Unlock stock picks and a broker-level newsfeed that powers Wall Street.

Why New AI Winners Marvell Technology, Credo Technology, and Nebius Group Plunged in March

In This Article:

Shares of new artificial intelligence (AI) winners Marvell Technologies (NASDAQ: MRVL), Credo Technologies (NASDAQ: CRDO), and Nebius Group (NASDAQ: NBIS) plunged in March, down 32.9%, 27.2%, and 35%, respectively, according to data from S&P Global Market Intelligence.

Both Marvell and Credo reported earnings early in the month, and both actually reported fairly good results. However, the problem was that all three of these AI stocks rallied in a big way in 2024, and came into the month with high valuations. Therefore, any imperfections were amplified, as uneasiness over potential tariffs and the threat they pose to AI capital spending increased through the month.

These new AI darlings deliver, but investor expectations were sky-high

Marvell had perhaps the most interesting earnings release of these stocks during March. Revenue rose a solid 27% year over year, and adjusted non-GAAP (generally accepted accounting principles) EPS rose 30.4% to $0.60. Both figures came in ahead of analyst expectations.

Marvell's strong numbers were mainly due to its custom ASIC revenue, where the company provides semiconductor IP to major cloud companies that make custom AI accelerators. That segment has skyrocketed over the past two years, and management also projected very strong growth for this year as well.

However, when management was asked about a competitor potentially vying for Marvell's main customer Amazon, CEO Matt Murphy reiterated that Marvell saw strong growth in Amazon revenue this year and next, but wouldn't comment on whether Amazon was working with another company on another custom ASIC, or "XPU." So while the current picture looks good for Marvell, that uncertainty really slammed the stock, given that Marvell's valuation had ballooned to over 81 times adjusted earnings at its January highs.

Credo Technology was also a recent highflier heading into its earnings release in early March. Credo produces IP that goes into AI chiplets, but the company's main growth driver has been its active electrical cables (AECs), which connect data center switches more efficiently, and in a smaller form-factor, than many competing technologies.

Even though the stock had begun correcting in February, shares still weren't cheap entering the month. Prior to its March 4 earnings report, the stock still traded at around 20 times sales.

Credo actually blew away analyst expectations, with revenue up a whopping 154.4% and adjusted EPS rallying 525%, and the stock rallied immediately in the aftermath. However, the jump was short-lived, as tariff and economic fears soon intensified, putting into question the company's future growth projections. At its lofty multiple, there was plenty of room for Credo to fall.