Marvell Crashed Below $200: This Wall Street Firm Thinks It Doubles From Here

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By Alex Sirois Published

Quick Read

  • MRVL crashed 33% in July while KeyBanc analyst John Vinh upgraded to $400, anchored by a Google "Merope" design win worth up to $12 billion.

  • AVGO and NVDA held flat through July's selloff, signaling Marvell's 33% decline was stock-specific, not a broad AI chip sector breakdown.

  • Marvell posted record Q1 revenue of $2.4 billion and guided Q2 to $2.7 billion, making July's crash a sentiment story, not a fundamentals collapse.

  • This lithium producer surpassed a $1B private valuation, joining some of America's most powerful startups. Now you can invest in EnergyX alongside global giants like General Motors, but only through July 16. (sponsor)

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Marvell Crashed Below $200: This Wall Street Firm Thinks It Doubles From Here

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Marvell Technology (NASDAQ:MRVL | MRVL Price Prediction) trades below $200, while Wall Street’s average analyst price target sits at $252.56. That implies roughly 22.4% of upside if the consensus is right.

Marvell designs the custom silicon, high-speed optics, and Ethernet switches that hyperscalers use in AI data centers, with the data center segment producing 76% of total revenue. That heavy exposure is why Wall Street treats every hyperscaler capex headline as a Marvell headline, and why the July reversal has been brutal.

The KeyBanc upgrade to a $400 price target on July 14, 2026 lands in the middle of that reversal, creating one of the widest gaps between price and expectations in large-cap semis.

A Data Center Favorite Gave Back a Month of Gains in Two Weeks

Hyperscaler capex anxiety triggered the immediate selloff. News flow around revised capital expenditure forecasts from major hyperscale cloud providers put the custom AI silicon trade on the defensive, and Marvell absorbed the worst of it.

Shares are down 33.21% over the past month and 10.96% in the past week alone, with a 7.27% single-session drop on the most recent trading day. Selling pressure was compounded by increased competition in the ASIC market and premium valuation sensitivity to sticky inflation.

Fundamentally, the business held together. Q1 FY2027 revenue hit a record $2.418 billion, up 27.6% year over year, with non-GAAP EPS of $0.80 beating consensus. Management guided Q2 to $2.70 billion, roughly 35% growth. The selloff is a sentiment story, with the underlying numbers intact.

KeyBanc Sees a $12 Billion Design Win the Market Is Ignoring

KeyBanc analyst John Vinh’s bull case rests on the custom AI accelerator pipeline. He flags the imminent second-half 2026 volume ramp of Amazon’s Trainium 3 processor alongside a major new design win for Google’s “Merope” LPU, projected to generate up to $12 billion over its lifecycle. That multi-year, high-margin revenue visibility supports a target well above current consensus.

CEO Matt Murphy backs the thesis on the earnings call, citing “exceptional AI-related bookings” and a raised revenue outlook for both fiscal 2027 and fiscal 2028. Design win activity reached an all-time record, with 50 plus custom AI opportunities across 10 plus customers heading into the ramp.

Wall Street’s posture has stayed constructive through the selloff. The ratings distribution shows 38 Buy, 5 Hold, and 1 Sell, and recent institutional filings show funds like NFSG Corp, Adell Harriman & Carpenter, and Legacy Capital Group adding into weakness rather than trimming.

Peers Held While Marvell Cracked Alone

The peer group did not sell off with Marvell, which makes the July move stand out.

Broadcom (NASDAQ:AVGO) trades at $394.28 against a $523.73 analyst target, roughly 32.8% of implied upside. Shares are up 0.25% on the month and rated overwhelmingly Buy, with 44 Buys, 4 Holds, and no Sells.

NVIDIA (NASDAQ:NVDA) sits at $212.50 with a $301.62 average target, implying 41.9% upside. The stock is flat over the past month and holds a lopsided 58 Buy, 2 Hold, 1 Sell ratings mix. Analyst-implied upside is the largest in this cohort.

Advanced Micro Devices (NASDAQ:AMD) trades at $529.14 versus a $525.40 target, essentially at fair value with roughly 0.7% downside implied. Ratings still lean Buy at 42 Buy, 9 Hold, but the target has not kept up with a 147.08% YTD run.

NVIDIA carries the biggest analyst-implied upside at consensus, but Marvell’s KeyBanc-tier scenario at $400 would represent roughly 93.9% upside, dwarfing every peer if it plays out.

Down 33% in a Month While the S&P Barely Budged

Marvell is up 143.07% year to date even after the crash, while the S&P 500 has returned 10.69% over the same stretch. That is a stock still lapping the index by a factor of more than 13, now offered at a discount.

Analyst posture: 44 firms cover the name, breaking down as 38 Buy, 5 Hold, 1 Sell. Consensus target of $252.56 implies 22.4% upside, and KeyBanc’s outlier $400 effectively doubles the current price.

My Take: A Real Setup, but Only If Hyperscaler Capex Holds

The bull path back to $252, and eventually to a $300-plus stock, runs through hyperscaler capex plans firming back up, the Trainium 3 ramp and Google Merope program delivering on KeyBanc’s timelines, custom XPU volume, 1.6T optics adoption, and the Celestial AI and XConn acquisitions closing the scale-up interconnect gap.

The bear path opens if the ASIC competitive picture tightens and hyperscalers pull budgets or bring more silicon in-house. The 74x trailing P/E leaves no room if design wins slip. On balance, the setup looks cautiously constructive: fundamentals are intact, the multiple has reset, and the Google and Amazon programs give concrete catalyst paths. The next earnings report is the key confirmation point for the ramp.

Contact [email protected] for any questions or corrections.

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About the Author Alex Sirois →

Alex Sirois is a financial writer with experience spanning both retail and institutional investing. He has written for InvestorPlace and held roles at BNY Mellon and Bernstein, giving him a perspective that bridges Main Street portfolios and Wall Street analysis.

Alex holds an MBA from George Washington University and has built his career across multiple industries, including e-commerce, education, and translation — a breadth of experience that informs how he breaks down complex financial topics for everyday investors. His writing is conversational, actionable, and grounded in long-term, buy-and-hold investing principles.

At 247 Wall St., Alex focuses on delivering analysis that is both accessible and useful, with a clear emphasis on helping readers make more informed decisions with their money.

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