Snapshot: Executive Summary
Broadcom is the world's only at-scale AI custom-silicon partner outside Nvidia, and the operator of the most consequential infrastructure-software franchise in enterprise (VMware). Q2 FY26 (quarter ended May 3, 2026) set a fresh record at $22.19B revenue (+48% YoY)1, non-GAAP gross margin of 77.1%, adjusted EBITDA of $15.24B (69% of revenue), non-GAAP EPS of $2.44 (+54% YoY), and free cash flow of $10.26B (46% of revenue). AI semiconductor revenue reached $10.8B (+143% YoY)2, now roughly half of total revenue, up from ~31% in FY25. Q3 FY26 is guided to ~$29.4B (+84% YoY) with AI semi revenue of ~$16.0B.
Three franchises, three valuation regimes:
- AI custom silicon (~$10.8B/qtr run-rate): XPUs (Google TPU, Meta MTIA, plus confirmed Anthropic and OpenAI, with ByteDance/Fujitsu reported) + AI-Ethernet networking, ramping toward the company-guided >$100B FY27 AI revenue.
- Non-AI semiconductors: Wireless (Apple), broadband, server storage, industrial. Mature, FCF-rich, cyclical.
- Infrastructure software (~$7.2B/qtr): Post-deal VMware re-stacked onto VCF/VVF subscription bundles; high-90s gross margin, mid-60s EBITDA margin, fully ratable.
At 31.4x forward earnings (FY26E non-GAAP EPS $11.62) versus a 5-year median of ~22x, AVGO trades at a premium, but with AI now ~half the company, the ~46% FCF-to-revenue conversion, and the recurring-software EBITDA, the re-rate is fundamental. Net debt of ~$45B is down from a ~$73B post-VMware peak. The stock sits at $365, ~26% below its $495 ATH after a "priced-for-perfection" post-Q2 selloff, which de-risked the entry. Reiterate Buy, 12-month PT $483 via SOTP (bull $560 / bear $360).
Tactical: AVGO is trading at $365, ~32% below our $483 12-month target, the post-Q2 ~26% drawdown removed the "priced-for-perfection" premium while the AI ramp accelerated (Q2 AI +143% YoY, FY27 guide >$100B). Rating Buy; note the bear case ~$360 sits near spot, an attractive entry asymmetry.
Investment Thesis
Bull Case
- FY27 AI revenue lands at ~$110B as the six-customer cohort fully deploys
- AI-networking attach holds ~30%+ as Ethernet displaces Infiniband
- VMware net-dollar retention >100% through the FY27 renewal wave
- AI custom-silicon segment holds a ~30x EV/EBITDA multiple
- Faster deleveraging on ~$45B+ annual FCF (net debt to ~$40B)
Base Case
- FY27 AI revenue >$100B per company guide, at 60% EBITDA margin / 29x
- Non-AI semis recover modestly to ~$33B as smartphone/broadband stabilize
- Infra software steady at ~$30B, 67% EBITDA margin / 18x
- No multiple expansion required, AVGO already trades near 29x/31x
Bear Case
- AI ramp decelerates to ~$90B FY27 in a hardware-spend digestion year
- Hyperscaler ASIC in-housing bites (AWS Trainium scales)
- VMware churn accelerates at the FY27 first-cohort renewal cliff
- AI semis de-rate to ~25x; software to 15x, but the franchise floor holds
Rating: Buy. The probability-weighted SOTP (30% bull / 50% base / 20% bear) blends to ~$482, essentially the $483 base, so the base case is the probability-weighted central value, not an optimistic tail. The base requires only that Broadcom deliver against its own reiterated FY27 >$100B AI guide at a multiple where it already trades. Crucially, the bear case ($360) sits right at the current $365 price, today's entry roughly equals the downside-scenario fair value, an attractive asymmetry after the post-Q2 ~26% drawdown removed the "priced-for-perfection" premium.
Business Overview
Broadcom reports two segments, Semiconductor Solutions ($15.01B in Q2 FY26, 68% of total, +79% YoY) and Infrastructure Software ($7.18B, 32%, +9% YoY). For valuation, the more useful frame is three franchises, because the AI semis subset trades at radically different multiples than the rest of semis, and AI is now ~half of total revenue, up from ~31% in FY25:
Q2 FY26 revenue mix: three franchises
AI semis ($10.8B) carved out of the reported Semiconductor Solutions segment using the company's quarterly AI revenue disclosure; non-AI semis (~$4.2B) is the residual.
