Conclusion First
Preliminary rating: Watch.
If I look at Innolight as a company I am preparing to acquire for the long run, I will lead with a judgment that is not flattering but is closer to a "Buffett-style" standard: this is a business I can understand and one that is most likely excellent, yet near the latest price I could retrieve it looks more like a business into which the market has heavily prepaid a decade of optimistic outcomes than like an acquisition carrying a margin of safety. As of the latest public market snapshot I could retrieve, the share price is about 1,037 yuan per share, total market capitalization is about 1.15 trillion yuan, the TTM price-to-earnings ratio is about 77x, and price-to-book is about 32x. That valuation is not impossible for a hard-tech leader, but for a balanced, conservatively inclined long-term value investor the demands it imposes are already very steep.
The core judgment compresses into four points. First, Innolight is already a company highly focused on high-speed optical modules for AI data centers: 2025 optical communications transceiver module revenue was about 37.457 billion yuan, the overwhelming majority of total revenue, while overseas revenue was about 34.637 billion yuan, which tells you it is feeding on the most central and most crowded segment of the global AI capital expenditure wave. Second, its position in the industry is genuinely strong. LightCounting ranked Innolight as the global TOP1 optical module supplier in 2024, with revenue exceeding 3.3 billion US dollars, and together with Eoptolink it is viewed as a "specialist" company focused on high-end Ethernet optical modules. Third, this is not a "collect money while you sleep" software business but a manufacturing hard-tech business with fast technology cycles, high customer concentration, a tight supply chain, and annual price declines, so the cost of misjudging the demand cycle would be large. Fourth, the market is already pricing in "strong growth continuation, multi-generation product leadership, stable share, and continued margin expansion," and at the current price there is almost no margin of safety to be seen.
Margin of safety at the current price: none. Better-suited investor type: growth investors, momentum-cycle investors, or industry investors who can withstand high-valuation volatility; less suited to ordinary long-term value investors who put "undervaluation plus certainty" first. The biggest uncertainties are mainly three. First, whether the capital expenditure of North American cloud providers and AI infrastructure can stay elevated beyond 2027. Second, whether the company can keep its technology and delivery lead through the evolution of new architectures such as 1.6T, 3.2T, and NPO/XPO/OCS. Third, whether, under highly concentrated customers and supply chains, margins might fall sharply once order cadence, annual price declines, or key upstream materials are disrupted.
Business and Industry
How this company actually makes money
Fact. Innolight's core business in 2025 is already highly clear: almost all revenue comes from optical communications transceiver modules. Per the company's annual report, 2025 optical communications transceiver module revenue was about 37.457 billion yuan, with corresponding operating cost of about 21.498 billion yuan and a gross margin of 42.61%. By region, overseas revenue was 34.637 billion yuan; by sales model, direct sales revenue was 37.739 billion yuan. This means the company essentially supplies high-speed optical modules to large global cloud providers, system vendors, and communications customers, earning revenue through product sales rather than subscriptions, platform take rates, or online advertising.
Fact. Both customer and supply-chain concentration are high. In 2025 the top five customers together accounted for about 29.056 billion yuan in sales, or 75.98% of full-year sales; the top five suppliers together accounted for about 12.797 billion yuan in procurement, or 51.50% of total annual procurement, of which the single largest supplier accounted for as much as 35.76%. The company itself notes in its annual report that its products mainly serve overseas markets such as North America and Europe, that some key raw materials also come from overseas, and that changes in exchange rates and trade policy could affect both demand and procurement.
Inference. This, therefore, is not a consumer or software business with "strong recurring revenue and small quarterly swings," but an enterprise where repeat purchasing exists yet purchase cadence is driven by customer capital expenditure. Its revenue is not one-off, but it is also far from "highly predictable." From management's recent communications, many key customers have already placed full-year 2026 orders, and some have begun early order preparation for 2027. This suggests order visibility is better than in traditional manufacturing, but it still hinges fundamentally on the expansion cadence of a few large customers.
Is this a business I can understand
From a "long-term owner's" angle, I believe this business can be understood but its complexity should not be underestimated. The business model itself is simple: research, manufacture, and sell high-speed optical modules. But its economic characteristics are not simple, because success and failure are determined not only by volume but also by generational transitions, customer qualification, yield ramp, key-material assurance, global capacity layout, and the pace of cost reduction under annual price declines. That differs clearly from "I buy a toll road today, and ten years later it is still much the same toll road."
