AI infrastructure-linked stocks drew market attention as demand signals spread from GPUs to chip IP, DRAM/HBM memory and optical connectivity, while mixed stock moves showed that supply constraints still matter.
AI infrastructure-linked stocks were in focus this week as market attention continued to move beyond Nvidia and into the wider AI supply chain, including chip IP, DRAM/HBM memory, optical connectivity and data center infrastructure.
The moves were mixed rather than one-directional. Nvidia extended gains, SK Hynix showed strong weekly momentum, while ARM fell after earnings as AI demand was offset by supply concerns and smartphone-market weakness. According to the collected market snapshot, NVDA rose 5.68% over one day, ARM fell 10.11%, SK Hynix gained 16.4% over five days, and COHR rose 3.06% over one day.
| Asset | 1D Change | 5D Change | Key Signal |
|---|---|---|---|
| NVDA | +5.68% | +4.74% | AI GPU and data center anchor |
| ARM | -10.11% | +0.99% | AI demand offset by supply concerns |
| MU | -0.47% | -2.10% | Memory demand, mixed near-term move |
| SK Hynix | +1.93% | +16.40% | HBM and memory supply attention |
| GLW | +0.46% | +3.20% | Optical connectivity |
| COHR | +3.06% | +4.50% | Optics components |
The latest market focus reflects a broader AI infrastructure-chain theme. Market participants are no longer watching only GPU makers. They are also tracking companies linked to chip design, high-bandwidth memory, optical connectivity, data movement and data center expansion.
The spending backdrop remains large. Yahoo Finance reported that Microsoft, Alphabet, Amazon and Meta are on track to spend upward of $650 billion on AI-related investments in 2026, with most of that spending directed toward AI chips, servers and data center infrastructure. Source
This is why the AI trade is increasingly being viewed as an infrastructure-chain story rather than a single-stock story.
ARM shows both sides of the AI infrastructure story. Demand for its data center AI chip remains strong, but supply capacity is becoming a near-term limitation.
Reuters reported that ARM shares fell after the company warned about smartphone-market weakness and supply issues for its new AI chip. The report also noted that ARM’s AI chip is expected to generate more than $2 billion in revenue across fiscal 2027 and 2028, but the company currently has enough resources to fulfill only the first $1 billion of demand. Source
That makes ARM a useful example of the current AI infrastructure theme: demand is expanding, but wafers, testing equipment and manufacturing capacity can still limit how quickly that demand turns into revenue.
Memory is becoming one of the clearest bottlenecks in AI infrastructure. AI data centers need GPUs, but they also need high-bandwidth memory and broader DRAM supply to move and process large volumes of data.
Reuters reported that SK Hynix has received unprecedented offers from major technology companies looking to secure memory chip supply. The report said some firms are offering to fund new production lines and manufacturing equipment, while sources indicated there is currently little spare chip manufacturing capacity available. Source
This helps explain why DRAM, HBM, Micron and SK Hynix-related names are being watched alongside Nvidia. The AI infrastructure buildout depends not only on compute power, but also on memory availability.
The AI infrastructure theme is also spreading beyond semiconductors. Optical connectivity is becoming more important as large-scale AI data centers require faster data movement between processors, servers and networking systems.
Reuters reported that Nvidia made a substantial financial commitment to support Corning’s U.S. manufacturing expansion, in addition to a previously disclosed equity investment. The partnership is aimed at increasing production capacity for glass and fiber-optic cables used in large-scale data centers. Source
A separate Reuters report said Corning and Nvidia are working to boost U.S. production of optical connectivity products for AI data centers, with Corning shares rising strongly after the announcement. Source
This is the broader signal: AI infrastructure is no longer only about who makes the GPU. It is increasingly about who supplies the AI factory.
The next focus will be whether AI infrastructure demand continues to translate into stronger guidance across the supply chain.
Key areas to watch include Nvidia’s data center guidance, ARM’s AI chip supply progress, Micron and SK Hynix updates on HBM and DRAM supply, Big Tech capital expenditure plans, and further optical connectivity demand after the Nvidia-Corning partnership.
If these signals remain strong, market attention may continue to spread across the wider AI infrastructure chain. If supply constraints, valuation pressure or weaker end-market demand increase, stock reactions could remain uneven even while the long-term AI infrastructure theme stays active.


