Broadcom stock rises after Q1 earnings, $100 billion AI chip target and OpenAI plan

Broadcom stock rises after Q1 earnings, $100 billion AI chip target and OpenAI plan

March 6, 2026

NEW YORK, March 6, 2026, 07:51 (EST)

Broadcom Inc projected current-quarter revenue at roughly $22.0 billion and outlined plans for AI chip sales topping $100 billion by 2027. The stock jumped nearly 4.8% early Friday. First-quarter revenue climbed 29% to $19.31 billion.

This update carries weight. Broadcom supplies custom AI chips and networking hardware to some of the largest cloud players, so its results are a real-world measure of ongoing AI infrastructure investment. The likes of Alphabet, Microsoft, Amazon, and Meta together are predicted to pour over $600 billion into AI-related infrastructure this year.

Broadcom stands apart from Nvidia. Rather than just offering off-the-shelf chips, it collaborates with customers like Google and OpenAI to build custom processors. The company is also in the business of selling the hardware that shuttles data between AI systems.

The company reported in a filing that AI semiconductor revenue surged 106% in the first quarter, hitting $8.4 billion, with custom AI chips and networking providing a boost. Chief Executive Hock Tan said, “our AI revenue growth is accelerating,” and flagged a projected $10.7 billion in AI semiconductor revenue for the second quarter. SEC

During the earnings call, Tan mentioned Broadcom counts six large custom-chip clients, and predicted OpenAI would roll out its first volume-built custom chip with Broadcom in 2027. As for Meta, he described its MTIA AI chip initiative as “alive and well.” The Motley Fool

Gil Luria at D.A. Davidson described Broadcom’s April quarter forecast—and its guidance stretching into 2027—as “very encouraging,” arguing that such long-range visibility signals real demand strength. Broadcom continues chasing Nvidia for AI chip dominance, while AMD isn’t far behind, eyeing major cloud contracts too. Reuters

Broadcom’s free cash flow jumped to $8.01 billion, while the company stuck with its quarterly dividend of 65 cents per share. The board also cleared a fresh $10 billion stock buyback program that stretches through late 2026, according to the filing.

Not every area moved in lockstep. Infrastructure software—home to VMware—barely nudged higher, up just 1% to $6.8 billion for the quarter. Compare that to the semiconductors unit, which jumped 52%, hitting $12.5 billion.

Tan pointed out the company relies heavily on just six major customers, and the real question is if these big spenders stay the course. Broadcom has flagged risks—trade rules, tight supplies, unpredictable buyer behavior—all of which could weigh on performance. Still, Tan noted they’ve locked in critical capacity until 2028.

Konrad Wysocki

Konrad Wysocki is a senior markets reporter at Bez-kabli.pl, specializing in technology stocks, artificial intelligence and global financial markets. A graduate of the University of Rzeszów, he previously worked in investment research and market analysis. His coverage helps readers understand the key trends, companies and innovations influencing investors worldwide.

Stock Market Today

  • Compass Group Shares Dip Despite 2026 Profit Upgrade Amid Rate-Hike Concerns
    June 23, 2026, 7:57 AM EDT. Compass Group shares fell 0.4% to $32.38 in London, rebounding slightly after hitting a session low. The company raised its 2026 profit outlook, forecasting an 11.2% rise in underlying operating profit at constant exchange rates and 7.2% organic revenue growth. This contrasts with French rival Sodexo, which cut targets due to execution challenges. Compass's US dollar listing aims to reduce currency issues. Risks remain from AI-related job cuts in key sectors and possible changes in eating patterns, though CEO Dominic Blakemore sees more opportunity than risk. Market jitters over rising UK and US interest rates pressured stocks, with the STOXX 600 down 1.3%. Investors await Compass's Q3 update on July 21 for signs on new business and margin sustainability amid economic uncertainty.