 2026, 19:06 (EDT)
- Corning was last seen at $200.40, up $23.66, or 13.4%. The stock hit $201.88 earlier.
- Optical-networking stocks jumped after Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang’s comments at Computex brought new attention to AI connectivity.
- Corning’s deals with Nvidia and Meta have given the glassmaker a new role as a way to trade the AI data center buildout.
Corning stock surged Tuesday, undoing its loss from Monday, as buyers moved into names related to optical connections in AI data centers. The shares were last at $200.40, up $23.66. More than 18 million shares changed hands.
AI plays are broadening. It’s no longer just chip stocks getting bought. Now investors are also picking up shares tied to data center hardware—pipes, glass, switches, connectors that move data among the many GPUs in big server farms. That shift is what made the move stand out.
Corning shares jumped after Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang called out the limits of copper-based interconnects, saying optical interconnects are needed for AI data centers, according to Investing.com. The site said fiber-based links that move data with light were the phrase of the day.
Marvell Technology jumped after Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said at Computex in Taipei that Marvell could be the next “trillion-dollar company,” Reuters said. Marvell shares surged, rallying other networking stocks too. Marvell closed at $290.79, up 32.6%. Reuters
Coherent jumped 17.6% and Lumentum put on 13.7%, latest market quotes showed, with buyers piling into suppliers linked to optical parts and data center connections. Corning, though not a chipmaker like Marvell, makes fiber and optical-connectivity products used in the same AI infrastructure supply chain.
Corning has seen fresh buying less than a month after striking an agreement with Nvidia. On May 6, the companies announced Corning would boost U.S. optical-connectivity output tenfold, lift domestic fiber production by over 50%, set up three new plants in North Carolina and Texas, and add upwards of 3,000 jobs. Nvidia’s Huang described AI as pushing “the largest infrastructure buildout of our time.” Corning
Nvidia has put in a “multi-billion-dollar prepayment” to help pay for Corning factories, Reuters said, on top of a possible equity investment of as much as $3.2 billion. Corning CEO Wendell Weeks confirmed the prepayment on CNBC, according to Reuters. Reuters
Meta is part of the story too. Back in January, Corning and Meta said they signed a multiyear deal worth as much as $6 billion for fiber and connectivity supplies for U.S. data centers. Weeks said then that the agreement would help Corning grow in North Carolina. Meta’s Joel Kaplan said Corning brings “deep expertise in optical connectivity.” Corning Investor Relations
Corning’s rally got a push from earnings too. The company said first-quarter core sales jumped 18% to $4.35 billion, with core earnings per share up 30% to 70 cents. Its Optical Communications unit posted a 36% sales gain to $1.85 billion. Corning is looking for about $4.6 billion in core sales in the second quarter.
Corning’s drop was only partly masked by the market, with the S&P 500 adding 0.13% and the Nasdaq up just 0.03%, Reuters said. Mike Dickson at Horizon Investments pointed to “massive dispersion” across AI infrastructure stocks. Reuters
But it’s not all upside for Corning. The company is still exposed to consumer electronics and display, where Reuters said weak replacement cycles and slower spending are pressuring demand. Corning also pointed to a $30 million hit from a solar-wafer maintenance shutdown in the second quarter. The expansion tied to Nvidia leans on how well its factories run, how much customers want, and how stable supply chains are.
Corning’s next hurdle is proving it can convert AI buzz into real sales while holding its margins. The focus turns to second-quarter guidance, how fast Nvidia-driven plant expansion plays out, and if optical orders keep climbing after Tuesday’s quick trades in the sector.