If the stock market closed for five years, I would separate two things. By the business itself, I would be willing to hold a global high-speed optical module leader like this for the long term; by the current acquisition price, I would not be willing to buy the whole company at a price near 1.15 trillion yuan in market value. The reason is not that the company is poor, but that the price already reflects, to a large extent, very strong growth continuation.
Business understandability score: 4/5. The core business and value-chain position are understandable, but because it is heavily affected by technology generations, the supply chain, and customer CAPEX cycles, it is not an "extremely simple" business model.
Industry and competitive landscape
Fact. The industry is currently in a high-prosperity growth phase, but not one without cycles. Cignal AI expects 800G Datacom optics to be the fastest-growing segment in 2025, with 1.6T entering volume production in 2025 but at a full-year scale still below 1 million units. LightCounting likewise notes that 2025 optical module market growth will be driven mainly by 800G, with 1.6T beginning to make a small contribution mid-year, while the telecom market shows no clear recovery. In other words, the long-term direction of the industry is upward, but the prosperity is driven almost entirely by AI data centers rather than by broad industry-wide expansion.
Fact. The competitive landscape is not a scattered scrum of small companies in cutthroat competition but is concentrated at the top. In its 2024 supplier ranking, LightCounting noted that Innolight ranked first globally, and Eoptolink rose to third in 2024; Cignal AI also lists Innolight, Coherent, and Eoptolink as the main suppliers of Datacom modules. The company's history further shows that it went from a 37% share of the 40G single-mode market in 2014, to launching the industry's first 800G pluggable module in 2020, to leading the release of the 1.6T OSFP DR8 silicon-photonics module in 2024 and releasing 800G coherent-lite and single-wavelength 400G in 2025, advancing through product generations very fast.
Fact plus inference. But this is not a "naturally high-margin, ever-widening moat" perfect industry. LightCounting explicitly notes that over the past two decades the average gross margin of optical component and module suppliers has typically been lower than that of other links in the communications value chain, with average net margins fluctuating between 0% and 10%; the industry experienced demand declines and worsening profitability in both 2018-2019 and 2022-2023. Customers over-order during shortages and then suddenly cancel orders, which causes demand and profits to swing sharply. In short: this is a good track, but it remains a track with strong cyclicality where bargaining power is not entirely held by the seller.
Industry attractiveness score: 4/5. Demand is buoyant, technology upgrades quickly, the addressable space is large, and the leader can capture share; but the industry itself carries clear cyclicality and technology-substitution risk, and cannot be framed as a "stable consumer leader."
Moat and Management
How strong is the moat
I would define Innolight's moat as an "operational moat" built from R&D iteration, volume delivery, customer qualification, global manufacturing, and scale procurement, rather than a brand-monopoly or network-effect moat.
Start with scale advantage and cost advantage. The annual report states plainly that the company already has multiple product types such as 1.6T, 800G, 400G, 200G, and 100G that meet different application scenarios; because its production scale and supply capability rank among the industry leaders, its scale advantage not only raises its ability to take on large orders but also improves its control over manufacturing and procurement costs. LightCounting also defines Innolight and Eoptolink as "specialists" focused on high-speed Ethernet optical modules, indicating that this focus and scale are themselves important reasons they win.
Next, technology and product leadership. The company's history shows a sustained record of being first: demonstrating 400G QSFP-DD FR4 ahead of others in 2018, launching the 800G pluggable module in 2020, releasing the 1.6T OSFP-XD DR8+ in 2023, leading the release of the 1.6T OSFP DR8 silicon-photonics module in 2024, and releasing 800G coherent-lite and single-wavelength 400G in 2025. In its 2026 communications, management further stated that 1.6T is already in volume production and shipping, with shipment volumes set to keep rising over the next three quarters; meanwhile NPO, XPO, OCS, and other products have been shown at OFC and are expected to begin contributing volume-production revenue in 2027. For hyperscalers, whether a supplier can deliver next-generation products on time, in volume, at the right power consumption, and at the right yield is almost the line between life and death.
