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Ciena's AI Infrastructure Boom Is Just Getting Started, Analyst Says

MarketDash Editorial Team
1 day ago
Despite a Friday pullback, analysts are raising price targets on Ciena after blowout earnings and guidance that signal accelerating growth ahead. One analyst boosted his forecast to $305 from $175, citing the company's dominant position in AI networking infrastructure.

Sometimes the market makes zero sense. Ciena Corp (CIEN) delivered the kind of earnings report that should make shareholders do a happy dance, complete with raised guidance and analyst price targets jumping by double digits. Instead, the stock gave up its Thursday gains and dropped more than 10% on Friday. Wall Street is a weird place.

But let's focus on what actually matters here: Ciena just posted a standout fourth-quarter result and issued guidance pointing to accelerating growth throughout 2026. The company is riding a wave of AI infrastructure spending that shows no signs of slowing down, and analysts are taking notice.

Analyst Gets Bullish, Really Bullish

Rosenblatt analyst Mike Genovese maintained his Buy rating on Ciena and raised his price target from $175 to $305. That's not a typo. That's a 74% increase in the price forecast, reflecting just how much the AI networking opportunity has expanded for this company.

Genovese's enthusiasm isn't based on wild speculation. It's rooted in Ciena's actual execution and the scale of what's coming down the pipeline.

The Numbers Tell a Growth Story

Ciena closed its fiscal fourth quarter of 2025 with strong execution across the board, beating expectations on revenue, margins, and earnings. Revenue climbed 20% year-over-year and 11% sequentially to $1.35 billion, coming in about $70 million (roughly 5%) above Genovese's estimate.

Gross margins expanded to 43.4%, up 150 basis points from the previous quarter and 80 basis points above the analyst's model. The adjusted EPS of $0.91 crushed the $0.74 estimate by 28%.

For the full fiscal year, Ciena booked $4.77 billion in revenue and $7.8 billion in orders. Perhaps most impressively, the company exited fiscal 2025 with roughly $5 billion of backlog compared to $2.1 billion a year earlier. That backlog more than doubled, which tells you everything about demand momentum heading into 2026.

Guidance That Exceeds Expectations

Ciena guided first-quarter 2026 revenue to about $1.39 billion, up sequentially and roughly 30% year-over-year. That came in some $140 million (about 11%) ahead of consensus expectations. Management also raised fiscal 2026 revenue growth guidance to 20%-28%, exceeding what analysts had been modeling.

On margins, Ciena flagged first-quarter gross margins near 43.5% but warned of a second-quarter dip driven by increased 800ZR revenue for scale-across projects. Management expects both 800ZR and overall company margins to improve in the second half of 2026 as pricing adjustments, higher volumes, and cost reductions take effect.

The company lifted its fiscal 2026 operating margin target to 17% from 16%, supported by top-line growth, flat operating expenses year-over-year, and improving second-half margins.

Earnings Estimates Jump Materially

Based on the strong guidance, Genovese materially raised his earnings outlook, boosting his fiscal 2026 EPS estimate to $5.25 from $4.25 and introducing a fiscal 2027 EPS forecast of $6.78.

The analyst cautioned that his fiscal 2027 numbers remain conservative, modeled on 20% revenue growth and gross margins below 44%. In more optimistic scenarios with revenue growth exceeding 30% and operating margins in the low-20s range, earnings could climb $10 to $12 higher than his base case.

Dominating the Scale-Across Opportunity

Here's where things get really interesting. Genovese emphasized Ciena's leadership position in the scale-across opportunity, which refers to the massive networking infrastructure needed to connect AI data centers.

The analyst expects Ciena to capture nearly 100% of line systems for scale-across deployments in fiscal 2026, thanks to its unique Hyper Rail/Multi Rail technology. He also expects Ciena to dominate the 800ZR pluggable market for that specific use case, though the company will share some business with Cisco Systems, Inc. (CSCO) and Nokia Corp (NOK).

Initial scale-across deployments began in the fourth quarter of 2025, and Genovese estimates dozens of such projects in fiscal 2026. Each project could generate revenue in the high tens of millions to low hundreds of millions, depending on distance, capacity requirements, and pluggable share.

Why the Stock Dropped Anyway

Despite all this good news, Ciena shares closed down 10.31% at $217.39 on Friday. Sometimes stocks pull back after big runs, even when the fundamentals keep improving. The stock had hit 52-week highs earlier in the week, so some profit-taking isn't surprising.

What matters more for long-term investors is whether the company can execute on the enormous opportunity ahead. With a $5 billion backlog, raised guidance, and a dominant position in AI networking infrastructure, Ciena appears well-positioned to capitalize on one of the biggest infrastructure build-outs in tech history. The AI boom needs networking gear, and Ciena is right in the middle of that spending wave.

