A mixed earnings report was not enough to stop the momentum in optical communication stocks, as investors bet on a broader AI-driven upgrade cycle.
A mixed earnings report was not enough to stop the momentum in optical communication stocks, as investors bet on a broader AI-driven upgrade cycle.

A mixed earnings report was not enough to stop the momentum in optical communication stocks, as investors bet on a broader AI-driven upgrade cycle.
U.S. optical communication stocks surged on May 8, led by a more than 10 percent gain in Applied Optoelectronics, as investors looked past mixed individual earnings to a wider sector bet on artificial intelligence infrastructure demand.
The bullish sentiment was echoed by analysts at Jefferies, who recently described business for peer Lumentum Holdings as “starting to improve significantly” and reiterated a “Buy” rating on the stock, citing the AI infrastructure boom.
The rally saw shares of Applied Optoelectronics (NASDAQ: AAOI) jump over 10 percent despite the company posting a quarterly loss of $0.07 per share, missing consensus estimates of a $0.05 loss. Elsewhere, POET Technologies (NASDAQ: POET) climbed over 11 percent, Corning Inc. (NYSE: GLW) gained more than 7 percent to a new high, while Ciena (NYSE: CIEN) and Coherent (NYSE: COHR) both rose over 3 percent.
The widespread gains suggest investors are increasingly confident that the artificial intelligence build-out is broadening beyond headline names like Nvidia, creating a powerful upgrade cycle for the underlying hardware and networking fabric. This theme, noted by J.P. Morgan research as a broadening of the AI trade, is lifting component makers integral to building next-generation, high-bandwidth data centers.
The rally's primary catalyst, Applied Optoelectronics, surged despite reporting revenues of $151.14 million for the quarter, missing the Zacks Consensus Estimate by 3.4 percent. The loss of $0.07 per share also represented a miss. However, the stock has added about 412.2 percent since the beginning of the year, according to Zacks, showing that investors are focused on a longer-term story. The market's willingness to overlook the earnings miss indicates a strong belief that demand from AI and data center customers will accelerate, lifting the entire sector.
The case for a sector-wide, AI-driven re-rating is exemplified by Lumentum Holdings Inc. (NASDAQ: LITE), which itself rose over 2 percent in the session. The stock had already gained 145.2 percent year-to-date as of May 8, according to Insider Monkey. The company's recent strong fiscal Q3 results, driven by the AI infrastructure boom, prompted Jefferies to raise its price target to $1,200. Lumentum has been actively positioning itself to capitalize on the trend, presenting a portfolio of products for next-generation hyperscale data centers, including high-power lasers and transceivers designed to support AI architectures.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.