
The chipmaker is on a tear, but its real value to your portfolio comes with a very specific trade-off.
Analog Devices (ADI) just delivered a record-setting quarter, with revenue hitting $3.62 billion, fueled by booming demand from AI data centers and industrial clients. The company even announced a new acquisition, Empower Semiconductor, to double down on the AI power-management space. The market loved it, sending the stock up 5.4% in a week where the S&P 500 barely managed a 1.4% gain.
When a stock puts up numbers like that, the instinct is simple: greed. It’s the urge to chase a clear winner, to get a piece of the action before it’s too late.
But the question that actually builds wealth isn’t about where a stock goes next week. It’s about what owning it does to your entire portfolio. How much of its return is its own unique story, and how much is just an echo of the broad market you likely already own through an index fund?
What Does A 0.72 Correlation Mean?
To find the answer, we look past the short-term noise to its long-term behavior. Over the last five years, Analog Devices has had a correlation of 0.72 with the S&P 500. A reading of 1.0 would mean it moves in perfect lockstep with the index, while zero would mean no relationship at all. At 0.72, this is a high-correlation stock, meaning a large share of its movement overlaps with the market you already own.
It doesn’t add much in the way of classic diversification. Instead, it leans your portfolio further into the market’s general direction. But here’s the critical twist: it doesn’t just mirror the market; it has historically amplified it in a very particular way. Over the past year, on days the S&P 500 rose, ADI captured about 137% of the market’s gain. On days the market fell, it absorbed only about 85% of the loss. It has tended to catch more of the upside while softening the downside.
AI Fueling A Record Run
That attractive asymmetry is backed by a business firing on all cylinders. The company’s latest results showed its industrial segment, its largest, grew 56% year-over-year. Its data center business, which now makes up over three-quarters of its communications revenue, was up more than 90% year-over-year, driven by what management calls “strong AI-driven infrastructure investments.”
The primary risk, however, is whether this peak performance can last. Gross margin hit an impressive 73% in the second quarter. But on the earnings call, management guided for a slight decline in the third quarter, noting they “don’t see a ton of future upside on gross margin from utilization.” With factories running near full tilt, the easy gains in profitability may be in the past, a concern analysts are watching closely.