Semiconductor segment: product mix
AI XPU is custom-silicon programs (Google TPU et al.); AI networking is the Tomahawk/Jericho Ethernet line (~40% of Q2 AI revenue). Wireless is concentrated in Apple FBAR filters.
Franchise commentary
- AI semis: Two pillars: custom XPUs (Hock Tan's "ASIC compute", Google TPU and Meta MTIA are the foundational customers; Anthropic and OpenAI are newly confirmed, with ByteDance and Fujitsu widely reported as the fifth and sixth) and AI networking (Tomahawk 6 and Jericho 4-5 Ethernet switches displacing Infiniband for hyperscale AI fabrics). Both ramp on multi-year, multi-generation contracts with high switching costs. Networking was ~40% of Q2 AI revenue, expected to trend toward ~30% over time.
- Non-AI semiconductors: Wireless (Apple FBAR/PA content), broadband (cable modem, PON), server storage (HDD controllers + custom storage SoCs), and industrial. This pool is mature, FCF-rich, cyclical, and recovering from a 2024 trough.
- Infrastructure software: Post-VMware, this bucket is ~95% software (VMware re-stacked onto VCF/VVF, plus Symantec EntSec, CA mainframe, Brocade fibre-channel SAN). Recurring, ratable, high-90s gross margin, mid-60s EBITDA margin on a normalized basis.
AI Custom Silicon: The >$100B FY27 Call
The single most important slide in this report. Hock Tan's framing has escalated from a $60-90B FY27 SAM to an explicit company guide of >$100B FY27 AI revenue3 (he said "significantly above $100B" on the Q2 FY26 call, reiterated, not raised). The customer cohort has expanded from three "lead customers" to six core custom-silicon customers: Google (TPU), Meta (MTIA), plus newly confirmed Anthropic and OpenAI (which signed a ~10-GW custom-accelerator deal), with ByteDance and Fujitsu widely reported as the remaining two. AI revenue hit $10.8B in Q2 FY26 (+143% YoY), ~half of total revenue; Q3 FY26 is guided to ~$16.0B (+200%+ YoY). Management explicitly ruled out entering the full-rack/system business.
AI revenue trajectory
FY24 $12.2B → FY25 ~$19.7B → FY26E ~$56B (company guide) → FY27E >$100B (Hock Tan, reiterated on the Q2 FY26 call). AI networking attach runs ~40% of AI revenue today, expected to trend toward ~30%.
FY27E AI revenue: illustrative customer share
Illustrative FY27E split across the six-customer cohort + networking. AI-Ethernet is the largest single sub-bucket; XPU dollars split across Google (TPU), Meta (MTIA), and the newer OpenAI (10-GW) / Anthropic / ByteDance ramps. Individual customer shares are estimates.
What the custom-silicon model actually is
Each customer brings a target workload (Google: TPU for training + inference of internal models; Meta: MTIA for ranking/recommendation; OpenAI/Anthropic: frontier-model training and inference). Broadcom does the SerDes IP, the package design, the foundry interface, the manufacturing yield ramp, and the supply-chain orchestration. The customer owns the architecture and the compiler. XPU gross margin is lower than a merchant GPU, but the volumes are committed multi-year and the design-win incumbency is sticky, the architecture is co-evolved with the customer's stack and a re-bid is a 24-36 month project. The higher-margin networking silicon (Tomahawk 6 / Jericho) lifts the blended franchise margin.
AI Ethernet: the quieter story
The AI networking line (Tomahawk 6 switches at the leaf and Jericho 4-5 at the spine) is the displacement story for Infiniband. Hyperscalers want a single network fabric, Ethernet, for both their general cloud and AI clusters. Networking was ~40% of Q2 FY26 AI revenue and is expected to trend toward ~30% as XPU volume scales. This is a higher-margin business than XPU.
