The Investor
04 Jun 2026, 12:26
Broadcom Plunges 12% Despite Record Results as Sky-High AI Expectations Overshadow Strong Guidance
Broadcom (AVGO) fell 12% in premarket trading despite delivering record revenue, profits, and cash flow, suggesting investors were expecting even stronger results after the stock's massive AI-driven rally over the past year.
The semiconductor and infrastructure software giant reported second-quarter revenue of $22.2 billion, up 48% year-over-year, while non-GAAP earnings per share surged 54% to $2.44. Adjusted EBITDA climbed 52% to a record $15.2 billion, representing an exceptional 69% margin. Free cash flow reached a record $10.3 billion during the quarter. The company also increased its cash position to nearly $20 billion and maintained its quarterly dividend.
The primary growth engine remained artificial intelligence. Semiconductor revenue jumped 79% to $15.0 billion, driven by explosive demand for custom AI accelerators and AI networking products. AI-related semiconductor revenue reached $10.8 billion during the quarter, soaring 143% year-over-year and exceeding management's prior expectations.
Looking ahead, management provided what would normally be considered spectacular guidance. Broadcom forecast third-quarter revenue of approximately $29.4 billion, representing 84% year-over-year growth, while AI semiconductor revenue is expected to reach $16.0 billion, implying growth of more than 200% from the prior year period. Operating margins are also expected to remain exceptionally strong.
Despite these impressive numbers, investors appear to be reacting to valuation and expectation concerns rather than operational performance. After becoming one of the market's largest beneficiaries of the AI infrastructure boom, Broadcom had entered earnings with extremely high expectations. Many investors were likely looking for an even larger guidance increase, additional AI customer announcements, or signs that AI demand was accelerating beyond already extraordinary levels.
Some investors may also be focusing on the composition of growth. While semiconductor revenue surged, infrastructure software revenue grew only 9%, highlighting Broadcom's increasing dependence on the AI spending cycle. With the stock having dramatically outperformed the broader market, any result perceived as merely "excellent" rather than "exceptional" can trigger a sharp reaction.
Importantly, nothing in the report suggests a slowdown in Broadcom's underlying business. AI demand continues to accelerate, margins remain near record highs, cash generation is enormous, and management's outlook points to another quarter of extraordinary growth. The sharp premarket decline appears driven primarily by profit-taking and a reset of expectations rather than any deterioration in business fundamentals.
In short, Broadcom delivered one of the strongest earnings reports in the semiconductor industry, but after a prolonged AI-fueled rally, investors appear to be concluding that even record results were not enough to justify the market's extremely elevated expectations.
Broadcom (AVGO) fell 12% in premarket trading despite delivering record revenue, profits, and cash flow, suggesting investors were expecting even stronger results after the stock's massive AI-driven rally over the past year.
The semiconductor and infrastructure software giant reported second-quarter revenue of $22.2 billion, up 48% year-over-year, while non-GAAP earnings per share surged 54% to $2.44. Adjusted EBITDA climbed 52% to a record $15.2 billion, representing an exceptional 69% margin. Free cash flow reached a record $10.3 billion during the quarter. The company also increased its cash position to nearly $20 billion and maintained its quarterly dividend.
The primary growth engine remained artificial intelligence. Semiconductor revenue jumped 79% to $15.0 billion, driven by explosive demand for custom AI accelerators and AI networking products. AI-related semiconductor revenue reached $10.8 billion during the quarter, soaring 143% year-over-year and exceeding management's prior expectations.
Looking ahead, management provided what would normally be considered spectacular guidance. Broadcom forecast third-quarter revenue of approximately $29.4 billion, representing 84% year-over-year growth, while AI semiconductor revenue is expected to reach $16.0 billion, implying growth of more than 200% from the prior year period. Operating margins are also expected to remain exceptionally strong.
Despite these impressive numbers, investors appear to be reacting to valuation and expectation concerns rather than operational performance. After becoming one of the market's largest beneficiaries of the AI infrastructure boom, Broadcom had entered earnings with extremely high expectations. Many investors were likely looking for an even larger guidance increase, additional AI customer announcements, or signs that AI demand was accelerating beyond already extraordinary levels.
Some investors may also be focusing on the composition of growth. While semiconductor revenue surged, infrastructure software revenue grew only 9%, highlighting Broadcom's increasing dependence on the AI spending cycle. With the stock having dramatically outperformed the broader market, any result perceived as merely "excellent" rather than "exceptional" can trigger a sharp reaction.
Importantly, nothing in the report suggests a slowdown in Broadcom's underlying business. AI demand continues to accelerate, margins remain near record highs, cash generation is enormous, and management's outlook points to another quarter of extraordinary growth. The sharp premarket decline appears driven primarily by profit-taking and a reset of expectations rather than any deterioration in business fundamentals.
In short, Broadcom delivered one of the strongest earnings reports in the semiconductor industry, but after a prolonged AI-fueled rally, investors appear to be concluding that even record results were not enough to justify the market's extremely elevated expectations.