New York, Feb 26, 2026, 11:23 ET — Regular session
- Lumentum shares dropped on Thursday, paring gains from a two-day rally.
- Nasdaq is trading down, and the company hasn’t put out any new statements since early February.
- Investors are on the lookout for fresh details from management’s investor meetings, as well as the March 2 conference presentation.
Lumentum Holdings Inc. shares slid 5.1% to $686.69 Thursday, erasing gains from a 5.1% rally the previous session. The Nasdaq retreated 1.3% during that stretch. 1
Lumentum’s retreat is catching attention, given how the stock has become a high-volatility proxy for AI-driven network capex. Traders have been moving fast, piling in and out as momentum shifts. Even after Thursday’s decline, shares held well above their levels from earlier in the week. The move has traders watching closely for management’s next steps.
The stock swung between $662 and $728, a range that highlights just how reactive traders have been to any news or even rumors tied to optical hardware demand. Those kinds of shifts tend to accelerate, particularly when there’s a pileup in positioning.
Lumentum’s newsroom hasn’t seen any fresh press releases since the quarterly update on Feb. 3, per its site. That’s left investors without new signals from the company, turning their focus instead to the overall market mood and analyst chatter. 2
The stock’s climb keeps drawing attention, especially when stacked against Wall Street’s targets. According to a Fintel summary on Nasdaq.com this Wednesday, analysts now peg Lumentum’s average one-year price target at $565.29, with estimates swinging from as low as $385.03 to as high as $945.00. 3
Lumentum projected revenue for the March quarter between $780 million and $830 million, with non-GAAP earnings per share in the $2.15 to $2.35 range. The non-GAAP metric excludes items companies argue don’t show core performance. President and CEO Michael Hurlston described the business as “only at the starting line” when it comes to optical circuit switches and co-packaged optics—hardware built to speed up data transfer and reduce power use in large data centers. 4
It wasn’t just Lumentum making moves. Wednesday saw a batch of photonics stocks—IPG Photonics, Coherent, nLIGHT—climbing together as the market rallied. 5
Still, there’s a clear risk if things don’t go perfectly. Expectations are lofty. The company has pointed out the familiar pitfalls: swings in customer demand, plus the chance that orders could be canceled, cut, or pushed back. Broader macro and trade issues, too, have the potential to disrupt tech supply chains almost overnight. 6
On Thursday, investors are watching closely for updates from management’s investor meetings. They’re also eyeing the Morgan Stanley Technology, Media & Telecom Conference on March 2, where a scheduled presentation is set to be webcast at 11:30 a.m. Pacific time, according to the company. 7