Switching costs do exist, but I would give a medium rather than a high score. The reason is that optical modules do not carry the strong stickiness of ERP or payment networks, yet large customers impose long qualification cycles and high requirements on compatibility, reliability, and volume yield for high-speed modules, so once a supplier enters the primary supply system, switching is not a low-cost move either. Management disclosed that some customers have already placed full-year 2026 orders and have begun preparing early 2027 orders, which can serve as corroboration of this medium switching cost; still, this is closer to engineering and supply-chain stickiness than to the irreplaceable stickiness of a consumer brand. This is an inference.
As for brand advantage, network effects, data advantage, and regulatory licensing, I do not believe any of these is the company's true core moat. It has an industrial brand and customer goodwill, but it lacks the pricing power of a classic branded consumer product; it has no network effect; and it has no licensing barrier. The real barrier is the ability to deliver advanced products stably to a few key customers.
My overall judgment is: the moat exists, and through this round of AI optical-module prosperity it is stable to slightly widening; but it is not an irreplicable "eternal moat," rather a dynamic moat that requires continued R&D investment and capacity execution to maintain. A competitor replicating it is not something achievable in one quarter; it typically requires years of R&D accumulation, customer onboarding, overseas manufacturing, supply-chain binding, and yield ramp. But if the company falls behind on its next two product generations, the moat would also narrow markedly.
Moat strength score: 4/5.
Is management trustworthy
Fact. As of the end of the first quarter of 2026, the controlling shareholder Shandong Zhongji Investment Holding Co., Ltd. held about 10.93%, the actual controller Wang Weixiu directly held about 6.28%, and as parties acting in concert they together held visibly about 17.2%. This means control and shareholder interests are not entirely disconnected. The company's 2025 annual report shows the actual controller did not change; its 2026 first-quarter report likewise shows a stable major-shareholder structure.
Fact. On capital allocation, the 2025 actions were broadly positive. On one hand, the company continued to expand capacity, stating that the Tongling Phase III project had been completed, helping raise high-end product capacity; on the other, it changed the purpose of the 16,465,985 shares previously held in the buyback account to cancellation and reduction of registered capital, completing the cancellation in March 2025. At the same time, the company's 2025 profit distribution plan was 10 yuan per 10 shares, which, together with the interim 2025 distribution of 4 yuan per 10 shares, brought the "total cash dividend (including other methods)" disclosed in the 2025 annual report to 1.556 billion yuan. This at least shows that management did not pursue only scale during the boom but began actively raising shareholder returns.
Fact. But note as well that the share-based payment expense the company recognized in 2025 reached 269 million yuan, and the cumulative equity-settled share-based payment amount charged to capital reserve exceeded 1.098 billion yuan. This does not constitute an obvious red flag, but it shows the company is still fairly active in using equity incentives to bind the team. The good side is that net share capital at end-2025 actually fell versus end-2024, indicating the cancellation of buyback shares offset to some degree the dilution from incentives; the cautious side is that whether long-term equity incentives consistently create per-share value still needs to be tracked.
Opinion. On "honesty, rationality, and long-term orientation," I would not give full marks but would give a fairly high rating. In the materials I have reviewed I have not seen any obvious governance red flag; the company discloses fairly diligently, and in its quarterly and annual briefings it responds candidly to questions on the supply-demand gap, gross-margin swings, the Pillar Two tax rate, and foreign-exchange gains and losses. Still, as a company expanding rapidly amid extreme prosperity, its sample of true capital-allocation testing in "headwind years" is not yet long enough.
Management and capital allocation score: 3.5/5. The strengths are shareholding alignment, expansion that broadly centers on the core business, and fairly active buyback cancellation and dividends; the reservation is that the through-cycle capital-allocation sample is limited, and the equity incentives still require ongoing observation of their real contribution to per-share value.
