Corning stock (GLW) holds near $150 after CEO sale filing as March catalysts line up

Corning stock (GLW) holds near $150 after CEO sale filing as March catalysts line up

February 28, 2026

NEW YORK, Feb 27, 2026, 19:08 (EST) — After-hours

  • Corning closed barely higher, up 0.05% at $150.38, then ticked up again in after-hours trading to $150.48
  • CEO Wendell Weeks exercised options and then sold 137,514 shares, an SEC filing showed.
  • UBS and Citi bumped up their price targets this week, with investors already eyeing the March conferences.

Corning Incorporated shares barely budged Friday, inching up just 0.05% to finish at $150.38. After hours, the stock ticked up to $150.48 following news from a regulatory filing that Chief Executive Wendell Weeks sold shares. During the session, Corning traded between $146.61 and $154.50, even as the S&P 500 slipped roughly 0.6%.

The insider trade hits just as both bulls and bears find themselves uneasy. Corning, now serving as a volatile AI-infrastructure stand-in—traders have started calling it “high beta”—has been swinging wildly within sessions, leaving everyone eyeing the next move.

A quick milestone comes up soon: Corning CFO Ed Schlesinger is on the calendar for March 3, speaking at Morgan Stanley’s Technology, Media & Telecom event in San Francisco. The investor relations site has the webcast link live.

According to Weeks’ Form 4, the insider exercised options for 137,514 shares at $27 and unloaded the same number at a weighted average of $155.3721 on Feb. 26. Sale prices ranged from $154.45 up to $157.17, the SEC filing shows. In addition, Weeks reported gifting 16,694 shares, which brings his direct holdings to 733,891 shares.

UBS bumped up its price target on Corning, now looking for $171 instead of $160, sticking with its Buy call on Thursday. The broker is flagging Nvidia’s numbers as a short-term boost for demand. Still, UBS trimmed its longer-term forecasts, citing a slower rollout for co-packaged optics (CPO)—those optical links that sit right by chips to lower power use and crank up speed—and for “scale-up” fiber, which connects high-density data center racks over short distances. Investing.com Australia

Citi bumped up its Corning price target to $170 from $120 this week, sticking with its Buy rating. The bank also slapped “upside 30-day catalyst watches” on both Corning and Lumentum, an optical supplier, citing expectations for upbeat headlines from the Optical Fiber Communication conference set for March 17-19. Citi called Corning and Lumentum “pillars” in the AI optical networking space. TipRanks

Corning last month projected first-quarter core sales ahead of Wall Street’s view, citing stronger demand for its fiber-optic products—nearly 40% of its revenue—and flagging a multi-year agreement with Meta Platforms that could be worth as much as $6 billion to provide fiber-optic cables for AI-driven data centers. “The numbers were good this morning, but probably baked in after yesterday’s announcement,” said William Kerwin, senior equity analyst at Morningstar. Reuters

Corning announced a $0.28 per share quarterly dividend on Feb. 11, according to a statement from Nasdaq. Shareholders on record as of Feb. 27 will get paid March 30.

There’s a chance the stock’s AI narrative could get ahead of the company’s actual results—particularly if customers pull back on data-center orders, or CPO uptake drags out beyond what investors are betting on. Friday’s wild range, snapping from $146 up to $154, shows just how fast the tape can turn.

Schlesinger’s conference slot arrives March 3. After that, the focus shifts to the OFC gathering running March 17-19, as analysts hunt for clearer cues on just how fast optical demand is ramping up inside AI data centers.

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