TLDR UBS raised its Corning (GLW) price target to $160 from $125, maintaining a Buy rating The upgrade is driven by 30–50% capex revisions from major hyperscalersTLDR UBS raised its Corning (GLW) price target to $160 from $125, maintaining a Buy rating The upgrade is driven by 30–50% capex revisions from major hyperscalers

Corning (GLW) Stock Jumps 6% After UBS Raises Price Target on AI Fiber Demand

2026/02/21 17:26
3 min read
For feedback or concerns regarding this content, please contact us at [email protected]

TLDR

  • UBS raised its Corning (GLW) price target to $160 from $125, maintaining a Buy rating
  • The upgrade is driven by 30–50% capex revisions from major hyperscalers like Meta, Amazon, and Microsoft
  • Corning signed a $6 billion “anchor agreement” with Meta, providing revenue visibility and funding for new factories
  • UBS forecasts 21% compound annual sales growth and 30% EPS growth through 2028
  • The emerging “Scale Up” fiber market — replacing copper inside server racks — could be 2–3x larger than the current “Scale Out” market

Corning (GLW) stock climbed 6.5% in midday trading on Friday after UBS made a strong move on its outlook for the company.


GLW Stock Card
Corning Incorporated, GLW

UBS analyst Joshua Spector raised his price target on GLW to $160 from $125 and kept his Buy rating in place.

The driving force behind the upgrade: hyperscalers are spending a lot more money, and Corning is in the middle of it.

Spector cited “30–50% revisions in capex spending by major hyperscalers” as the core reason for his updated estimates. Amazon alone recently guided for $200 billion in capex — about 33% above prior expectations.

UBS now sees hyperscale spending growing 68% year-over-year in 2026.

All of that spending means more data moving through more infrastructure — and more fiber optic cable to carry it.

The $6 Billion Meta Deal

Corning recently locked in a $6 billion agreement with Meta Platforms, described as an “anchor agreement.”

The deal is more than just a big revenue number. It gives Corning forward visibility into demand and brings in upfront cash the company can use to build new manufacturing capacity.

Spector said he expects similar deals with other hyperscalers, which could help Corning grow its market share further.

“These contracts are giving GLW visibility to longer-term demand growth, but also have the potential to bring in cash earlier to fund investments, in part de-risking investments in new capacity,” Spector wrote.

Scale Up: The Next Wave

Right now, fiber optic cables connect server racks to each other — a setup called “Scale Out.” Corning already plays here.

But the next opportunity is “Scale Up” — replacing copper wires inside individual server racks with fiber. That’s a newer, faster-growing market.

UBS estimates the Scale Up market could be two to three times larger than the current Scale Out market.

Demand from Scale Up is seen as just getting started, with elevated growth potentially running into the mid-2030s.

Spector now forecasts Corning’s Optical segment will account for 55% of the company’s net income by 2028, up from its current level.

He projects compound annual sales growth of 21% and adjusted EPS growth of 30% through 2028.

Despite the stock’s recent run, UBS applied a 33x next-twelve-months P/E multiple — a slight discount to optical peers — to arrive at the $160 target.

Spector also noted that 2028 likely won’t represent peak sales, with fiber demand expected to stay above historical growth rates well into the middle of the next decade.

He added there is potential for further estimate revisions following Nvidia’s upcoming update, saying he doesn’t expect the current round of hyperscaler capex raises to be the last.

The post Corning (GLW) Stock Jumps 6% After UBS Raises Price Target on AI Fiber Demand appeared first on CoinCentral.

Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact [email protected] for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.
Tags:

You May Also Like

Original Penguin Sues Pudgy Penguins Over Trademark Dispute

Original Penguin Sues Pudgy Penguins Over Trademark Dispute

TLDR Original Penguin sues Pudgy Penguins for alleged trademark misuse. PEI targets crypto brand over penguin-themed apparel and headwear. Lawsuit demands stop
Share
Coincentral2026/03/06 21:09
Exclusive interview with Smokey The Bera, co-founder of Berachain: How the innovative PoL public chain solves the liquidity problem and may be launched in a few months

Exclusive interview with Smokey The Bera, co-founder of Berachain: How the innovative PoL public chain solves the liquidity problem and may be launched in a few months

Recently, PANews interviewed Smokey The Bera, co-founder of Berachain, to unravel the background of the establishment of this anonymous project, Berachain's PoL mechanism, the latest developments, and answered widely concerned topics such as airdrop expectations and new opportunities in the DeFi field.
Share
PANews2024/07/03 13:00
American Manufacturing Has A Private Equity Problem

American Manufacturing Has A Private Equity Problem

The post American Manufacturing Has A Private Equity Problem appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Private equity would seem to be a natural fit for SME manufacturers’ increasing needs for growth and buyout capital. But there’s a problem. getty Baby Boom owners of small- and medium-sized enterprise manufacturing companies, which comprise about 98% of American industry, are reaching retirement age in droves, with Generation X not far behind. Those without relatives or partners to take over the businesses need to find buyers so they can exit. Private equity investors would seem to be the natural answer. Unfortunately, there exists a critical distrust of PE among industrial owners. Matt Guse is president of MRS Machining in Augusta, Wisconsin, a family-owned machine shop established by his dad in 1986. Author of the new book MRS Machining: A Manufacturing Story, Guse published an article on LinkedIn last week giving one reason for that great level of distrust among owners looking to sell. There’s a gap right now in manufacturing that mostly gets swept under the rug—a real disconnect between buyers and sellers that goes way deeper than price. Almost every week, I hear from private equity firms or buyers circling manufacturing businesses, coming in with their own playbooks. But let’s be honest: most buyers still approach business owners like they’re handing them a favor, tossing out the same tired 2x–4x multiples, assuming owners are desperate to cash out. That attitude misses the point entirely. Manufacturing business owners aren’t just selling off machines and real estate. They’re putting decades of hard work, community, and identity on the line. These are their legacies, not just another transaction to check off a spreadsheet. Treating these deals as cold, purely financial moves ignores everything that actually makes these businesses valuable in the first place. There’s a much deeper level of distrust that dates back about as long as MRS Machining has been…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 05:05