Analog Devices (ADI) is plugged directly into the infrastructure powering the AI wave. Today, the company’s AI story has shifted from vague thematic exposure to concrete, measurable demand. Hyperscalers are building at a record pace, and ADI’s optical and power components are foundational to that buildout.
Analog Devices’ CEO, Vincent Roche, had a strong message about the demand for AI infrastructure that the company is seeing. What he’s seeing can have rippling effects across the entire AI industry.
AI infrastructure is changing ADI’s narrative
ADI reported Q2 revenue of $3.62 billion, a record, finishing above the high end of guidance while growing 37% year over year. The breakdown told the real story. Data center now accounts for more than 75% of Communications revenue after growing more than 90% year over year, driven by both optical and power portfolios.
This isn’t soft AI exposure. ADI is selling the specific components that go inside AI clusters and networking systems, the foundational layers where hyperscaler budgets are being committed first and at scale. CEO Vincent Roche was direct about the durability of that demand: “As we move through 2026, our confidence in their continued growth into ’27 is increasing.”
That visibility is the key detail. Customers are placing orders to plan around a multi-year deployment cycle, and ADI is embedded in it.

To further cement that position, ADI announced plans to acquire Empower Semiconductor, whose integrated voltage regulator technology, Roche said, can shrink the power footprint by up to 4x and slash data center compute power consumption by an estimated 10% to 15%.
Roche called it “the final piece of our comprehensive grid-to-core power platform” and said it would expand ADI’s addressable market within what he described as the “hypergrowth AI accelerator space.”
Management guided for Q3 revenue of $3.9 billion, plus or minus $100 million. The bull case holds if Communications stays large and margins stay firm.
Industrial recovery remains ADI’s profit backbone
Meanwhile, ADI’s other major engine is roaring back. The Industrial segment, 50% of total revenue, grew 56% year over year last quarter, with every single industrial business increasing both sequentially and year over year. Roche highlighted aerospace and defense, ATE, electronic test and measurement, and the broad market as leading contributors.
Industrial is ADI’s most profitable segment, with product cycles that often run 15 to 20 years. Every dollar of recovery brings back the part of the portfolio that drives margin stability, low churn, and repeat cash generation.
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The combination of a recovering Industrial business and an accelerating Communications segment is what makes ADI’s current setup unusual.
Crucially, Roche noted that these industrial businesses “are still well below their prior cycle highs with lean channel inventories,” meaning there’s still meaningful room to run even as growth rates moderate from here.
Margin expansion shows earnings power inflecting
The quarter’s most striking numbers were the margins. Gross margin hit 73%, up 360 basis points year over year. Operating margin reached 49%, up 780 basis points year over year. This is excellent profitability, even in a booming semiconductor market.
CFO Richard Puccio tied the expansion directly to a favorable mix, higher utilization, and pricing, not just fixed-cost absorption. In a semiconductor rebound, that distinction matters. Mix-driven margin expansion points to a structurally stronger earnings base, not just a recovery bounce.
Investors will want to see revenue hold near $3.9 billion, and the mix remain favorable enough to preserve earnings quality. Roche’s closing remarks suggest he’s confident: “Our confidence in our future has never been greater.”
What could drive Analog Devices’ stock higher
- AI cluster buildouts increase demand for ADI’s optical and power components used in data centers.
- Data center networking demand improves revenue visibility and reduces short-cycle volatility.
- A broader Industrial recovery restores one of ADI’s strongest earnings segments.
- Favorable mix toward infrastructure products supports stronger margin expansion.
- Better factory utilization could allow earnings to grow faster than revenue.
What could break ADI’s thesis at current prices
- ADI stock has already climbed 73% in the past year, which could leave limited room for upside.
- AI demand may become too concentrated among a small group of hyperscale customers.
- Optical and power content growth could lag overall AI infrastructure spending.
- Industrial recovery may stall, increasing reliance on AI-related demand.
- Lower-margin businesses could recover faster and dilute profit mix.
- Supply chain constraints may create execution issues as Communications demand accelerates.
Key takeaways for Analog Devices
Analog Devices is seeing accelerating demand from AI infrastructure customers through its optical, networking, and power products used in hyperscale data centers. Communications revenue is increasingly tied to long-term AI deployment cycles, supporting stronger visibility and growth.
Industrial recovery provides another important tailwind, as it supports one of ADI’s highest-margin and highest-quality businesses. AI infrastructure demand combined with improving Industrial trends could drive stronger earnings growth, margin expansion, and cash flow generation over the next several years.
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