Marvell Technology (MRVL) dropped 7.3% on Wednesday after Erste Group Bank cut its rating from Buy to Hold. The stock fell as low as $201.22, down from a prior close of $222.44, with around 26.6 million shares changing hands during the session.
Marvell Technology, Inc., MRVL
Erste Group analyst Hans Engel flagged two core concerns: the stock’s premium valuation and its heavy dependence on a small number of customers. At a P/E of 73.56, Engel argued the stock is priced above the industry average. InvestingPro’s Fair Value model also places MRVL among the more overvalued names in the market.
That said, the PEG ratio of 0.13 tells a different story — suggesting the valuation may hold up if growth targets are met.
Erste Group stands largely alone in its caution. Of 37 analysts tracked by MarketBeat, three rate MRVL a Strong Buy, 27 rate it a Buy, and seven have a Hold. The consensus price target sits at $245.45 — well above current levels.
B. Riley recently raised its target to $345, citing Marvell’s Nvidia partnership. UBS lifted its target to $340, pointing to growth opportunities in CXL technology. JPMorgan raised its target to $240, giving the stock an Overweight rating.
Oppenheimer has a $250 Outperform target. Even Cantor Fitzgerald, which holds a Neutral rating, pushed its target up to $300.
Last quarter, Marvell reported revenue of $2.42 billion — up 27.6% year over year — and EPS of $0.80, matching analyst expectations exactly. Net margin came in at 28.99%, with a return on equity of 13.83%.
For Q2 fiscal 2027, the company guided for revenue of approximately $2.7 billion, representing 35% year-over-year growth. EPS is projected at around $0.93, with gross margins expected between 52.1% and 53.1%.
Wednesday’s move wasn’t entirely about the downgrade. Sector weakness dragged the whole chip space lower, with Micron falling 8% on China competition concerns and pulling Intel, AMD, and Marvell down with it.
On the insider front, CFO Dan Durn sold 2,250 shares at $281.01 on June 23rd — a 24.58% reduction in his position. His predecessor Willem Meintjes sold 4,000 shares at $175.24 back in May. Over the past quarter, insiders offloaded a combined 122,873 shares worth roughly $19.9 million.
Institutional ownership remains high at 83.51%. The company’s 50-day moving average is $238.91, while its 200-day sits at $147.23 — reflecting how sharply the stock has run over the past year.
Marvell declared a quarterly dividend of $0.06 per share, payable July 30 to shareholders of record as of July 10.
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