The capex backdrop
Top-5 hyperscaler capex ($B)5
Microsoft + Google + Meta + Amazon + Oracle combined: ~$226B (2024) → ~$485B (2026E) → ~$580B (2027E). AVGO's exposure is differential, it benefits from the custom-silicon share of that spend (Google + Meta + the new AI-lab customers), which is rising as a percentage. AWS Trainium and Microsoft Maia are the chief substitution risks.
VMware Integration: The Cash-Compounder
The Hock Tan playbook on VMware was identical to CA (2018) and Symantec EntSec (2019): radically simplify the SKU stack, push the customer base onto subscription bundles, re-paper the top ~10,000 strategic accounts at an ARR uplift, and let the long tail churn. Infrastructure Software posted $7.18B in Q2 FY26 (+9% YoY), ~32% of total revenue, a high-90s gross-margin, mid-60s EBITDA-margin recurring-revenue business, fully ratable. Growth has decelerated to high-single-digit YoY as the subscription re-base laps; the segment is now the steady cash-compounder while AI drives growth.
The SKU re-stack
- VMware Cloud Foundation (VCF): flagship full-stack bundle (compute + storage + network + management). Priced by core; standardizes the top-tier of customers onto a single contract.
- VMware vSphere Foundation (VVF): smaller-tier bundle for mid-market.
- Standalone perpetual licensing was discontinued. ~80% of the legacy SKU portfolio was retired or wrapped into VCF/VVF.
What's actually driving the revenue line
The top ~10K strategic VMware customers re-papered at meaningful ARR uplift on like-for-like renewals, per management commentary. The long-tail SMB and channel customers, by management's own framing, not strategic, are the locus of any churn. The economic impact is modest because that tail was already a small share of revenue.
The risk lens
The bear case is that net dollar retention slips below 90% as Nutanix, Red Hat OpenShift Virtualization, and Proxmox accumulate share at the renewal cliff. Our position: the strategic-customer renewal pipeline is largely visible; the marginal churn happens in tiers that were never margin-meaningful. The harder question is the FY27 first-cohort renewal wave, when the largest first-cohort 3-year contracts come up for re-papering.
Financial Health & Trends
Revenue by quarter ($B)
Non-GAAP gross margin (%)
FY15-FY26E: the M&A arc
Broadcom's revenue line cannot be read without the M&A overlay. The current entity is the product of: Avago/Broadcom Limited merger (Feb 2016), Brocade (Nov 2017), CA Technologies (Nov 2018), Symantec Enterprise Security (Nov 2019), and VMware (Nov 2023). Every step-change in revenue corresponds to a closed deal; the steady-state organic growth between deals has been mid-to-high single digits, with gross margin steadily expanding as software mix has grown.
FY15-FY26E: revenue & non-GAAP GM
FY16 jump: Avago/Broadcom merge. FY24 jump: VMware (11 months consolidated). FY26E reflects guidance + the AI ramp (consensus revenue ~$106B, +66%). GM rises as software mix grows. FY25 closed at $63.9B revenue with ~$26.9B FCF.
Q2 FY26 print highlights
| Metric | Q2 FY26 actual | YoY | QoQ | vs cons |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Revenue | $22.19B | +48% | +15% | beat |
| AI semi revenue | $10.8B | +143% | +29% | beat |
| Software revenue | $7.18B | +9% | +3% | in-line |
| Non-GAAP GM | 77.1% | — | — | in-line |
| Adj. EBITDA | $15.24B | +52% | — | 69% of rev |
| Non-GAAP EPS | $2.44 | +54% | +16% | beat |
| FCF | $10.26B | +60% | — | 46% of rev |
| Q3 FY26 revenue guide | ~$29.4B | +84% | — | AI ~$16.0B |
Note: capex was just $231M (fabless), so FCF tracks EBITDA closely. The stock fell ~13-15% in the days after this beat because management reiterated, but did not raise, the FY27 >$100B AI target: a textbook "priced for perfection" reaction.
Capital Allocation & Returns
Hock Tan's stated capital priority hierarchy is unchanged: (1) grow the dividend; (2) reduce debt; (3) opportunistic buyback; (4) M&A. With FCF now running ~$40B+ annualized, all three of the first priorities run concurrently. Q1 FY26 alone returned $10.9B to holders ($3.1B dividends + $7.8B buybacks).