Financial Quality and Owner Earnings
Financial quality
The table below lists only the core metrics I can directly verify; some 2021-2022 cash flow and balance-sheet line items were not fully extracted from the original documents I reviewed, and so are explicitly marked as blank rather than guessed. The 2023-2025 main data come from the 2025 annual report, 2026Q1 comes from the 2026 first-quarter report, and 2021-2022 revenue and net profit attributable to shareholders come from public summaries/reports of the corresponding annual reports.
| Year | Revenue | YoY | Net profit attributable to shareholders | Net operating cash flow | Free cash flow | ROE |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 7.695 billion yuan | 9.16% | 877 million yuan | To be supplemented | To be supplemented | To be supplemented |
| 2022 | 9.642 billion yuan | 25.29% | 1.224 billion yuan | To be supplemented | To be supplemented | To be supplemented |
| 2023 | 10.718 billion yuan | 11.16% | 2.174 billion yuan | 1.897 billion yuan | To be supplemented | 16.58% |
| 2024 | 23.862 billion yuan | 122.64% | 5.171 billion yuan | 3.165 billion yuan | 298 million yuan | 31.23% |
| 2025 | 38.240 billion yuan | 60.25% | 10.797 billion yuan | 10.896 billion yuan | 8.136 billion yuan | 43.84% |
| 2026Q1 | 19.496 billion yuan | 192.12% | 5.735 billion yuan | 3.368 billion yuan | Should not be simply annualized | 17.54% |
On growth, the company has been almost a step-change grower over the past few years. From 2022 to 2025, revenue growth was about 25.3% / 11.2% / 122.6% / 60.3%, and net profit attributable to shareholders grew about 39.6% / 77.6% / 137.9% / 108.8%. This growth is clearly not linear but is an acceleration accompanying the volume ramp of AI-related high-speed optical modules. It shows the company seized the right industrial opportunity; it also means investors cannot mechanically extrapolate the 2024-2026 profit growth rate over ten years.
Margins are also moving up markedly. On a rough reading of verifiable data, the operating margin from 2023 to 2025 rose roughly from 23.3% to 25.4% to 35.6%, and the net margin from 20.3% to 21.7% to 28.2%; the 2025 gross margin of the optical communications module business was 42.61%, while a simple estimate from 2026Q1 single-quarter revenue and operating cost puts the gross margin already at about 46.1%. This shows the company is not making money on volume alone but on volume growth plus mix upgrade plus process/yield improvement together driving a profit surge.
Cash flow quality is not poor, but it is not a "no-wobble cash cow" either. Net operating cash flow in 2025 was 10.896 billion yuan, slightly above net profit attributable to shareholders of 10.797 billion yuan; net profit excluding non-recurring items of 10.710 billion yuan is almost identical to net profit attributable to shareholders, showing 2025 profit was overall cash-backed and little affected by non-recurring gains and losses. But by 2026Q1, net operating cash flow of 3.368 billion yuan was clearly below net profit attributable to shareholders of 5.735 billion yuan, mainly because of rapid growth in accounts receivable, prepayments, and construction in progress. My conclusion is: profit is largely real profit, but working capital will swing cash flow violently.
The balance sheet is broadly sound. At end-2025, total assets were 45.289 billion yuan, total liabilities 13.668 billion yuan, and the debt-to-asset ratio 30.18%; by 2026Q1, cash and cash equivalents rose to 12.208 billion yuan. With end-2025 short-term borrowings of about 301 million yuan, non-current liabilities due within one year of about 784 million yuan, and long-term borrowings of about 510 million yuan, the company remains in a clear net-cash position on its books. Combined with 2025 interest expense of only 63 million yuan and operating profit of 13.597 billion yuan, one can infer that the interest coverage ratio is far above the usual risk line.
What truly needs watching is not leverage but working capital and inventory. In reconciling 2025 net profit to operating cash flow, the cash tied up by the increase in inventory was about 5.811 billion yuan, the increase in operating receivables tied up about 1.763 billion yuan, but the increase in operating payables replenished about 5.545 billion yuan. By 2026Q1, accounts receivable rose a further 51.92% versus year-end, prepayments surged 1009.48%, construction in progress grew 65.95%, and accounts payable grew 41.26%. In addition, the auditor listed the inventory write-down provision as a key audit matter, with the end-2025 inventory book balance of about 12.979 billion yuan and a write-down provision of about 298 million yuan. This does not directly point to fraud, but it clearly tells you: this is a business extremely sensitive to stocking, capacity, and delivery cadence amid high-speed expansion.
Owner Earnings analysis
Here I adopt a measure closer to "long-term owner earnings" rather than looking only at accounting net profit.
