On June 23, Applied Optoelectronics declined 5.04% overnight, trading at $162.09/share, with turnover of $12.604 million. The optical communication sector faced broad-based selling pressure as concerns over delayed co-packaged optics (CPO) commercialization persisted.
On the news front, a SemiAnalysis report previously indicated that large-scale CPO adoption may be pushed back to 2028 or even 2029, far later than the market's prior expectation of full-scale deployment by 2027. The report cited system-level yields potentially as low as approximately 19.4%, reflecting significant challenges in production yields, system integration complexity, and cost economics. This pessimistic assessment has continued to suppress valuations across high-multiple optical communication names.
Within the Communication Equipment sector, Nokia fell 6.51%, Lumentum fell 4.82%, Ciena fell 3.76%, and Arista Networks fell 2.69%, reflecting sector-wide weakness. Additionally, CEO Chih-Hsiang Lin disposed of 145,655 shares on June 12, including 59,000 shares sold on the open market at an average price of approximately $166.53, adding a modestly cautious signal for sentiment-sensitive investors.
Applied Optoelectronics is a leading fiber-optic networking products supplier focused on cable television, fiber-to-the-home, and data center markets, and is among the few U.S.-based companies capable of self-producing InP lasers for AI optical modules.
(The above content is based on publicly available market information, generated by a program or algorithm, and is intended solely as a stock movement alert. It does not constitute investment advice or a basis for trading decisions.)
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