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Thomas Hughes

Why Applied Optoelectronics Stock May Be Near a Turning Point

Applied Optoelectronics (NASDAQ: AAOI) is shaping up to be a solid buy for long-term investors as it is a leader in optical and photonic technology.

Its products range from transceivers and lasers to amplifiers and short-distance cables, all critical to telecommunications and digitization globally. The driving force in 2026 is datacenters and AI, but the technology spans use cases, as it enables faster, higher-bandwidth communications across the technology world, from chips and components to datacenters and hyperscale networking.

The problem, as the market approaches mid-year, is the stock's price action and valuation. They set the market up for a correction that could shave a high-double-digit amount off the stock price. Trading at 215X the current-year earnings consensus, the market is pricing in significant growth and flawless execution, setting the stage for missteps and delays to be reflected in the stock price.

The stock price action is fundamentally bullish, with rising volume and converging MACD, but the May activity reflects a topping market, with the potential to trend sideways in consolidation, if not to pull back in a correction. Rising volume and MACD convergence suggest new highs will be reached; it’s only a matter of timing, but the potential for correction is significant, with support targets at $140 and $96, approximately 37.5% and 54% below the May peaks.

Applied Optoelectronics Misses in Q1: Guides Weak

Applied Optoelectronics had a solid earnings report for Q1 and provided strong guidance, but both fell short of the analysts' high bar, prompting them to reset their forward outlook and creating headwinds for market sentiment. As it stands, the company’s $151 million in revenue was up more than 50% year-over-year, driven by broad-based strength. Data centers and AI underpinned the business, with demand for next-gen 800G products on the verge of ramping up.

Earnings per share were a miss. The company’s growth investments, which include new products and capacity expansion, cut into the earnings results—but failed to darken the outlook. If anything, demand dynamics suggest the investments will pay for themselves quickly as the capacity comes online. Guidance was likewise bullish, but fell short of expectations, with revenue below consensus at the midpoint of the range.

Capitalization is an important factor, and perhaps the more pressing issue, capping shares in May. The company’s expansion is capital-intensive, requiring massive capital raises and shareholder dilution. Highlights at the end of Q1 include a greater-than-50% increase in share count compared to the prior year, and a high likelihood of additional capital raising. The good news is that the balance sheet remains healthy, with low long-term debt and total liabilities below 50% of equity. The cash balance will decline, but it will be converted into equity-boosting property, revenue, and earnings over time.

Sell-Side Forces Set Stage for AAOI Market Volatility

While institutions provide a solid support base, owning more than 60% of the shares and aggressively accumulating, analysts and short-selling data suggest this market is poised to fall. The seven analysts tracked were unmoved by the Q1 release, leaving their price targets and ratings intact.

They peg the stock at Hold and expect it to decline by 50% at the consensus, and the short-sellers will be happy to see it get there. They’ve sold into the rally, sustaining a mid-teens interest as of late April, and may have increased activity due to the tepid Q1 release and its impact on the outlook.

The primary catalyst for AAOI stock this year will be the monetization of its massive backlog. Hyperscaler demand for 800G and other next-gen products is surging, with Oracle (NASDAQ: ORCL) alone accounting for $324 million in demand, and it only needs to be delivered. The biggest risks are executing on its aggressive expansion plans, including building multiple facilities and customer concentration.

Customers are centered in the major hyperscalers, primarily Oracle, Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN), and Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT), and are easily disrupted. There is not only a risk of execution delays impacting the pace of revenue recognition, but also for technological disruption from competitors. Aeluma (NASDAQ: ALMU) is one of several companies focusing on photonics with the power to disrupt, and the incentive for it to do so is substantial. The successful integration of commercially viable, scalable copackaged optics could make many AAOI products obsolete.

Timing an investment in AAOI will require consideration of its upcoming earnings releases. News revealing strategy execution will help invigorate market sentiment, but the market will need proof that execution is driving improved revenue and earnings metrics. That may not come until August, with the Q2 release, or even later.

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The article "Why Applied Optoelectronics Stock May Be Near a Turning Point" first appeared on MarketBeat.

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