New York, February 28, 2026, 11:53 ET — Market closed.
- Coherent finished Friday’s session at $258.93 a share.
- The company plans to have both its CEO and CFO speak at Morgan Stanley’s TMT conference set for March 3.
- Investors want new clues on both demand for datacenter optics and upcoming capacity plans.
Coherent Corp (COHR) climbed 3.5% on Friday, finishing the session at $258.93. The photonics company is once again drawing attention as next week’s trading approaches.
U.S. markets are closed for the weekend, and attention now turns to whether management’s remarks will sustain the rally. Coherent, meanwhile, stands out as a key indicator for components driving high-speed connectivity in today’s datacenters.
Recent sessions have seen the stock swing sharply. On Feb. 26, it dropped 6.6%, only to recover on Feb. 27, with shares moving between $241.71 and $260.85 during the day, Yahoo Finance data show.
Coherent plans to have CEO Jim Anderson and CFO Sherri Luther participate in a live Q&A “fireside chat” at the Morgan Stanley Technology, Media & Telecom Conference, happening March 3 in San Francisco. Their session is set for 2:35 p.m. PST. Investors can catch the audio webcast on the company’s investor relations site. Coherent Inc
Coherent makes lasers, transceivers, and a range of optical and optoelectronic products, plus engineered materials, for both communications and industrial customers, according to a company filing.
Coherent posted second-quarter fiscal 2026 revenue of $1.69 billion and GAAP earnings of $0.76 per share in its latest update on Feb. 4. Non-GAAP earnings, which strip out certain items, came in at $1.29. “Strong demand” in the datacenter and communications segment powered the numbers, according to Anderson. Luther noted the company is stepping up capital investment to boost capacity. Coherent Inc
Next week, the focus lands on demand visibility, how fast new capacity is coming online, and the implications for margins. With expectations high, even a subtle change in tone can send the stock moving.
It’s been an uneasy stretch. Global stocks slipped on Friday, with investors eyeing stretched valuations and the specter of AI-fueled upheaval, according to a Reuters market wrap. Optical suppliers have felt the pressure too.
The setup, though, isn’t one-way traffic. If there’s even a whiff of large clients pulling back on orders—or if bringing on new capacity starts dragging out—shares that have sprinted higher could just as quickly take a hit.
March 3 stands out as the next obvious catalyst. On top of that, traders are eyeing the week’s AI-focused earnings — Broadcom is on the list — to gauge networking demand and signs of spending.