A breakthrough in fiber optic capacity sent Hong Kong-listed optical communication stocks sharply higher Tuesday.
A breakthrough in fiber optic capacity sent Hong Kong-listed optical communication stocks sharply higher Tuesday.

Hong Kong-listed optical communication stocks surged Tuesday after the world's first S+C+L triple-band ultra-low-loss multi-core fiber optic cable was activated in Qingdao, expanding data capacity without new cable laying.
The cable combines three transmission windows — the short-wavelength S-band, conventional C-band, and long-wavelength L-band — within a single multi-core fiber, a configuration that telecom engineers have pursued for years as a way to multiply capacity without digging new trenches or securing additional right-of-way permits.
曦智科技-P (01879.HK) led the rally, climbing 9.32%, while 剑桥科技 (06166.HK) rose 5.58% and 长飞光纤光缆 (06869.HK) added 4.90%. The three companies span the optical communication value chain from photonic chip design to cable manufacturing and network equipment.
Why Multi-Core, Multi-Band Matters Now
Traditional single-mode fiber, the industry standard for long-haul networks since the 1990s, is approaching its theoretical capacity limit of roughly 100 terabits per second per fiber pair. Multi-core fibers, which pack multiple light-guiding cores into a single cladding, can multiply that capacity by the number of cores — typically four to eight. Adding S-band and L-band transmission on top of the conventional C-band extends the usable spectrum from roughly 4 terahertz to more than 10 terahertz per core.
The timing is critical. AI model training and inference alone are projected to drive a compound annual growth rate of 25% to 30% in data center interconnect bandwidth through 2030, according to industry estimates. Cloud providers such as Alibaba Cloud and Tencent Cloud, which operate large data center clusters in China, are among the heaviest users of inter-city fiber links and would benefit from capacity upgrades that avoid the 12-to-18-month permitting timelines required for new cable construction.
Who Stands to Gain
Global fiber optic cable manufacturers including Corning and Prysmian have been developing multi-core and multi-band technologies in their research labs, but the Qingdao deployment marks the first time the combined S+C+L multi-core configuration has moved from laboratory demonstration to operational infrastructure. Chinese telecom carriers China Mobile and China Telecom are expected to be early adopters given their extensive fiber networks and growing bandwidth demands from data center expansion.
For investors, the commercial validation of the technology opens a new growth vector. 长飞光纤光缆, as one of China's largest optical fiber preform and cable manufacturers, stands to benefit directly from any acceleration in multi-core fiber deployment by domestic carriers. 剑桥科技, which supplies optical transceivers and network equipment, could see increased demand for the higher-specification components needed to support multi-band transmission. 曦智科技, focused on photonic integrated circuits, represents exposure to the next-generation optical components that multi-band networks will require.
The technology also has implications beyond China. Global telecom operators facing capacity constraints on existing fiber routes — particularly subsea cable systems where new builds can cost $200 million to $500 million per route — are watching multi-core, multi-band developments closely. If the Qingdao deployment proves commercially viable at scale, it could accelerate adoption across markets where trenching and permitting are the primary bottlenecks to network expansion.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.