Credo Technology Group’s (CRDO) stock surged after management announced a major acquisition that could reshape how investors view the company.
The DustPhotonics deal pushes Credo deeper into optical networking and gives the company exposure to one of the fastest-growing parts of AI infrastructure.
Here’s why investors believe the acquisition could significantly expand Credo’s long-term opportunity.
Credo adds silicon photonics to stack
Credo shares jumped about 20% after the company announced on April 13, 2026, a definitive agreement to acquire DustPhotonics, a silicon photonics specialist, for $750 million in cash plus roughly 0.92 million shares upfront and up to 3.21 million additional shares tied to milestones.
The acquisition pushes Credo beyond its historical identity as an AEC and electrical interconnect supplier into a broader optical platform spanning SerDes, optical DSPs, silicon photonics PICs, and transceiver-level integration.
AI data centers are rapidly moving toward faster networking speeds, with the industry upgrading from 800G connections today toward 1.6T and eventually 3.2T systems.
At those speeds, companies must also solve for higher power consumption, signal quality, and fitting increasingly complex hardware into tight spaces.
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A key bear case against Credo had been that a long-term shift from copper to optics could narrow the company’s role in the networking stack. DustPhotonics directly addresses that concern by giving Credo exposure to optical transceivers already deployed in leading hyperscale AI clusters, according to the company.
FY2027 optical target resets valuation debate
Credo paired the acquisition with a hard financial target, noting: “With the addition of DustPhotonics, the company expects its combined portfolio of ZeroFlap Optical Transceivers, Optical DSPs, and Silicon Photonics products to generate greater than $500 million in optical revenue in fiscal 2027.”
A company with a path to more than $500 million in optical revenue could warrant a broader valuation multiple if execution holds.
Credo’s $500 million FY2027 optical revenue target gives investors a clear benchmark to judge whether its broader AI networking strategy can translate into meaningful growth.
Yuichiro Chino via Getty Images
BNP Paribas noted that DustPhotonics may need to contribute at least $20 million of net income in fiscal 2027 for the math to work. That creates a clear scorecard for the acquisition.
In Credo’s latest reported quarter, revenue roughly tripled year over year while non-GAAP gross margin reached 68.6%, reducing concerns that management is pursuing acquisitions to offset weakness in the core business.
NPO and CPO exposure broadens long-term opportunity
DustPhotonics gives Credo direct exposure to Near-Port Optics and Co-Packaged Optics, which place optics closer to the switch to improve bandwidth density and reduce power draw.
DustPhotonics’ product portfolio spans 400G, 800G, and 1.6T, with a roadmap to 3.2T. The deal could expand Credo’s scale-up networking opportunity into silicon-photonics-based CPO and NPO solutions, reinforcing why investors view the acquisition as strategically additive.
Still, it’s worth keeping in mind that just three customers accounted for 88% of Credo’s revenue last quarter. That concentration could create upside if Credo can deepen optical content inside existing hyperscaler relationships, increasing wallet share without needing to add an entirely new customer base.
What could keep Credo’s stock price soaring
- DustPhotonics closes successfully and increases Credo’s content per AI deployment
- Optical transceiver and DSP ramps help management reach its FY2027 optical revenue target
- Near-Port Optics and Co-Packaged Optics design wins move into production
- Vertical integration across SerDes, DSPs, PICs, and modules improves product fit and supports margins
- Investors gain confidence optics can become a higher-value growth driver, not just a larger revenue opportunity
Have the gains already been had? What could go wrong from here
- Acquisition-related dilution becomes more painful if operating performance underwhelms
- DustPhotonics misses revenue milestones, weakening the broader optical growth thesis
- Product overlap or operational missteps pressure margins during the scale-up period
- Competitive pricing in optical modules reduces profitability despite revenue growth
- Heavy reliance on a few hyperscale customers magnifies the impact of any slowdown in AI infrastructure spending
Key takeaways for investors
Credo’s acquisition of DustPhotonics gives the company a stronger position in optical networking and addresses a key concern that a long-term shift toward optics could reduce its role in AI infrastructure.
The opportunity now looks larger, but investors will need proof that the acquisition can translate into real revenue growth and margin expansion over the next several quarters.
If management executes well, Credo could evolve into a broader AI networking platform rather than remain narrowly viewed as an AEC supplier.
Related: Credo soars 15% as analysts flag ‘significant disconnect’