Why the dividend matters
Broadcom has raised the dividend every year since 2011, through the 2019 semiconductor downturn and the VMware closing year. The quarterly dividend stands at $0.65/share (declared with Q2 FY26). We expect the next dividend raise (typically announced in December) to land in the +10-15% range; management has been explicit that the dividend grows in line with normalized FCF, which is now compounding fast on the AI ramp.
The M&A question
The most-asked question on every Hock Tan investor call. Net debt has fallen to ~$45B (from ~$52B at Q1 and a ~$73B post-VMware peak) on the AI-driven FCF; deleveraging is fast. Our read: he is unlikely to do a large software deal while the AI ramp is the priority, but a bolt-on chip M&A (small, accretive, custom-silicon-adjacent) is possible at any time. A large re-leveraging deal would test the dividend-first priority.
Valuation Overview
AVGO trades at 31.4x fwd P/E (FY26E non-GAAP EPS $11.62) vs a 5-year median of ~22x. Read at face value that looks rich. But the headline multiple obscures the three-franchise structure, applying a single P/E to a business that is now ~half AI custom-silicon (deserves a premium multiple), part non-AI semis (deserves a market multiple), and part recurring software (deserves a software multiple) is the wrong frame. Peer fwd P/E: NVDA ~20x, QCOM ~23x, TXN ~35x, AMD ~60x, MRVL ~85x. The right frame is SOTP, and we develop the full mechanics in the next section, which reconciles to the $483 base.
AVGO forward P/E history
Pre-FY24 the AI franchise effectively did not exist. The 2024-2026 re-rate is fundamental, the business changed (AI now ~half of revenue), not just the sentiment.
Peer NTM EV/EBITDA
AVGO at ~26x sits between Nvidia (~28x, AI scale on far larger numbers) and the diversified semis (TXN ~31x, QCOM ~15-18x). MRVL is the cleanest pure custom-silicon comp but trades far higher on a smaller base.
Why the SOTP
A blended P/E argument always loses to a fundamentals-aware SOTP when the underlying business mix is heterogeneous. We separate AVGO into three buckets, apply scenario-appropriate multiples to each, sum the enterprise values, subtract net debt, and divide by shares. That work is in the next section, with an interactive scenario tool.
SOTP: Sum-of-the-Parts
The SOTP is the heart of the report. Each franchise is valued on its own revenue, EBITDA margin, and EV/EBITDA multiple. Toggle between Bull, Base, Bear, and Reverse-DCF scenario anchors; drag the AI and Software multiples directly to see the implied PT update.
| Bucket | Rev ($B) | EBITDA margin | Multiple | EV ($B) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AI semis (FY27E) | 100 | 60% | 29x | — |
| Non-AI semis (FY27E) | 33 | 48% | 14x | — |
| Infrastructure software (FY27E) | 30 | 67% | 18x | — |
| Total enterprise value | — | |||
| Less: net debt ($B) | −45 | |||
| Equity value ($B) | — | |||
| Implied per-share PT (÷ 4.72B sh) | — | |||
| vs current market | — |
Revenues and EBITDA margins update from the scenario anchors; multiples are user-editable via the sliders. The "Reverse" scenario uses base revenues/margins, drag the multiples until the implied PT equals the current market price to see what the market is pricing.
Sensitivity grid: AI multiple × Software multiple (PT in $)
PT calculator (alternative simple-multiple view)
Risk / Reward calculator
Ask the Thesis AI-assisted checking…
Describe a scenario in natural language; the assistant returns a structured impact analysis against this dashboard's thesis, scenarios, and SOTP math. Powered by Claude via a Cloudflare Worker proxy (Anthropic key held server-side; same pattern as the live-quote feed).
Note: The assistant reasons from the dashboard's data snapshot and thesis sections, it does not browse the web, hit Bloomberg, or access real-time fundamentals beyond what's in data.js. Treat its responses as scenario-modeling support, not as primary research. Author judgments on rating, PT, and probabilities remain with the analyst.
