Marvell Technology (MRVL) dropped around 8.5% on Monday, falling to approximately $218 during a broad selloff in semiconductor names. The stock was down about 6.58% to $220.29 at the time of writing, with no negative company-specific news behind the move.
Marvell Technology, Inc., MRVL
The slide came as traders rotated out of high-beta tech names into defensive positions and energy plays. The Technology sector finished as the day’s worst performer, off 1.33%, while Energy climbed 2.27%.
Marvell has had a powerful run — up nearly 178% year-to-date — so it’s not surprising to see it hit harder when the market turns cautious. Premium-valued names tend to draw the most selling when risk appetite fades.
Macro pressure is adding to the pain. Rising expectations for a Federal Reserve rate hike, combined with Middle East tensions, are pushing money out of growth names.
The advance/decline ratio sat at just 1.2, and the Russell 2000 was down 0.54%, suggesting a defensive tone across markets broadly.
From a technical standpoint, the longer-term trend for MRVL remains intact. The stock is still trading about 31% above its 100-day moving average and roughly 74% above its 200-day moving average.
The near-term setup is shakier. MRVL is about 18% below its 20-day SMA and around 5% below its 50-day SMA, a sign that the recent momentum has cooled off.
Part of the selling pressure is also being linked to a post-index inclusion hangover. Passive S&P 500 rebalancing flows have run their course, removing a tailwind that had been lifting the stock.
Marvell’s heavy weighting in key semiconductor ETFs — including SOXX (6.15%), ARTY (6.37%), and SOXQ (6.03%) — means that broad outflows from those funds will automatically drag the stock lower.
The Nasdaq fell 1.13% on the day, and the S&P 500 was off 0.36%, adding broader index pressure to the chip sector.
Despite the day’s drop, Wall Street hasn’t turned on Marvell. The stock carries a Buy consensus with an average price target of $270.17.
RBC Capital maintained an Outperform rating with a $360 target on July 7. UBS raised its target to $340 on June 29, and Cantor Fitzgerald lifted its target to $300 on the same day, though with a Neutral rating.
The next big catalyst is the Aug. 27 earnings report. Analysts are looking for EPS of 87 cents, up from 67 cents a year ago, and revenue of $2.70 billion, up from $2.01 billion year-over-year.
At current levels, MRVL trades at a P/E of 81x, a premium to peers that leaves little room for execution slippage.
At the time of writing, MRVL was trading at $218.06, down 7.53% on the session.
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