Fact. 2025 net profit attributable to shareholders was about 10.797 billion yuan; in reconciling net profit to operating cash flow, the visible depreciation- and amortization-related non-cash expenses were roughly: fixed-asset depreciation 740 million yuan, right-of-use asset depreciation 24 million yuan, intangible-asset amortization 86 million yuan, and amortization of long-term deferred expenses 84 million yuan, totaling about 934 million yuan. In the same year, cash paid to acquire and construct fixed assets, intangible assets, and other long-term assets was about 2.760 billion yuan.
If one adopts the most basic free-cash-flow measure directly, 2025 FCF ≈ operating cash flow of 10.896 billion yuan − capital expenditure of 2.760 billion yuan = 8.136 billion yuan, for an FCF conversion rate of about 75%. This measure already counts the large 2025 working-capital drain, so it is relatively conservative and closer to "what shareholders actually receive that year." If one moves further toward "Buffett-style Owner Earnings," one must separate maintenance capital expenditure from expansion capital expenditure. This company is clearly in an expansion phase in 2025-2026; management itself stated that 2025 annualized capacity already reached over 28 million units and that 2026 capacity would rise considerably further, so a substantial part of 2025 capital expenditure is clearly not required to maintain the status quo but is invested ahead of future growth. Based on existing depreciation and amortization of 934 million yuan and the reality of fast product-generation upgrades, I would conservatively assume maintenance capital expenditure of about 1.0 to 1.2 billion yuan. Under this assumption, and after considering the additional cash tied up by net working capital in 2025, the conservative Owner Earnings range I would give is roughly 8.0 to 9.0 billion yuan. This is below accounting net profit, indicating growth is not entirely "capital-free."
My judgment is: Innolight already has the ability to generate real cash flow on a sustained basis, but in the high-prosperity optical-module cycle this ability will show a clear "peak-shaped" character. Put differently, it is neither a fake-profit company nor a bad business that runs short of cash the more it grows; but it is also not the kind of asset-light miracle where revenue rises a bit and cash rises steadily alongside.
Valuation and Margin of Safety
Intrinsic value estimate
Here I explicitly distinguish four types of content: Fact: current price, historical financials, industry position. Assumption: future growth rate, discount rate, terminal growth rate. Inference: the sustainable earnings range derived from historical financials and industry structure. Opinion: whether it is worth buying now.
Discounted owner-earnings method
I use a three-scenario approach to estimate equity value, with a starting point that is not 2025 net profit but the more conservative Owner Earnings.
| Dimension | Conservative | Neutral | Optimistic |
|---|---|---|---|
| Starting Owner Earnings | 10 billion yuan | 12 billion yuan | 14 billion yuan |
| First five-year growth | 12% | 18% | 28% |
| Second five-year growth | 4% | 6% | 10% |
| Discount rate | 10% | 9% | 8% |
| Terminal growth | 2% | 3% | 3% |
| Corresponding intrinsic value per share | about 180-220 yuan | about 340-430 yuan | about 850-950 yuan |
These scenarios already generously concede three things: the company continues to benefit from AI optical-interconnect upgrades; 1.6T and higher-speed products keep ramping; and margins at least do not fall off a cliff. Even so, the current share price of about 1,037 yuan still sits above the rough upper bound of my optimistic scenario, which at minimum shows the market price already requires conditions close to "very high growth lasting a very long time, with a very low discount rate."
Relative valuation method
Set against comparable names, the valuation is not cheap either. On the latest comparable snapshot I retrieved, Innolight currently trades at roughly PE 77.3x / PB 32.5x / PS 22.6x; Eoptolink, also an A-share core high-speed optical module company, with 2025 revenue of 24.842 billion yuan and net profit attributable to shareholders of 9.532 billion yuan, trades at roughly PE 54.4x / PB 28.7x / PS 20.1x. In other words, the market gives Innolight a valuation that is not only high but also higher than one of the strongest domestic peers. Given that Innolight is genuinely stronger on global ranking and customer onboarding, some premium is understandable; but with Eoptolink's 2025 margins equally striking, this premium no longer looks "clearly cheap."
Compared against a broad index, the gap is more extreme. The CSI 300 around May 2026 traded at roughly PE 14.9x and PB 1.44x; by contrast, Innolight's valuation amounts to pricing in nearly all of "extremely strong growth, high ROE, leading share, and generational leadership" ahead of time. The index of course lacks its growth elasticity, but it also offers entirely different diversification and a valuation buffer.
