Key Highlights
- Bank of America elevated Corning’s price target from $144 to $155 while reaffirming its Buy rating
- Shares surged over 5% on March 23, advancing from $124.58 to close between $131 and $133
- The company granted US Conec licensing rights for its PRIZM TMT optical ferrule technology targeting AI data centers
- Corning presented multicore fiber and co-packaged optics solutions at OFC 2026 for hyperscale deployments
- Latest quarterly earnings revealed 20% revenue growth to $4.22 billion and 72% EPS increase to $0.62
Shares of Corning (GLW) experienced a notable rally on March 23, 2026, surging more than 5% during NYSE trading. The upward momentum stemmed from Bank of America’s raised price objective and the company’s announcement of innovative products designed for AI-powered data center infrastructure.
Wamsi Mohan, an analyst at Bank of America, increased GLW’s price objective to $155 from the previous $144 mark while maintaining the Buy recommendation. This adjustment signals strengthening conviction in Corning’s leadership position within optical connectivity as capital expenditures for data centers accelerate.
This wasn’t an isolated analyst action. Citigroup had earlier pushed its target to $170, while BofA itself had elevated its forecast from $120 to $144 only weeks before. The consensus Wall Street target currently hovers around $129.54, with the upper range extending to $171.
Trading began near $124.58 before shares peaked at $135.26 during the session. The closing price settled within the $131–$133 band. NYSE volume exceeded 13 million shares, significantly surpassing normal trading activity.
During the OFC 2026 conference, Corning introduced an innovative portfolio of solutions targeting high-density AI networking requirements. The lineup featured sophisticated multicore fiber, co-packaged optics, and expanded-beam ferrules engineered for space-constrained data center deployments.
US Conec Receives PRIZM Technology License
Corning additionally disclosed a licensing agreement granting US Conec access to its PRIZM TMT optical ferrule technology. This innovation enables greater fiber connectivity within condensed spaces—a critical advantage as data centers seek to maximize bandwidth within limited physical infrastructure.
This development complements Corning’s current $6 billion collaboration with Meta focused on optical cabling solutions. Hyperscale operators such as Meta represent primary demand catalysts as they expand infrastructure to accommodate generative AI processing requirements.
Recent quarterly performance validates this upward trajectory. Revenue increased 20% to reach $4.22 billion. Earnings per share jumped 72% to $0.62. Management provided guidance of $0.66–$0.70 EPS for the upcoming quarter while projecting 15% core sales expansion.
Optical communications currently anchors the company’s growth narrative. This segment anticipates annual revenue growth of 15–20%, driven by industry-wide AI capital investment.
Financial Performance Metrics
GLW has advanced 45.4% year to date. At $131.85, shares remain approximately 17.8% beneath the 52-week peak of $160.43 reached in February 2026. A $1,000 investment made five years ago would have grown to roughly $3,307 today.
Annual revenue totals $15.63 billion. Net income stands at $1.60 billion. Gross profit margins approximate 36%, with pretax margins at 11.3%.
The company has earmarked $1.7 billion for capital expenditures in 2026, focused on expanding manufacturing capacity for solar and AI-related production.
Several challenges remain. CEO Wendell Weeks divested 137,514 shares in February 2026. The stock trades at a P/E ratio near 70. Additionally, NVIDIA’s copper interconnect development roadmap could introduce competitive pricing dynamics to the optical marketplace.
Three days preceding this rally, GLW had declined 3.9% as geopolitical uncertainties involving the US, Israel, and Iran elevated energy costs and created headwinds for industrial stocks generally.
The current closing price of $131.85 suggests investors are balancing robust operational performance against a premium valuation that offers limited margin for disappointment.
