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Marvell sees custom chip revenue topping $10 billion by 2029 as AI demand grows

By Thomson Reuters May 27, 2026 | 3:11 PM

By Anhata Rooprai

May 27 (Reuters) – Marvell Technology forecast on Wednesday its custom chip business would surpass $10 billion in revenue in fiscal 2029, as cloud companies expand AI data centers and invest ​in custom chips to reduce reliance on Nvidia’s processors.

The surge ‌in AI adoption has fueled demand for specialized chips, which along with Marvell’s interconnect technologies, play a critical role in advanced data centers by linking thousands of processors used to train and run AI models.

The company’s shares have more than doubled ‌so far ​this year.

The custom chip revenue guidance “implies $5 billion ⁠in incremental revenue from FY28 ⁠to FY29 exclusively from one business, portending another robust growth year in FY29,” Morningstar analyst William Kerwin said.

Marvell now expects 2028 revenue to grow to about $16.5 billion, up from its prior forecast of $15 billion.

Second-quarter ​revenue is expected to be $2.70 billion, plus or minus 5%, compared with the analysts’ average estimate of $2.60 billion, according to data compiled ⁠by LSEG. Adjusted profit is expected to ⁠be 93 cents per share, plus or minus 5 ​cents, above estimates of 90 cents apiece.

Marvell and larger rival Broadcom help cloud-computing ​companies design custom chips tuned to their specific data center ‌needs, and that work has grown into a large business for both companies.

“We have custom engagements across the board at all the U.S. hyperscalers,” CEO Matt Murphy told analysts on the earnings call.

The company has been ⁠a key beneficiary of surging capital spending by hyperscalers, who use its technology for high-speed connectivity inside data centers.

U.S. tech giants, including Alphabet and Amazon ⁠are expected to spend ‌more than $700 billion on AI infrastructure this year, ⁠a sharp rise from around $400 billion in 2025.

Marvell said ​it expects ‌its data center business to grow by about ​50% this ⁠year. Revenue in this segment came in at $1.83 billion in the first quarter, beating estimates of $1.81 billion.

In the first quarter, its revenue rose 28% to $2.42 billion, beating estimates of $2.40 billion. Adjusted profit came in at 80 cents per share, exceeding estimates of 79 cents.

(Reporting by Anhata Rooprai in Bengaluru; editing ​by Alan Barona)