Upcoming Catalysts
| Catalyst | Window | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Q3 FY26 print | Sep 2026 | The $29.4B revenue / $16.0B AI guide is the next ramp checkpoint, and the key test of the FY27 >$100B trajectory. Watch for any raise to the ~$56B FY26 or >$100B FY27 AI targets. |
| 5th/6th customer confirmation | Any quarter | Naming/sizing of the fifth and sixth custom-silicon customers (ByteDance, Fujitsu reported but unconfirmed) would extend the moat. |
| OpenAI / Anthropic milestones | 2H 2026+ | Shipment milestones on the OpenAI ~10-GW and Anthropic custom-accelerator deals validate the FY27 ramp. |
| Tomahawk 6 / Jericho design wins | Ongoing | Next-gen AI-networking design wins are a second growth leg (Ethernet over Infiniband). |
| Annual dividend raise | Dec 2026 | Long track record of raises. Magnitude (10-15%) signals confidence in normalized FCF. |
| VMware FY27 renewal disclosure | 2H 2026+ | First-cohort renewal-wave commentary is the key software-NDR tell ahead of the FY27 cliff. |
Risk Factors
- "Priced for perfection." The pre-eminent risk. The stock fell ~13-15% after the Q2 FY26 beat because Hock Tan reiterated, but did not raise, the FY27 >$100B AI target. At ~31x forward earnings the bar is extreme; any AI-guide stumble is asymmetric and re-rates the multiple fast.
- Hyperscaler ASIC in-housing. AWS Trainium ramping at scale shows hyperscalers can do this themselves; Google is internalizing more of the SerDes stack. If a lead customer (e.g. Meta) pulls a future MTIA generation fully in-house, the AI revenue trajectory disappoints.
- AI capex digestion year. A hardware-spend digestion year would compress both AI revenue growth and the EBITDA multiple simultaneously, the bear-case mechanism.
- VMware net dollar retention slipping. The FY27 first-cohort renewal wave is the test. If Nutanix / Red Hat OpenShift / Proxmox accumulate enough share, NDR slips and the software multiple compresses.
- Customer concentration + counterparty risk. Google plus the top AI customers are a large share of AI revenue. Critically, OpenAI and Anthropic are pre-profit counterparties funding multi-gigawatt commitments that depend on continued capital raising.
- China export-control expansion. A broader regime including custom XPU shipments to China-headquartered hyperscalers would directly affect ByteDance revenue.
- Non-AI semi cyclicality / M&A re-leveraging. Wireless (Apple content) and broadband (cable capex) remain cyclical. Separately, a large software deal at premium pricing would force re-leverage and test the dividend-first capital priority.
Scenario Stress Tests
| Scenario | Mechanism | Anchor PT | Delta vs base $483 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Base | FY27 AI >$100B (company guide), steady VMware, normalized non-AI | $483 | — |
| AI FY27 only $80B | AI rev FY27 $80B (vs $100B base), margins/multiple held | ~$408 | (15%) |
| VMware NDR to ~88% | Software FY27 rev $24B (vs $30B), 15x multiple | ~$435 | (10%) |
| Hyperscaler in-houses 20% of XPU | AI rev lower + 4-turn multiple compression | ~$385 | (20%) |
| AI multiple compresses to 22x | Rate/sentiment shock; revenue held | ~$400 | (17%) |
| Bear composite | AI $90B FY27 at ~25x + VMware churn | ~$360 | (1%) vs spot |
| Bull: top-of-range AI | AI rev FY27 $110B at premium multiples; SW 18x | ~$560 | +16% |
All stress-test PTs are derived from the same SOTP framework used in the interactive tool, each shock changes only the inputs noted. Each 1x on the AI EBITDA multiple is ~±$13 PT; each $10B of FY27 AI revenue is ~±$37 PT. The base case is the central anchor we maintain; note the bear composite lands ~flat to the current spot.
