New York, June 16, 2026, 08:02 (ET)
- Marvell closed Monday at $308.88, up 10.43%, before early Tuesday premarket quotes showed the stock easing near $305.
- GF Securities maintained a buy rating and raised its Marvell price target to $350 from $230.
- The next near-term catalyst is Marvell’s S&P 500 addition before the open on June 22.
Marvell Technology’s stock is back in focus after a sharp Monday move tied to the same forces that have powered the chipmaker’s 2026 rally: AI infrastructure demand, index buying and fresh analyst support. Shares closed Monday at $308.88, up 10.43%, according to MarketScreener’s MRVL quote page, while early Tuesday premarket trading showed some profit-taking around $305.26. The stock’s market value was about $276 billion, and its price/earnings ratio, or P/E — the share price divided by earnings per share — stood above 100, a level that signals investors are paying heavily for future growth. MarketScreener Canada
The latest spark came from the analyst side. MarketScreener reported Tuesday that GF Securities Co. Ltd. maintained its buy recommendation on Marvell and lifted its price target to $350 from $230. That helps explain why buyers are still chasing the stock after a steep run. At the same time, the broader consensus is less aggressive: MarketScreener’s analyst page listed a buy consensus from 44 analysts but an average target price of $235.70, below Monday’s close. That gap is the tension in the stock today. Bulls see Marvell as a core AI infrastructure winner; bears see a name that may already be pricing in years of execution. MarketScreener Canada
The fundamental case rests on Marvell’s data-center and custom-chip momentum. In late May, the company reported record fiscal first-quarter revenue of $2.418 billion, up 28% from a year earlier, and guided for second-quarter revenue of $2.7 billion at the midpoint. CEO Matt Murphy said Marvell was seeing “exceptional AI-related bookings” and cited demand across optics, Ethernet switches, data-center interconnect modules and custom XPU products. Non-GAAP earnings, meaning adjusted profit that excludes certain accounting items, were $0.80 a share in the quarter, with the company guiding for $0.93 a share in the current quarter. Marvell Technology, Inc.
The stock also has an index catalyst. S&P Dow Jones Indices said Marvell will be added to the S&P 500 before trading opens on Monday, June 22, replacing Pool Corp. That matters because index funds and exchange-traded funds that track the S&P 500 typically have to buy new constituents to match the benchmark. Reuters noted earlier this month that such buying can support demand for the shares, though it does not change Marvell’s underlying revenue or profit on its own. PR Newswire
The bull case is straightforward: Marvell sits in the plumbing of AI data centers, where cloud companies need custom chips, optical interconnects and high-speed networking to move data between thousands of processors. Reuters reported that Marvell has forecast its custom-chip business will surpass $10 billion in revenue in fiscal 2029, and Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang’s recent “trillion-dollar company” comment has helped keep investor attention on the name. The bear case is valuation and timing. Marvell has already more than tripled this year, according to Reuters, and even strong businesses can fall quickly if AI capital spending slows, large customers delay orders, margins disappoint or index-related buying fades after June 22. Reuters
Based on the verified numbers, Marvell looks risky rather than plainly cheap today. The company’s growth story is real, and Monday’s target hike shows some analysts still see upside. But the stock is trading far above the average analyst target listed by MarketScreener and carries a triple-digit P/E ratio, leaving little room for execution mistakes. Investors now have two near-term markers to watch: whether June 22 S&P 500 inclusion brings sustained demand or a “sell-the-news” reaction, and whether management’s next updates support the current AI revenue expectations.