Broadcom’s $100 Billion AI Roadmap Is Now the Trade — Here’s What the Numbers Actually Say

There’s a version of the Broadcom story where everything is perfect – record AI chip revenue, a $30 billion backlog, margins holding at 67%, and management telegraphing $100 billion-plus in AI semiconductor revenue for fiscal 2027. And then there’s the version traders are actually living in right now, where the stock dropped nearly 14% after hours following Q2 earnings on June 3 despite delivering all of that. That gap – between the fundamental story and the price reaction – is where the trade lives.

Let’s start with the numbers, because they matter here.

The Q2 Print

Broadcom’s fiscal Q2 2026 was, by any reasonable measure, a record quarter. Total revenue hit $22.2 billion, up 48% year-over-year. AI semiconductor revenue came in at $10.8 billion – up 143% YoY – representing nearly half of the company’s entire revenue base. Non-GAAP EPS of $2.44 beat the Street’s $2.32 estimate. Free cash flow reached $10.3 billion, or 46% of revenue. Operating margin held at 67% despite the revenue mix shift.

AI bookings exceeded $30 billion in the quarter. Bookings for AI semiconductors now exceed three times quarterly shipments – a structural signal, not a one-quarter blip. Management also disclosed that on June 8, it arranged for an investor partner to deploy AI racks backed by a backstop agreement with maximum exposure of $29 billion. That’s not a balance sheet footnote – it’s a demand commitment stretching out years.

For Q3, Broadcom guided AI semiconductor revenue to $16 billion – up over 200% year-over-year. The non-AI semiconductor business is also recovering, with Q3 revenue guided up 12% sequentially.

Why the Stock Sold Off Anyway

Here’s the thing about high-expectation stocks: the bar moves with the price. Investors had been positioning for Broadcom to raise its $100 billion FY2027 AI revenue target. Instead, management reiterated it – technically on track, but not the upgrade the market wanted. The software segment also came in slightly light, which gave traders a reason to reduce exposure after a run into the $495–$497 range pre-earnings. AVGO hit an all-time high of $495 on June 3, 2026, right before the print.

Post-earnings, Cathie Wood stepped in to buy the dip. Mizuho reiterated its bullish thesis. The consensus analyst price target as of June 13 sits near $501, with 26 analysts maintaining a Buy rating. The stock currently trades near $382, up roughly 16% year-to-date – still outpacing the Nasdaq’s 13.5% YTD gain, but meaningfully below its recent peak.

Sector and Structural Context

Broadcom doesn’t compete with Nvidia on commercial GPUs. It designs custom AI accelerators (XPUs) and networking for specific hyperscaler clients – Google, Meta, Anthropic, OpenAI. The co-engineering model creates high switching costs and multi-year revenue visibility. Under a Meta agreement alone, Broadcom plans to deploy 3 gigawatts of capacity by the end of 2028. Two additional customers are set to begin shipments in late 2026, with $6 billion in purchase orders already booked. The company expects to ship roughly 10 gigawatts of compute capacity in fiscal 2027.

Full-year 2026 AI semiconductor revenue is guided at $56 billion – up roughly 180% from fiscal 2025. The $100 billion FY2027 number, if it holds, implies continued acceleration rather than normalization.

Technical Framework

AVGO is currently trading in the middle of its 52-week range and above its 200-day simple moving average. The post-earnings gap lower set a new reference range. Key levels to monitor include the $380–$385 zone as near-term support, with the $420–$430 region representing the first meaningful resistance cluster from prior consolidation. The ATH near $495 becomes a longer-term target only if Q3 guidance is absorbed cleanly and software segment concerns fade.

Beta sits above 1.4, meaning AVGO amplifies broader market moves in both directions. Volatility around macro catalysts – Fed signals, broader tech sentiment shifts – will remain elevated.

Scenario Framework

  • Bull Case: Software segment stabilizes, Q3 AI revenue execution hits or beats the $16B guide, hyperscaler demand signals extend into fiscal 2028 visibility. Stock re-engages the $450–$495 range.
  • Base Case: AVGO consolidates in the $370–$430 range through late summer as the market digests the AI revenue ramp and monitors infrastructure software ARR growth (currently 17% YoY). Institutional accumulation continues at lower levels.
  • Bear Case: Customer concentration risk surfaces – Broadcom’s chip business relies on a small number of large AI customers. Any demand deferral from a top-3 hyperscaler, or margin compression from the AI chip mix shift, could accelerate downside toward the $320–$340 region.

What Traders Are Watching

The next significant catalyst for AVGO is the Q3 earnings release, where the $16 billion AI semiconductor guidance print will either validate or reset the FY2027 roadmap. In the interim, hyperscaler capex commentary – from Google, Meta, and Microsoft earnings calls – acts as a real-time proxy for Broadcom’s demand environment. Infrastructure software ARR trajectory is the second metric worth tracking; it’s the margin stabilizer, and any deterioration there changes the multiple argument.

Position sizing matters on a beta-1.4+ name with a $1.82 trillion market cap. The setup isn’t binary, but the range between the bull and bear cases is wide enough to demand disciplined risk management at every entry point.

For informational and educational purposes only. Not investment advice. Trading involves risk, including loss of principal.

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