NEW YORK, June 5, 2026, 12:06 (EDT)
- Marvell shares dropped roughly 7.4% to $292.88 late in the morning. Market cap stayed above $260 billion.
- The stock is trading between pressure from a wider chip selloff and optimism it might get into the S&P 500 after the close.
- Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang’s call for the “next trillion-dollar company” is still hanging over the trade. Reuters
Marvell Technology shares fell Friday, paring some gains from a recent AI rally. Chip names traded lower as the market looked for a possible S&P 500 index move after the bell.
Marvell shares dropped 7.4% to $292.88 recently. The stock changed hands from $284.19 to $310.32 so far. Marvell’s market cap is about $260.8 billion—still well above its level before this week.
S&P Dow Jones Indices is set to announce rebalancing changes after the close, with Marvell in the mix as a possible S&P 500 addition. The S&P 500 is the main U.S. large-cap index. According to the NYSE 2026 calendar, S&P puts out rebalance updates after the market closes on the first Friday in March, June, September and December.
When a stock is added to an index, passive funds tracking that index have to buy it, so index decisions can trigger short-term trading in names like Marvell. For Marvell, this has turned the inclusion into a near-term trading event, not just a signal of its market size.
Semi stocks sold off too. Wall Street dropped after May payrolls beat forecasts, Reuters said, and the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index lost over 5%. Shares of Nvidia, AMD and Broadcom fell, so Marvell traded with the rest of the AI group.
Marvell shares took off earlier this week after Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang called the company “the next trillion-dollar company,” Reuters columnist Jamie McGeever said. The stock jumped 32.5% on June 2, even though there was no sales or earnings upgrade. Reuters
Marvell is showing new strength in its business. The company last week reported first-quarter fiscal 2027 revenue up 28% year over year to a record $2.418 billion. CEO Matt Murphy called out “exceptional AI-related bookings” and put second-quarter revenue guidance at $2.7 billion, midpoint. Marvell Technology, Inc.
Investors now face a choice: Marvell is tied to AI data-center spending, but its shares have run up to where valuation is in focus. The company said data center revenue was 76% of first-quarter sales.
Marvell’s “consistently sizable market cap” is a key factor in the S&P 500 discussion, Stephens analyst Melissa Roberts told MarketWatch. The report also said Marvell is now a large eligible candidate after meeting profitability rules. MarketWatch
Still, inclusion isn’t automatic. The S&P committee can decide not to pick a stock, even if it looks big enough. In its latest quarterly filing, Marvell said customers could cancel or push back orders. The company also flagged tough demand forecasts and said competition in cloud, data-center and networking might hit revenue and margins.
For now, the market is calling the shots. Marvell stays among the chip stocks traders are watching this week, but Friday’s selloff shows how fast an AI-driven rally can fade when rates, positioning, and index bets run into trouble.