Credo Technology Just Proved It’s an AI “Picks-and-Shovels” Stock Worth Watching

Credo Technology (NASDAQ: CRDO) continues to deliver for investors. The stock made several new all-time highs this year and just vaulted to another one after posting record-setting numbers for the second quarter of its 2026 fiscal year.

Credo stock is now up more than 180% so far this year, demonstrating that there are outstanding opportunities for investors as artificial intelligence (AI) continues to take center stage in the stock market.

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Based in San Jose, California, Credo is a technology company that provides high-performance connectivity for data centers, 5G carriers, AI, and high-performance computing markets.

The stock was valued at less than $50 per share until late 2024 when the market began to recognize the massive opportunity for data center and AI growth. Grand View Research estimates that the overall AI market opportunity will rise from $279 billion to $3.5 trillion by 2033, and the data center market will expand from $347.6 billion to $652 billion by 2030. Both opportunities are massive tailwinds for Credo, which is why investors started running the stock price up.

Credo has several products for AI workloads that perhaps fly under the radar when you’re thinking about the most dynamic products for AI development. For instance, Credo’s Active Electrical Cables (AECs) are considered superior to copper cables in connecting clusters of graphics processing units (GPUs) and central processing units (CPUs) in data centers. AECs use signal processors within the wiring to help move the data faster and more efficiently.

Its OmniConnect next-generation architecture is designed to overcome memory bottlenecks and improve AI inference scalability. And the ZeroFlap optical transceivers provide network stability and improved efficiency for AI workloads.

Earnings for fiscal 2026’s second quarter (ended Nov. 1, 2025) brought revenue of $268 million, up 272% from a year ago and up 20.2% from Q1. Gross margins were a whopping 67.5%, with operating expenses of $102.4 million and net income of $86.2 million. On the bottom line, Credo reported earnings per share of $0.44 and ended the quarter with a cash balance of $813.6 million.

“These are the strongest quarterly results in Credo’s history, and they reflect the continued build-out of the world’s largest AI training and inference clusters,” CEO Bill Brennan said.

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