Bull vs Bear Debate
| Issue | Bull view | Bear view |
|---|---|---|
| Is the >$100B FY27 AI real? | It is contracted backlog across six named customers (Google, Meta, Anthropic, OpenAI + two reported), not extrapolation; Hock Tan reiterated "significantly above $100B" on the Q2 call. | The stock already discounts a flawless ramp, it sold off on a beat because the target was reiterated, not raised. Any disappointment causes an asymmetric re-rate. |
| Hyperscaler in-housing | Hyperscalers prefer Broadcom because the multi-billion-dollar yield-ramp and supply-chain orchestration work is too expensive to internalize at one customer's volume; the OpenAI 10-GW + Anthropic wins widen the moat. | AWS Trainium proves the model. Meta has the budget. Google could internalize more SerDes at any board meeting. Lock-in is real but not permanent. |
| VMware durability | The strategic 10K cohort is re-papered onto VCF subscriptions at ARR uplift; the segment is now a steady high-90s-GM cash annuity. | Growth has decelerated to ~9% YoY and the FY27 renewal cliff is the test. Alternatives (Nutanix, OpenShift, Proxmox) have matured. |
| Premium multiple justified? | 31x fwd P/E is sensible when ~half of revenue is now AI custom-silicon with multi-year visibility, plus a recurring-software annuity. A blended multiple on a blended business, and the SOTP base needs no multiple expansion. | The 5-yr median is 22x. At 31x there is no margin for a digestion year; a few turns of compression is a large PT impact. |
| FCF + networking second leg | Q2 FCF was 46% of revenue on just $231M capex; AI-Ethernet (Ethernet over Infiniband) is an independent higher-margin growth leg funding dividend + buyback + deleveraging. | AI XPU GM is dilutive vs software; if networking attach falls and XPU mix rises, blended margin softens. Pre-profit AI-lab counterparties add funding risk. |
Technical Analysis
AVGO trailing-12-month monthly closes (Jul '25 – Jun '26)
RSI (multi-timeframe)
Daily 62 = neutral-to-bullish; Monthly 68 = trend intact but stretched.
MACD vs Signal
Crossed above signal in late Q2; trend is constructive.
Relative strength (YTD)
AVGO ran to a $495 ATH (Apr-May 2026) then corrected ~26% on the Jun-3 Q2 print, the post-earnings drawdown accounts for the modest YTD figure (+5.5%) despite a strong year-to-ATH advance.
EMA stack (current)
Trader's view
- Two tapes in twelve months: a run from ~$292 (Jul 2025) to a $495 all-time high (Apr-May 2026), then a ~26% correction to $365 after the Jun-3 Q2 print. Price is now below the 50-DMA, consolidating beneath the highs.
- Key support: the post-earnings $360-365 zone (also the bear-case fair value). A sustained break below invalidates the near-term setup.
- Key resistance: the $446 May close, then the $495 ATH overhead. Reclaiming $446 reopens the path toward the $483 PT.
- Momentum: MACD constructive after the reset; RSI neutral, not extreme.
Glossary & Methodology Notes
- XPU (custom AI accelerator)
- A workload-specific AI processor co-designed with a single hyperscale customer. Google's TPU and Meta's MTIA are the foundational examples; Broadcom's six-customer cohort now also includes Anthropic and OpenAI (with ByteDance/Fujitsu reported). Distinct from a merchant GPU (Nvidia) and a standardized ASIC.
- SerDes
- Serializer/Deserializer, the high-speed I/O block that connects a chip to off-chip signaling (PCIe, Ethernet, custom interconnects). Broadcom's SerDes IP is the bedrock of its custom-silicon program.
- SOTP (Sum-of-the-Parts)
- A valuation method that values each business segment of a multi-line company separately, then sums the enterprise values, subtracts net debt, and divides by shares to get a per-share fair value. Used when applying a single blended multiple obscures the underlying mix.
- EV/EBITDA
- Enterprise value divided by EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, amortization). A capital-structure-neutral measure of valuation; appropriate for cross-comparing business with different debt loads.
- VCF / VVF (VMware bundles)
- VMware Cloud Foundation (the flagship full-stack bundle) and VMware vSphere Foundation (mid-market). The post-deal SKU simplification reduced ~80% of legacy SKUs into these two.
- Net dollar retention (NDR)
- The expansion or contraction of revenue from a fixed cohort of customers year-over-year, including upsells, downgrades, and churn. NDR >100% indicates the cohort expands; >90% is healthy for an enterprise software business.
- Hyperscaler
- Refers to the largest cloud and AI infrastructure operators: Amazon (AWS), Microsoft (Azure), Google (GCP), Meta (FAIR + ads infrastructure), and increasingly Oracle (OCI).
