In a building in San Jose, California, engineers work on issues that are invisible to the human eye, such as modifying light at wavelengths measured in nanometers and creating lasers that can send data at speeds that would have seemed unthinkable twenty years ago. This is what Lumentum Holdings has been doing since it separated from JDSU in 2015 to become a specialized photonics business.
For years, the majority of investors had a modest understanding, modest coverage, and modest valuation of it. The world suddenly required far more fiber optic capacity than it had, data centers began to scale in ways that made traditional copper interconnects physically insufficient, and artificial intelligence (AI) emerged. The parts that enable that capability are made by lumentum. The stock reached a high of $901.30 from a 52-week low of $48.88. It’s not a typo. That represents a change of over 1,700% in less than a year.
After Mizuho increased its price target from $750 to $930 on Wednesday, April 8, 2026, LITE increased by an additional 9.84% to close at $896.02, retaining its outperform rating. Volume was approximately 6.95 million shares, which is 15% more than the daily average.
NASDAQ: LITE · Photonic Technologies · Optical Communications · AI Infrastructure
| Founded & Headquarters | 2015 — San Jose, California, USA |
| CEO | Michael E. Hurlston (since Feb 7, 2025) |
| Stock Price (Apr 9, 2026) | $896.02 +9.84% · New 52-Week High $901.30 |
| 52-Week Range | $48.88 – $901.30 (+1,743% from low) |
| Market Cap | $63.98 Billion |
| P/E Ratio | 273.98x — pricing in sustained high growth expectations |
| Q2 FY2026 Revenue | $665.5M +65.5% YoY · beat estimate of $646.74M |
| Q2 EPS | $1.67 (beat $1.41 estimate by $0.26) |
| Q3 FY2026 EPS Guidance | $2.15 – $2.35 (strong sequential acceleration) |
| NVIDIA Investment | $2 Billion via Series A convertible preferred shares + multi-year purchase commitments |
| S&P 500 Addition | March 23, 2026 · Q1 2026 gain: +90.7% (2nd best in S&P 500) |
| Analyst Consensus | Moderate Buy · Avg target $592.88 · Mizuho $930 · Morgan Stanley $595 |
This suggests that the move was motivated by real conviction rather than thin-market drift. The company has now reached a new 52-week high, making it one of the most talked-about charts in the technology industry. It has also garnered the kind of widespread analyst attention that only occurs when a stock’s performance is too good to ignore. In March, Jim Cramer brought it up on air, pointing out that shares had increased by about 900% in the previous year and characterizing it as a “fiber optics play” on the boom in AI data centers. Even though it understated the scope of what was going on, it was a fair summary.

The run’s basic narrative is true and pretty simple. Lumentum exceeded the consensus estimate with Q2 FY2026 revenue of $665.5 million, up 65.5% year over year. EPS of $1.67 exceeded the $1.41 forecast by $0.26. The increase in revenue is translating into real earnings leverage rather than just top-line inflation, as evidenced by the non-GAAP operating margin, which increased to 25.2%. The Q3 EPS guidance of $2.15 to $2.35 indicates that the acceleration is continuing.
These are really impressive figures. However, NVIDIA’s $2 billion investment in Lumentum through a private placement of Series A convertible preferred shares, along with multi-year purchase commitments, was the anchoring event—the catalyst that turned this from an intriguing sector story into a marquee momentum trade. The market interprets the world’s most valuable chip company’s $2 billion commitment and supply agreement to a photonics manufacturer as a clear indication of the true direction of AI infrastructure spending.
The story was further complicated by the S&P 500 inclusion on March 23, 2026. Index addition creates a mechanical demand pulse that drives the stock higher by forcing passive funds to purchase regardless of valuation. With a 90.7% gain in the first quarter of 2026, Lumentum had its best quarter in recent memory and was the second-strongest performer in the entire S&P 500 during that time. There are complications associated with that type of attention.
Momentum stocks that enter major indices following strong rallies typically draw both disciplined profit-takers and enthusiastic buyers. This is precisely what the market witnessed in the days that followed the inclusion, as the stock lost several percentage points before rising again.
The aspect of this story that most sharply divides serious investors is the valuation. Lumentum is priced with an assumption of compounding growth at a P/E of roughly 274 times earnings, which leaves very little room for execution errors, disappointing demand, or pressure from other photonics suppliers. Morgan Stanley’s price target of $595 suggests a roughly 33% decline from current levels. Barclays has an equal weight rating and is currently at $750.
Mizuho is the most aggressive at $930. Even bulls are frequently running behind the stock rather than ahead of it because the average analyst target of $592.88 is significantly below the current trading price. Such dispersion indicates that even seasoned analysts are unsure of how to accurately model a company whose revenue is increasing at such a rapid rate in an industry where so much capital is being invested.
It’s difficult to ignore the similarities with Coherent, the other optical components company that joined the S&P 500 at about the same time and also received a $2 billion investment from NVIDIA. These businesses are now at the center of the argument that investing in AI infrastructure yields benefits beyond the obvious names of chips and servers.
The next two or three earnings reports will begin to address whether that narrative endures long enough for Lumentum to grow into a $274 P/E multiple. The first true test of whether the guidance range represents confidence or optimism will be the Q3 results, which are set for May 5. There is very little room for disappointment at $896 per share.

