
Watching a small semiconductor stock explode like Max Linear did last Friday is almost surreal. By the time the closing bell rang, MXL had risen 76.12 percent to $60.32, barely missing an intraday high of $63.52, which the company hadn’t reached since 2022. The move felt more like a real-time market re-rating than an earnings bounce for a stock that had dropped as low as $9.07 in the previous year.
A Q1 earnings report that exceeded analysts’ projections by all measures served as the impetus. Revenue came in at $137.2 million, up 43 percent year-over-year. In contrast to the $0.18 consensus, adjusted earnings per share came in at $0.22. However, infrastructure revenue, which increased by 136 percent, was the figure that truly caught the room off guard. For the first time, that segment—which is primarily driven by optical data-center platforms—has surpassed broadband as the company’s largest end market. It’s the kind of structural change that doesn’t go unnoticed.
| MaxLinear, Inc. — Key Information | Details |
|---|---|
| Company Name | MaxLinear, Inc. |
| Ticker Symbol | NASDAQ: MXL |
| Headquarters | Carlsbad, California, USA |
| Industry | Semiconductors |
| Chairman & CEO | Kishore Seendripu |
| Share Price (Apr 24, 2026) | 60.32 USD |
| One-Day Change | +76.12% (+$26.07) |
| 52-Week Range | $9.07 – $63.52 |
| Market Capitalization | ~$5.40 Billion |
| Q1 2026 Revenue | $137.2 Million (+43% YoY) |
| Q1 2026 Adjusted EPS | $0.22 (beat estimate of $0.18) |
| Q2 2026 Revenue Guidance | $160M – $170M |
| Year-to-Date Change | +246.07% |
It’s difficult to disagree with the company’s chairman and CEO, Kishore Seendripu, who described the event as a turning point. MaxLinear’s optical products, which support 400G and 800G architectures designed especially for AI workloads, are expanding at several hyperscale clients in the United States and Asia. After being a slower-burning story for some time, the Keystone PAM4 DSP platform now appears to be the ideal product at the ideal moment. The management increased the revenue forecast for optical data centers in 2026 by $40 million to a range of $150 to $170 million. Analysts are generally apprehensive about such an upward revision.
When Wall Street was caught off guard, it reacted as it usually does. Roth/MKM raised its price target from $18 to $60 and upgraded the stock to Buy. Needham had a $60 target when he went to buy. Susquehanna raised its goal from $30 to $45. Even Deutsche Bank increased its target to $40 while maintaining a hold. Analysts believe that the optical infrastructure thesis is true, but it’s unclear if the multiple expansion will be sustainable. By its own historical standards, MXL is no longer inexpensive at about 43.6 times forward earnings.
The speed at which the story changed is worth noting. A year ago, the AI rotation that boosted Marvell, Broadcom, and Nvidia largely ignored MaxLinear, which was trading in the single digits and reporting losses. In a hyperscale supply chain that requires all available bandwidth, investors appear to believe that the company has finally found its lane. The family of Panther storage accelerators is becoming more popular. In late 2026, the next generation of Annapurna and Rushmore products are anticipated to go on sale. Customers seem to be lining up for once, and there is a roadmap.
There is still some doubt, though. A net cash outflow of $8.9 million related to wafer prepayments was reported by management, highlighting industry-wide supply constraints and serving as a reminder that scaling into hyperscale demand isn’t free. Rising input costs are anticipated to put some pressure on gross margins. Additionally, because of the stock’s 500 percent run over the last 12 months, expectations are now set at a level that makes mistakes difficult.
As this develops, it’s difficult to avoid thinking of past semiconductor tales—businesses that struggled in obscurity until a single product cycle and a surge in demand collided. One thing became clear over the past week, regardless of whether MaxLinear maintains this level of success or retreats once the dust settles. It had been undervalued by the market. Most likely for too long.
