Today: 23 June 2026
Coherent Stock Falls After AI-Fueled Q3 Beat: Why Wall Street Still Sold COHR

Coherent Stock Falls After AI-Fueled Q3 Beat: Why Wall Street Still Sold COHR

SAXONBURG, Pennsylvania, May 6, 2026, 17:01 EDT

Coherent Corp. dropped roughly 6% after hours Wednesday, despite the photonics supplier beating fiscal third-quarter revenue expectations and projecting results above what Wall Street had penciled in—a clear sign investors were looking for more from a name riding this year’s AI-infrastructure boom. Revenue came in at $1.81 billion, marking a 20.5% jump from the prior year, with adjusted earnings at $1.41 a share.

Coherent now finds itself under the AI data-center spotlight, moving beyond its roots in lasers and engineered materials. Datacenter & Communications revenue hit $1.36 billion, up from $968.7 million a year ago. Industrial, though, slipped—down to $444 million from $529.2 million.

AI pushes demand for speedy optical links—crucial for shuttling data across chips, servers, and sprawling data centers. Coherent claims its optical gear underpins networks for hyperscale data centers and global comms. The broader photonics segment? That’s everything from generating and shaping to detecting signals, serving data centers, communications, and industrial customers.

The stock had already factored in that move. Stifel’s Ruben Roy bumped Coherent’s price target up to $412 from $275 ahead of the print, keeping the firm’s Buy rating not just for Coherent but also on Lumentum and Ciena—the key competitors in optical networking.

Coherent came in with solid headline results. GAAP gross margin ticked up to 37.7%, while the non-GAAP figure—which excludes certain items—hit 39.6%. GAAP diluted EPS landed at 97 cents; adjusted earnings tallied $1.41 per share.

Analysts were caught off guard by a brighter forecast. Coherent is guiding for fourth-quarter fiscal 2026 revenue between $1.91 billion and $2.05 billion, with adjusted EPS in a $1.52 to $1.72 band. StockStory noted the revenue outlook’s midpoint lands 3.4% ahead of Wall Street targets, while the EPS midpoint tops the $1.54 consensus.

Chief Executive Jim Anderson described demand in datacenter and communications as “exceptionally strong,” noting Coherent is pushing to expand capacity with AI infrastructure scaling up. “We’re ramping our capital investment,” Chief Financial Officer Sherri Luther added, citing robust visibility into demand. GlobeNewswire

Still, the numbers gave bears something to work with. Adjusted operating income landed at $366 million, short of the $372.7 million analysts had called for, and free cash flow came in negative at $536.9 million, according to StockStory. The company’s cash-flow statement also reflected a jump in spending: additions to property, plant and equipment hit $547.2 million for the first nine months of fiscal 2026, up from $309.5 million in the prior year.

The key risk here: even if AI demand holds up, ramping up capacity might drain cash before those profits materialize. Coherent flagged other uncertainties, too—swings in end-market demand, shifts in how customers buy, tariffs, timing of product launches, and competition could all mean actual results stray from the current outlook.

Stifel’s note highlights that the conversation stretches well past a single quarter. Analysts pointed to longer-term order visibility and ongoing supply constraints for upstream laser components tied to optical networking. Among its picks, Stifel put Coherent at the top in optical networking, then named Ciena and Lumentum just behind.

Coherent delivered on key investor demands: quicker sales growth, stronger margins, and a raised outlook. But the after-hours slide points to a tougher next step — translating an AI optics surge into real cash, while holding onto the margin improvements that initially fueled the stock’s run.

Khadija Saeed is a financial markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and emerging industries. She studied economics and finance at the London School of Economics and previously worked in market research before moving into financial journalism. Her coverage focuses on the companies, innovations and economic trends influencing global investors.

Stock Market Today

  • Ramsdens shares rise 28% after $260 million takeover bid by FirstCash
    June 23, 2026, 4:17 AM EDT. Shares in UK pawnbroker Ramsdens Holdings jumped 28% to 580 pence following a recommended £206 million (about $260 million) cash takeover offer from U.S. group FirstCash, which operates over 3,300 pawnbroking stores across the US, Latin America, and the UK. Ramsdens shareholders will receive 609 pence per share, including a 33% premium on the pre-offer share price. FirstCash entered the UK market last year with H&T and says Ramsdens complements its footprint by expanding its publicly traded pawn platform. The deal, advised by Cavendish, is expected to complete by H2 2026 via a court-approved scheme. Ramsdens has 174 stores and earnings tied closely to gold prices, which have recently peaked above $5,500 an ounce.

Latest articles

Wall Street Feels the Heat (and Thrill): Fed Cuts, Tariffs & Mega-Mergers Set NYSE Buzz

US Stock Market Today: Live Updates 23.06.2026

23 June 2026
LIVEMarkets rolling coverageStarted: June 23, 2026, 4:00 AM EDTUpdated: June 23, 2026, 4:17 AM EDT Ramsdens shares rise 28% after $260 million takeover bid by FirstCash June 23, 2026, 4:17 AM EDT. Shares in UK pawnbroker Ramsdens Holdings jumped 28% to 580 pence following a recommended £206 million (about $260 million) cash takeover offer from U.S. group FirstCash, which operates over 3,300 pawnbroking stores across the US, Latin America, and the UK. Ramsdens shareholders will receive 609 pence per share, including a 33% premium on the pre-offer share price. FirstCash entered the UK market last year with H&T and says
Amazon Stock Just Got Hit Before Prime Day — AI Spending Fears Are Back

Amazon Stock Just Got Hit Before Prime Day — AI Spending Fears Are Back

23 June 2026
Amazon shares plunged 4.75% to $232.79 as investors questioned whether the company’s massive AI and cloud spending will pay off quickly enough, just ahead of Prime Day—a key test of U.S. consumer demand—with Bank of America projecting $21.6 billion in sales for the event and analysts warning that profit quality could disappoint if shoppers focus on lower-margin essentials.
AppLovin Stock Drops After Q1 Earnings Beat as Wall Street Questions What Comes Next
Previous Story

AppLovin Stock Drops After Q1 Earnings Beat as Wall Street Questions What Comes Next

Axon Stock: Q1 Revenue Jumps 34% as AI and Drone Demand Lift 2026 Outlook
Next Story

Axon Stock: Q1 Revenue Jumps 34% as AI and Drone Demand Lift 2026 Outlook

Go toTop