Estimated against 2025 free cash flow of 8.136 billion yuan, the current market value corresponds to a P/FCF of about 142x. Estimated against my more conservative 8.0 to 9.0 billion yuan Owner Earnings, the "owner-earnings multiple" implied by the current price is roughly in the 128x to 144x range. For any value investor centered on "cash returned," this number must be regarded as very expensive.
Asset or liquidation value method
On an asset basis, this price holds up even less. At end-2025, total assets were 45.289 billion yuan and net assets attributable to shareholders 29.765 billion yuan; 2026Q1 cash and cash equivalents were 12.208 billion yuan, interest-bearing borrowings were far smaller than cash, and the company was in a net-cash position. Even processing some working capital at a fairly optimistic discount, book assets can provide only very limited support for a market value of 1.15 trillion yuan. Put differently: the current share price is almost entirely buying the next decade of earning power, not the assets already sitting on the books today.
Margin of safety
My summary is very direct: there is no margin of safety at the current price.
The most fragile valuation assumption is that "high-speed growth will last a very long time, and high margins will not fall markedly because of annual price declines, intensifying competition, rising tax rates, and supply-chain easing." Management itself mentioned that the income tax rate in 2025Q3-Q4 was about 15%, already different from the prior 11%-12%, with reasons related to the Pillar Two tax regime; meanwhile the company still faces the reality of tight upstream materials, advance stocking, and continued expansion. If any one of these assumptions falls short of expectations, the room for the current valuation to compress is considerable.
If growth falls short of expectations, the investment does not necessarily turn into a bad investment immediately, but at the current pricing returns deteriorate fast. Against China's 10-year government bond yield of about 1.74%, equities should of course offer a higher return; the problem is that, working backward from the DCF assumptions above, the long-term return implied by the current price can only fall in the "neutral-to-optimistic" range, not in a high-expected-return range a value investor would find comfortable.
So it now comes closer to an old saying: a good company at a bad price. If I held no position, I would wait. If I already held a position, I would demand a higher "reason to keep holding" rather than equating excellent fundamentals with an infinitely high tolerable valuation.
The valuation ranges I give are:
Conservative intrinsic value range: 180-260 yuan per share
Fair intrinsic value range: 320-450 yuan per share
Optimistic intrinsic value range: 700-950 yuan per share
Ideal buy price range: 220-300 yuan per share
Acceptable holding price range: 300-500 yuan per share
Clearly overvalued range for a balanced, conservatively inclined investor: above 700 yuan; above 900 yuan is essentially prepaying the optimistic scenario.
Risks and Counterarguments
The most important risk is not short-term volatility but permanent loss of capital.
The first category is demand and cycle risk. LightCounting cautions that a common pattern in the optical-module industry is for downstream customers to over-order during shortages and then suddenly cancel orders once inventory is ample; the industry experienced profit swings in both 2018-2019 and 2022-2023. If AI infrastructure investment enters a digestion phase after 2027, Innolight, as a high-elasticity name, could see both profits and valuation come under pressure at the same time.
The second category is technology-path and competition risk. Today's growth backbone is 800G and 1.6T, but the company is itself actively advancing NPO, XPO, OCS, 3.2T, and other products, with management judging that some of these will only generate revenue as early as 2027; this means the next two to three years are not only a scale battle but also a period of choosing sides on technology paths. At the same time, Reuters reported that ST and AWS are partnering to launch photonic chips for AI data centers, indicating that both upstream and the customer side are pushing newer solutions with higher integration and lower power. If the company falls behind on the next-generation architecture transition, the most important supporting logic for its current valuation would be weakened.
The third category is customer and supply-chain concentration. The top five customers account for 76%, the top five suppliers for 51.5%, and the single largest supplier for 35.76%. This means that on either the demand or the supply side, a change in just a few entities is enough to materially affect profit. While the company mitigates this through onboarding new suppliers, overseas layout, and foreign-exchange tools, concentration itself will not disappear because management says so.
The fourth category is financials that look good on the surface while cash flow is periodically tight. In 2026Q1 the company's accounts receivable, prepayments, and construction in progress all rose significantly; as long as the industry stays buoyant, "spending first to grow" can be accepted by the market, but once a demand inflection arrives, high inventory and high prepayments could turn from expansion preparation into a drag on returns.
