Marvell Technology has showcased a remarkable performance since the beginning of 2025, with its stock surging more than 55% year-to-date and an astounding 168% increase over the past year. April alone saw MRVL’s stock rise by over 50%, a testimony to its upward trajectory and the strategic moves behind it.
Such a significant leap in stock price does not happen overnight. A series of key developments have bolstered confidence in Marvell’s prospects. Notably, on March 31, Nvidia announced a substantial $2 billion investment in Marvell through a private placement. This investment marked the beginning of a strategic partnership aimed at enhancing Nvidia’s NVLink Fusion platform while jointly developing semi-custom AI infrastructure.
Following this partnership, analysts responded positively, with Oppenheimer raising its price target for MRVL to $170, while Barclays upgraded it to Overweight and adjusted its target to $150 from $105, citing the robust performance in Marvell’s optical and ports segments.
Jim Cramer weighed in, describing Marvell as one of those rare data center stocks that has transformed from being merely good to “unbelievable.” He praised CEO Matt Murphy’s strategic stock purchases and the successful acquisition of an optical business.
At the heart of Marvell’s soaring stock price is the shift towards custom silicon, particularly in the high-stakes arena of AI data centers. Major hyperscalers are increasingly turning away from general-purpose GPUs in favor of custom solutions tailored for AI inference workloads. Marvell stands out as a prime beneficiary of this trend.
In Fiscal 2026, which concluded in January 2026, Marvell reported an impressive $1.5 billion in revenue from its custom silicon segment. Management projects that this category will constitute at least 25% of total data center revenue in the future. The company has asserted that its custom silicon offers a considerable cost-of-ownership advantage—estimated at over 40%—compared to traditional GPUs, thereby underscoring its accelerating demand.
Marvell has already secured design wins for its custom accelerators with all leading cloud service providers. Its forecasts suggest that shipments of these custom accelerators will exceed those of GPUs by 2028, indicating a pivotal shift in technology use in data centers.
On the acquisition front, Marvell continues to bolster its capabilities, recently completing a $1 billion cash acquisition of Celestial AI, a firm focused on advancing AI interconnect research.
Networking Revenue is Set to Soar
Marvell’s data center networking segment is experiencing rapid growth as well. Record revenue from this division surpassed $300 million in Fiscal 2026, with management expecting it to double to over $600 million in Fiscal 2027. This impressive growth is supported by the company’s strategic acquisition of XConn Technologies for $540 million earlier this year, which has allowed Marvell to introduce high-density products that outperform competitors.
Furthermore, demand is surging for retimers, especially as Marvell’s Alaska PCIe retimers find widespread adoption in hyperscaler server racks. Management anticipates revenue from retimers and active electrical cables to double in the coming fiscal year.
Currently, the average price target from 27 analysts stands at $126.12, suggesting a potential downside of approximately 9.7% from the prevailing market price. However, with Nvidia’s investment earmarked for R&D at the cutting-edge 3nm and 5nm node levels, Marvell’s next generation of custom silicon products is on the horizon, hinting at a bright future ahead.