Key takeaways
- Over the last 12 months, Lumentum, Applied Optoelectronics, Coherent, Corning, and Fabrinet have surged between about 176% and 1,137%, vastly outpacing the Nasdaq‑100’s roughly 23% gain.
- These companies supply lasers, optical transceivers, fiber, and advanced packaging that move data via light instead of copper inside AI data centers—a bottleneck Nvidia and other hyperscalers now call the “final puzzle” of AI infrastructure.
- Nvidia’s multiyear supply deals and 2‑billion‑dollar equity investments in both Lumentum and Coherent have effectively anointed them as core partners in the next leg of AI build‑out, supporting rapid EPS growth and multiple expansion.
- As a group, these optical names add significant volatility versus the Nasdaq‑100: they can hedge pure‑software AI exposure but are highly sensitive to capex cycles, supply constraints, and any pause in data‑center spending.
- Tickeron’s AI trading bots, powered by Financial Learning Models, monitor these stocks across multiple timeframes—turning narrative‑driven surges into rule‑based entries, exits, and position sizes for retail traders.
Ranking the optical winners and what they actually sell
Based on 12‑month performance you provided (and echoed in market posts), the ranking looks like this:
- Lumentum (LITE): +1,137%
- Applied Optoelectronics (AAOI): +551%
- Coherent (COHR): +282%
- Corning (GLW): +223%
- Fabrinet (FN): +176%
Below is how each company’s core innovations and earnings momentum justify that move, using recent sales/EPS commentary and growth estimates.
1. Lumentum (LITE) – “Nvidia’s laser foundry”
- What they make: High‑speed lasers and optical transceivers for cloud and AI networks; after its CloudLight acquisition, Lumentum is now a major supplier of optical circuit switches (OCS) and 800G–1.6T transceiver platforms for hyperscale data centers.finance.
- Innovation angle:
- InP (indium‑phosphide) lasers and OCS hardware that cut latency and power for GPU clusters.
- Integration with Nvidia’s silicon photonics and Spectrum‑X networking roadmap.
- Earnings / EPS context:
- Recent quarters show explosive sales growth, with one AI analysis citing sales up more than 60% year‑on‑year and EPS estimates being revised sharply higher as AI connectivity ramps.
- Despite high volatility, analysts highlight a “massive backlog” in OCS and multi‑year supply agreements that underpin future revenue visibility.
- Why it’s up the most: Nvidia’s announced 2‑billion‑dollar investment plus long‑term purchase commitments effectively de‑risked capacity expansion and signaled Lumentum as a key choke‑point supplier in AI optics. That combination of structural demand + strategic capital has driven both EPS upgrades and multiple expansion.
2. Applied Optoelectronics (AAOI) – “From left‑for‑dead to AI rocket”
- What they make: Optical transceivers and related components for data centers and broadband; historically a volatile, cyclical name tied to a few large customers.
- Innovation angle:
- 400G/800G data‑center optics and custom modules positioned for AI back‑end networks.
- Earnings / EPS context:
- After years of weak results, AAOI has swung back to strong revenue growth thanks to AI‑driven orders, with multiple reports noting a sharp uptick in both sales and profitability guidance.
- Why it’s up so much: The stock repriced from distressed levels as the market realized it had operating leverage to AI optics demand; EPS inflected from losses toward positive estimates, so percentage gains are huge off a low base.
3. Coherent (COHR) – “Industrial + AI lasers, now backed by Nvidia”
- What they make: High‑power lasers, photonics, and optical networking components used in AI data centers, industrial manufacturing, and communications.
- Innovation angle:
- Co‑packaged optics, 800G–1.6T transceivers, and advanced lasers for high‑density AI fabrics.adtek-
- Diversified photonics portfolio spanning both data center and industrial applications.
- Earnings / EPS context:
- Analysts expect double‑digit revenue and EPS growth as AI build‑out offsets cyclical weakness elsewhere.
- Why it’s up: Nvidia’s 2‑billion‑dollar strategic investment, plus long‑term optical‑transport commitments, reframed Coherent as a core enabler of AI data‑center interconnects rather than just a cyclical industrial laser company.
4. Corning (GLW) – “Fiber & glass for AI clusters”
- What they make: Fiber, glass, and connectivity products; for AI they supply fiber solutions and specialty glass for co‑packaged optics and dense data‑center wiring.
- Innovation angle:
- FlexConnect fiber tailored for short‑reach CPO (co‑packaged optics) inside AI racks.
- GlassWorks AI suite that targets the full AI network stack, including intra‑ and inter‑data‑center links.
- Earnings / EPS context:
- Corning’s enterprise / network segment reported ~58% YoY sales growth in a recent quarter driven mainly by AI network demand.
- Despite a relatively mature profile, AI‑network growth has pushed EPS and margins higher, supporting a re‑rating.
5. Fabrinet (FN) – “The arms‑dealer contract manufacturer”
- What they make: High‑end contract manufacturing and advanced packaging for optical components and modules—essentially the “foundry” building other companies’ photonics designs.