The fifth category is excessive valuation. This is not empty talk. The current pricing of about 77x TTM PE, 32x PB, and 22.6x PS already builds in a large number of optimistic assumptions. For a company at this valuation level, even if fundamentals are still growing, if the multiple the market is willing to pay falls from 77x to 40x, shareholders would face a substantial capital drawdown.
The strongest counterargument
The strongest bearish logic is actually very plain: what you are buying now is not "an undervalued excellent company" but "a company that may well be excellent but whose price already implies an extremely strong future."
A bear would say the market is pricing it as "the most central asset of AI compute infrastructure, with high growth sustainable for many years"; but history tells us the optical-module track is not an industry that can grow linearly and at high rates forever with margins that only rise and never fall. LightCounting's description of the industry's average margin swings and sharp demand fluctuations is itself a counter to the "perpetual high-growth narrative."
What facts would overturn the investment judgment? If the following appeared, I would admit I was wrong and should re-rate quickly:
1.6T and 3.2T product share falls rather than rises, or it loses key customer certification.
Gross and net margins fall markedly for several consecutive quarters and cannot be explained by short-term exchange-rate or tax-rate changes.
Receivables, prepayments, and inventory keep expanding sharply while operating cash flow begins to fall persistently behind profit.
Key customers convert full-year orders into short orders, delayed orders, or cancellations, and the industry begins to destock markedly.
A substantive disruption occurs in exports, tariffs, or the supply of key components.
The biggest permanent-loss scenario is not that the company directly loses its ability to survive, but that industry prosperity cools, profits retreat, and valuation reverts to normal happen at the same time. This is my inference: at the current valuation, if industry growth slows markedly over the next two to three years and the profit center retreats while valuation returns to 25-35x earnings, a long-term drawdown of the 50%-70% order in the share price is not an exaggerated scenario. Its essence is not corporate bankruptcy but an entry price that was too high.
Comparison With Other Opportunities and Investment Checklist
Comparison with other opportunities
Comparing it with Eoptolink, I would concede that Innolight may be stronger in global standing, scale, and front-line customer mindshare, but at the current valuation it does not offer a sufficiently clear "price compensation." Comparing it with the CSI 300, the latter is far weaker on growth but trades at only about 15x PE and 1.4x PB; comparing it with the 10-year government bond yield of about 1.74%, Innolight of course still offers a higher potential return, but the return advantage is not large enough to ignore the valuation risk of a single stock. My conclusion is: buying it at the current price is not clearly better than buying the index.
If my portfolio could hold only five assets, then Innolight qualifies for the candidate list but does not qualify for the final list at the current price. Its industry position is strong enough and its business quality good enough; but value investing is not "buy because the company is good," it is "buy when the company is good and the price is right too."
Checklist
The table below gives my results in terms of "pass / fail / uncertain." It is a summary of all the facts, inferences, and opinions above.
| Check item | Conclusion | Brief note |
|---|---|---|
| Can I understand this business | Pass | Core business is clear, but technology/cycle complexity is high |
| Does it have long-term stable demand | Pass | AI data-center demand is strong, but not subscription-type stable demand |
| Does it have a durable moat | Pass | Scale, R&D, volume production, and customer qualification form a moat |
| Does it have pricing power | Uncertain | Some bargaining power, but annual price declines are common in the industry |
| Can it generate stable free cash flow | Uncertain | Strong in 2025, weak in 2024, heavily affected by working capital and expansion |
| Is its return on capital excellent | Pass | ROE is already very high, and rough ROIC is also well above general manufacturing |
| Is management trustworthy | Pass | No obvious governance red flag for now, but the through-cycle sample is still limited |
| Is capital allocation rational | Pass | Expansion centers on the core business; dividends raised; buyback cancellation fairly active |
| Is the balance sheet sound | Pass | Net cash, low leverage, very light interest burden |
| Is the valuation below intrinsic value | Fail | Current price is above neutral valuation, near or beyond optimistic valuation |
| Is the margin of safety sufficient | Fail | Essentially none |
| Does long-term holding put me at ease | Uncertain | The business is excellent, but the current buy price does not put me at ease |
| Which key facts would make me sell | Defined | Share loss, margin decline, cash-flow distortion, order deterioration |
| Am I only wanting to buy because of price and emotion | Be wary | This is the line most in need of self-examination right now |
Final Investment Conclusion
[Final Rating] Watch
[One-Sentence Investment Thesis] Innolight is most likely a high-quality, globally leading AI high-speed optical module company, but near the current price investors are more like prepaying for many years of very optimistic growth than acquiring a company with a margin of safety.
