Summary:
- Broadcom's quarterly revenue came in below Wall Street estimates.
- Shares fell roughly 14% in after-hours trading.
- The miss is raising questions about the pace of AI chip spending at hyperscalers.
Broadcom's quarterly revenue missed Wall Street estimates, sending the stock down roughly 14% in after-hours trading.
The chipmaker has ridden the AI wave nearly as hard as Nvidia, which made the miss sting more than a typical earnings stumble.
Why The Miss Stings
Broadcom isn't just another chip company. It builds custom AI chips - known as ASICs - for the biggest cloud players, including Google, Meta, OpenAI, and Anthropic.
Those hyperscalers are spending tens of billions of dollars on AI buildouts, and Broadcom's custom silicon has become a quiet rival to Nvidia's general-purpose chips.
That made Broadcom's results one of the cleanest reads on whether AI spending is still picking up speed.
Investors weren't just buying a chip stock - they were buying a vote on the whole AI spending cycle.
The catch: A narrow revenue miss - Broadcom came in about $80 million short of the $22.27 billion consensus - complicates that story, though it doesn't mean AI demand is breaking. AI chip revenue actually surged 143% to a record $10.8 billion, but the AI sales outlook fell short of bullish whisper numbers.
It does mean the trade isn't a straight line up anymore.
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What Investors Are Watching Next
Three things matter from here:
- Hyperscaler spending plans: if Google, Meta, Microsoft, and Amazon keep raising their AI budgets, this looks like a Broadcom-specific issue.
- Broadcom's backlog: forward orders will tell investors whether the miss was a timing problem or a demand problem.
- Nvidia's next report: its August quarterly numbers will tell investors which story is real.
Wall Street has spent the past year debating whether the AI capex boom would slow, and Broadcom's report was widely seen as a key data point in that debate.
Worth Noting
The AI trade has been one of the easiest calls in the market for two years, and Broadcom's miss is the first major chip name to give investors a real reason to ask hard questions.
Nvidia still accounts for the lion's share of AI chip revenue, but Broadcom had become the closest thing to a second pillar in the trade.
Nvidia's next report lands in late August, and that answer matters now.
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