Ciena's AI Infrastructure Boom Is Just Getting Started, Analyst Says

MarketDash Editorial Team
1 day ago
Despite a Friday pullback, analysts are raising price targets on Ciena after blowout earnings and guidance that signal accelerating growth ahead. One analyst boosted his forecast to $305 from $175, citing the company's dominant position in AI networking infrastructure.

Sometimes the market makes zero sense. Ciena Corp (CIEN) delivered the kind of earnings report that should make shareholders do a happy dance, complete with raised guidance and analyst price targets jumping by double digits. Instead, the stock gave up its Thursday gains and dropped more than 10% on Friday. Wall Street is a weird place.

But let's focus on what actually matters here: Ciena just posted a standout fourth-quarter result and issued guidance pointing to accelerating growth throughout 2026. The company is riding a wave of AI infrastructure spending that shows no signs of slowing down, and analysts are taking notice.

Analyst Gets Bullish, Really Bullish

Rosenblatt analyst Mike Genovese maintained his Buy rating on Ciena and raised his price target from $175 to $305. That's not a typo. That's a 74% increase in the price forecast, reflecting just how much the AI networking opportunity has expanded for this company.

Genovese's enthusiasm isn't based on wild speculation. It's rooted in Ciena's actual execution and the scale of what's coming down the pipeline.

The Numbers Tell a Growth Story

Ciena closed its fiscal fourth quarter of 2025 with strong execution across the board, beating expectations on revenue, margins, and earnings. Revenue climbed 20% year-over-year and 11% sequentially to $1.35 billion, coming in about $70 million (roughly 5%) above Genovese's estimate.

Gross margins expanded to 43.4%, up 150 basis points from the previous quarter and 80 basis points above the analyst's model. The adjusted EPS of $0.91 crushed the $0.74 estimate by 28%.

For the full fiscal year, Ciena booked $4.77 billion in revenue and $7.8 billion in orders. Perhaps most impressively, the company exited fiscal 2025 with roughly $5 billion of backlog compared to $2.1 billion a year earlier. That backlog more than doubled, which tells you everything about demand momentum heading into 2026.

Guidance That Exceeds Expectations

Ciena guided first-quarter 2026 revenue to about $1.39 billion, up sequentially and roughly 30% year-over-year. That came in some $140 million (about 11%) ahead of consensus expectations. Management also raised fiscal 2026 revenue growth guidance to 20%-28%, exceeding what analysts had been modeling.

On margins, Ciena flagged first-quarter gross margins near 43.5% but warned of a second-quarter dip driven by increased 800ZR revenue for scale-across projects. Management expects both 800ZR and overall company margins to improve in the second half of 2026 as pricing adjustments, higher volumes, and cost reductions take effect.

The company lifted its fiscal 2026 operating margin target to 17% from 16%, supported by top-line growth, flat operating expenses year-over-year, and improving second-half margins.

Earnings Estimates Jump Materially

Based on the strong guidance, Genovese materially raised his earnings outlook, boosting his fiscal 2026 EPS estimate to $5.25 from $4.25 and introducing a fiscal 2027 EPS forecast of $6.78.

The analyst cautioned that his fiscal 2027 numbers remain conservative, modeled on 20% revenue growth and gross margins below 44%. In more optimistic scenarios with revenue growth exceeding 30% and operating margins in the low-20s range, earnings could climb $10 to $12 higher than his base case.

Dominating the Scale-Across Opportunity

Here's where things get really interesting. Genovese emphasized Ciena's leadership position in the scale-across opportunity, which refers to the massive networking infrastructure needed to connect AI data centers.

The analyst expects Ciena to capture nearly 100% of line systems for scale-across deployments in fiscal 2026, thanks to its unique Hyper Rail/Multi Rail technology. He also expects Ciena to dominate the 800ZR pluggable market for that specific use case, though the company will share some business with Cisco Systems, Inc. (CSCO) and Nokia Corp (NOK).

Initial scale-across deployments began in the fourth quarter of 2025, and Genovese estimates dozens of such projects in fiscal 2026. Each project could generate revenue in the high tens of millions to low hundreds of millions, depending on distance, capacity requirements, and pluggable share.

Why the Stock Dropped Anyway

Despite all this good news, Ciena shares closed down 10.31% at $217.39 on Friday. Sometimes stocks pull back after big runs, even when the fundamentals keep improving. The stock had hit 52-week highs earlier in the week, so some profit-taking isn't surprising.

What matters more for long-term investors is whether the company can execute on the enormous opportunity ahead. With a $5 billion backlog, raised guidance, and a dominant position in AI networking infrastructure, Ciena appears well-positioned to capitalize on one of the biggest infrastructure build-outs in tech history. The AI boom needs networking gear, and Ciena is right in the middle of that spending wave.