[Core Bull Case]
The company is already highly focused on high-speed optical modules, with 2025 optical communications transceiver module revenue of about 37.457 billion yuan, the absolute core of the business.
The company is at the top in global competition, with LightCounting ranking Innolight first globally in 2024.
1.6T has entered volume production and is expected to grow quarter on quarter, and management is upbeat on 2026-2027 order and demand visibility.
Profitability and cash flow have improved markedly, with 2025 net profit attributable to shareholders of 10.797 billion yuan and operating cash flow of 10.896 billion yuan.
The balance sheet is sound, with net cash and low leverage, and risk resistance is not poor.
[Core Bear Case]
Current valuation is extremely high: about 77x TTM PE, 32x PB, and 22.6x PS.
Customers and the supply chain are highly concentrated, and a disturbance at either end could be amplified onto the income statement.
Although the industry is buoyant, profits and demand have historically been unstable, with a cyclical pattern of sudden order cancellations after over-ordering.
2026Q1 already shows rapid increases in receivables, prepayments, and construction in progress, and growth will consume working capital.
New technology paths evolve quickly, and future leadership does not renew automatically.
[Key Assumptions]
AI infrastructure investment stays fairly buoyant for at least the next several years.
The company keeps its mainstream-customer share on next-generation products such as 1.6T, 3.2T, and NPO/XPO/OCS.
Margins do not fall sharply because of annual price declines, rising tax rates, or supply-chain recovery.
Working-capital usage does not erode profit quality over the long run.
International trade, exports, and the supply of key components do not face substantive disruption.
[Fair Buy Price] 220-300 yuan per share. The basis is that this price range roughly corresponds to the overlap of the conservative and neutral intrinsic value ranges, and begins to leave some margin of safety for future uncertainty. The current price is still far from this band.
[Target Holding Period] If the buy price is right, it suits 5-10 years or more; but the more appropriate action right now is to keep tracking and wait for the price rather than chase it.
[Expected Annualized Return] Based on this report's three scenarios and the current price, I give a conservative estimate:
Conservative scenario: 0%-2%
Neutral scenario: 4%-6%
Optimistic scenario: 7%-9%
This set of returns is not a short-term forecast of the share price but an estimate of "where the return implied by the current price roughly lies if the company delivers under different scenarios." For a single stock, this return-risk ratio is not enticing.
[Maximum Loss Risk] If "industry prosperity retreats plus profit pullback plus valuation reversion" appears in the future, a long-term drawdown of 50%-70% from the current level is not unimaginable. The reason is not that the company would fail, but that the price you pay buying in now is too high.
[Tracking Metrics]
Shipment cadence of 800G, 1.6T, and 3.2T products
Whether major-customer order coverage shifts from full-year orders to short orders
Trends in the gross and net margins of the optical-module business
The degree of match between operating cash flow and net profit
The linked changes in accounts receivable, prepayments, inventory, and accounts payable
Capital expenditure and the utilization rate of new capacity
The customer-qualification and volume-production progress of silicon photonics, coherent, and NPO/XPO/OCS
The tightness of key upstream component supply
Tax-rate changes and foreign-exchange gain/loss swings
Share and pricing changes among peers, especially Eoptolink and Coherent.
[Signals That Trigger Reassessment]
A clear decline in core-customer share
A 1.6T and 3.2T volume-production cadence below expectations
Cash flow significantly weaker than profit for two or more consecutive quarters
Inventory and receivables keep rising sharply while order guidance weakens
Gross margin declines markedly and cannot be explained by short-term factors
Major changes in overseas trade, export controls, or the supply of key components.
[Final Recommendation] Innolight is an excellent company worth long-term study and respect; but respecting the company does not mean indulging the price. For a balanced, conservatively inclined investor with a horizon of more than ten years, the most rational action right now is not to argue over whether it is a good company but to acknowledge: it is most likely a good company, but not yet a good price. Without a margin of safety, the best discipline is often to keep tracking, let Mr. Market take the emotion away first, and then decide whether to act.
This report is based on public information and does not constitute investment advice. Markets carry risk; invest with caution.
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