Marvell Technology has surged more than 200 percent this year, making it one of the best-performing semiconductor stocks in a volatile AI market.
Marvell Technology's 200 percent rally in 2026 has made it the top-performing major semiconductor stock, but the June selloff that erased $1 trillion from chip valuations has investors asking whether the run has room to extend.
"The market is pricing in perfection for AI-related names, and Marvell is no exception," said Rob Thummel, portfolio manager at Tortoise Capital. "A lot of the selloff from our perspective is an opportunity to buy essential AI infrastructure stocks at cheaper prices."
Marvell shares surged 9.6 percent on June 8 after S&P Dow Jones Indices announced the company would join the S&P 500 on June 22, adding to a month-to-date gain of roughly 29 percent. The stock has climbed more than 200 percent year-to-date, outpacing peers including Broadcom, which rose about 40 percent before its post-earnings pullback, and Nvidia, which has gained roughly 120 percent in 2026. The broader Philadelphia Semiconductor Index lost 10 percent on June 5 alone — its worst session in years — after Broadcom's AI chip guidance fell short of elevated expectations.
The question for investors is whether Marvell's valuation can sustain its current trajectory. The company trades at a premium multiple reflecting expectations for continued acceleration in its data center and custom silicon businesses. With the S&P 500 inclusion set for June 22 and Oracle's earnings report providing the next read on enterprise AI demand, the stock faces a critical test of whether its 200 percent gain is justified or overextended.
Marvell's rally has been driven by its position as a key supplier of custom ASICs (application-specific integrated circuits) and data center connectivity chips for hyperscale cloud providers. The company's custom silicon program, which includes partnerships with major cloud operators, has become a growth engine alongside its traditional networking and storage businesses. Unlike some peers that rely primarily on merchant silicon sales, Marvell's custom chip model provides multi-year revenue visibility through design-win contracts that lock in production volumes.
The June 5 semiconductor rout, triggered by Broadcom's fiscal second-quarter results, demonstrated how fragile elevated valuations can be. Broadcom reported AI semiconductor revenue of $10.8 billion, up 143 percent from a year earlier, but shares fell 14 percent after the company held its full-year AI forecast steady rather than raising it. The selloff spread across the sector, with Micron Technology falling 13.3 percent in a single session and AMD dropping 10.9 percent.
Can Marvell's momentum survive the valuation reset?
Marvell enters its S&P 500 inclusion with a market capitalization that has more than tripled this year, raising the bar for future earnings beats. The company's data center revenue, which accounts for the majority of its sales, must continue accelerating to justify the current multiple. Nvidia Chief Executive Officer Jensen Huang called the broader selloff a buying opportunity at his Computex keynote, and Morningstar analysts rated Nvidia as roughly 25 percent undervalued relative to a $280 fair value estimate as of June 8. But Marvell trades at a higher multiple than Nvidia on a forward basis, leaving less room for error.
The competitive landscape adds another layer of risk. Broadcom, Marvell's primary rival in custom ASICs, has guided for $16 billion in third-quarter AI chip sales — growth of more than 200 percent year over year — but the market punished the company for not raising its full-year outlook. If Marvell faces similar expectations when it next reports, the stock could see the same dynamic: record growth that fails to satisfy a market demanding acceleration.
For investors weighing an entry after the 200 percent run, the key variable is whether Marvell's design-win pipeline can sustain the growth trajectory implied by its valuation. The company's S&P 500 inclusion on June 22 will trigger forced buying from index funds, providing near-term support. But the broader AI trade remains vulnerable to any sign that hyperscaler capital spending is peaking. Oracle's earnings report Wednesday and Nvidia's full results on Aug. 26 will serve as the next major readouts on whether the AI infrastructure build-out is accelerating or plateauing. Marvell shares, trading at a premium to the semiconductor sector average, offer little margin for disappointment.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.