- Innovation angle:
- Precision assembly and packaging of 400G/800G transceivers, silicon photonics, and other complex optical modules for multiple OEMs.
- Earnings / EPS context:
- Zacks notes sales expected to rise ~28.5% this year and 16.9% next year, with earnings projected to grow ~30.7% and 16.1%, respectively; estimates have been revised up double‑digits in the last 60 days.
- Shares had already more than doubled before this latest leg, and still trade at roughly 35× forward EPS—elevated but in line with execution.
- Why it’s up: FN is a relatively “picks‑and‑shovels” way to play AI optics across several customers, so earnings growth looks more durable than some single‑customer stories.
Group vs. Nasdaq‑100: how big is the gap?
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Optical 5 (median): Using Coherent as the midpoint, the group’s 12‑month median gain is roughly +282%.
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Optical 5 (simple average): The five returns (1,137(1,137% + 551% + 282% + 223% + 176%) ÷ 5(1,137 work out to an approximate +474% average—clearly a multi‑hundred‑percent move.
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Nasdaq‑100: Over the same period, the Nasdaq‑100 returned about +23%.
So an equal‑weighted basket of these names has outperformed the Nasdaq‑100 by roughly 20× on price—driven by both EPS acceleration (LITE, FN, GLW, COHR) and multiple expansion off low bases (AAOI, LITE). That also means volatility is far higher: recent reports highlight days where optical stocks sold off 8–15% on no company‑specific news as traders locked in profits.
2026 outlook: company‑by‑company notes for retail traders
These are not price targets but scenario‑style expectations based on current AI data‑center capex trends and commentary.
Lumentum (LITE)
- Base case: Nvidia’s equity stake and long‑term supply contracts anchor multi‑year demand; revenue remains lumpy quarter‑to‑quarter but trends higher as AI networks move toward 1.6T optics.finance.
- For retail: High‑beta core of the theme. Reasonable to treat as a tier‑1 AI‑optics holding but control position size; expect 30–40% pullbacks along the way, especially if AI capex headlines wobble.
Applied Optoelectronics (AAOI)
- Base case: Leverage to AI optics stays strong, but single‑customer and execution risk remain high; earnings could surprise positively if design wins broaden, or reverse if one hyperscaler slows orders.
- For retail: Classic swing‑trade / satellite name. Better suited for tactical traders using stops and timeframes than for large, long‑term allocations.
Coherent (COHR)
- Base case: Nvidia partnership plus diversified industrial demand give it a more balanced profile; AI optics drives multiple years of growth, but industrial cycles and integration risk could cause volatility.finance.
- For retail: Reasonable as a core‑plus holding—less explosive than LITE/AAOI, but more diversified; watch valuation and balance sheet.
Corning (GLW)
- Base case: AI network and CPO deployments keep enterprise/network sales growing in the high‑double digits, but overall company growth is tempered by legacy businesses.
- For retail: Acts as a lower‑beta AI‑optics play with a more mature profile and some dividend support. Good candidate for investors who want AI‑infrastructure exposure without full photonics volatility.
Fabrinet (FN)
- Base case: As long as AI optics volumes keep ramping, FN’s manufacturing backlog and EPS growth stay robust; risk is primarily valuation and customer concentration, not demand per se.
- For retail: Attractive as a diversified supplier across the optics chain. After a big run and 30–40× EPS multiple, adding via partial positions or pullbacks makes more sense than chasing vertical moves.
How Tickeron’s AI trading bots use Financial Learning Models on optical stocks
The optical trade is narrative‑heavy and extremely volatile—perfect ground for rule‑based AI. Tickeron’s platform uses Financial Learning Models (FLMs), machine‑learning models trained on financial time‑series (prices, volumes, volatility, correlations, macro data) to guide trading decisions.
Here’s how that matters for LITE, AAOI, COHR, GLW, and FN:
- Multi‑timeframe pattern analysis
FLMs evaluate each stock on 5‑, 15‑, and 60‑minute horizons, identifying trend‑following and mean‑reversion setups with historical win‑rate and expected‑move statistics—crucial when a name can swing 10% on an AI headline. - Regime and rotation detection
Bots track relative strength vs sector ETFs and the Nasdaq‑100, spotting when optical names are leading, consolidating, or breaking trend. When patterns and RS deteriorate simultaneously (as they did in late‑March reversals), strategies can cut exposure or switch to defensive modes. - Risk management baked in
FLM‑powered agents enforce caps on position size, stop‑losses, and portfolio‑level drawdowns—preventing a single high‑flyer like LITE or AAOI from overwhelming a retail account if the trade snaps back.
For a retail investor who wants to ride the optical super‑cycle without turning their portfolio into a single high‑beta bet, combining a core allocation (e.g., GLW, FN, a modest LITE weight) with Tickeron’s AI‑guided tactical overlays on more volatile names (AAOI, short‑term LITE swings) is one practical way to balance upside with risk.
Tickeron AI Perspective