- Tomahawk / Jericho
- Broadcom's flagship Ethernet switch silicon families (current generation: Tomahawk 6 / Jericho 4-5). Tomahawk is the leaf-switch product (high port-count, lower-latency); Jericho is the spine/core switch (deep buffers, longer-haul). Both are the backbone of Ethernet-based AI cluster fabrics displacing Infiniband.
- 10-GW deal
- A capacity commitment sized in gigawatts of compute power rather than chip units, e.g. OpenAI's ~10-GW custom-accelerator agreement with Broadcom. Gigawatts have become the unit of account for frontier-AI buildouts because power, not silicon count, is the binding constraint.
Methodology
- Snapshot anchor: June 26, 2026 close ($365.02), post the Q2 FY26 print (reported Jun 3, 2026; quarter ended May 3, 2026). Live price patches via the Cloudflare-Worker quote proxy on page load.
- Only the FY27 AI revenue line (>$100B) is company-guided; the FY27 non-AI and software splits are author estimates calibrated to the SOTP. All FY26-FY27 figures are estimates.
- SOTP scenarios use FY27E revenues; the EBITDA-margin and multiple anchors are the author's view, not consensus. The base reconciles to $483.
- Conclusions are the author's view. Illustrative, not investment advice.
Sources & Citations
Inline citations
Superscripted numbers in the body link here. Click any N in the report to jump back to the source.
- Broadcom Inc., Q2 FY2026 Earnings Release / Form 8-K (Jun 3, 2026; quarter ended May 3, 2026). Record revenue $22,187M (+48% YoY), non-GAAP gross margin 77.1%, adjusted EBITDA $15,244M (69%), non-GAAP diluted EPS $2.44, free cash flow $10,262M (46%), per the consolidated statements of operations and supplementary tables. SEC 8-K Ex-99.1. ↩
- Broadcom Inc., Q2 FY2026 Earnings Release (Jun 3, 2026), AI revenue disclosure: AI semiconductor revenue $10.8B (+143% YoY, ~49% of total); networking ~40% of AI revenue. Q3 FY26 AI guide ~$16.0B. Press release. ↩
- Hock Tan commentary, Broadcom Q2 FY2026 earnings call (Jun 3, 2026): FY27 AI revenue reiterated at "significantly above $100B"; six core custom-silicon customers (Google, Meta, Anthropic, OpenAI + two reported); full-rack/system business ruled out. FY26 AI reaffirmed ~$56B. CNBC coverage. ↩
- Broadcom Inc., Form 8-K filed Nov 22, 2023, VMware acquisition close. Stated transaction value $69B (cash + stock + assumed debt) at closing. ↩
- Combined hyperscaler capex aggregates from Microsoft, Alphabet, Meta, Amazon, and Oracle 10-K / 10-Q filings and earnings releases. 2026E and 2027E figures are author estimates triangulating sell-side consensus, management qualitative guidance, and announced multi-year datacenter projects. ↩
Background reading
- Broadcom Inc. Q2 FY2026 Form 10-Q, balance sheet: cash $19,628M, ST debt $2,252M, LT debt $62,655M (net debt ~$45.3B); ~4,758M shares issued.
- Broadcom Inc. Q1 FY2026 8-K (Mar 4, 2026), revenue $19,311M, AI $8.4B, non-GAAP EPS $2.10; FY25 full-year results (revenue $63.9B, FCF ~$26.9B).
- Broadcom earnings transcripts (Q1-Q2 FY26), Hock Tan commentary on the >$100B FY27 AI guide, the six-customer cohort, VMware integration, and capital priorities.
- Consensus estimates (stockanalysis.com), FY26 EPS $11.62, revenue ~$106B, avg PT ~$524.
- Peer multiples (gurufocus, financecharts, Yahoo Finance key statistics, Jun 2026) for NVDA / MRVL / AMD / TXN / QCOM. 52-week range $262.66-$495.00.
- Public press on TPU (Google), MTIA (Meta), and the Anthropic / OpenAI 10-GW custom-accelerator deals, customer landscape.
Disclaimer. This report is the author's institutional equity-research view, prepared for portfolio and educational purposes. It is not a recommendation to buy, sell, or hold any security. Forward-looking statements are subject to risk and uncertainty; past performance is not indicative of future results. Consult a licensed financial advisor before making investment decisions. All third-party trademarks are the property of their respective owners.