Broadcom Stock Dropped 15% Despite A Record Quarter And Ai Revenue
- Broadcom stock fell about 16% even after the company posted a record AI quarter and won fresh target hikes from Bank of America and Morningstar.
- A record quarter and bullish targets were met by a stock that dropped hard, and the answer lies in earnings quality and money flow, not the headlines.
- Second-quarter revenue hit $22.2 billion, up 48% from a year earlier, a record.
- AI semiconductor revenue reached $10.8 billion, up 143%, and bookings topped $30 billion against $10.8 billion shipped.
What Happened
Broadcom stock fell about 16% even after the company posted a record AI quarter and won fresh target hikes from Bank of America and Morningstar.
The selloff is the puzzle. A record quarter and bullish targets were met by a stock that dropped hard, and the answer lies in earnings quality and money flow, not the headlines.
Broadcom Stock Earns a Record Quarter and Target Hikes
Market Context
Broadcom (NASDAQ: AVGO) gave the bulls plenty. Second-quarter revenue hit $22.2 billion, up 48% from a year earlier, a record. Yet, the price now stares at a big dip.
If the growth is this good but the quality is slipping, the next question is simple. Did the money that sets the price already see it and start to leave?
From roughly May 14 to June 2, the price trended higher while the CMF trended lower. That bearish divergence, with sell volume near 50 million shares, suggests institutional buyers were thinning out as the rally progressed.
Options traders leaned the same way. The put-call ratio compares put to call activity, with a reading above 1 marking a bearish lean. Before the report, its open interest reading was 1.12.
After the June 3 results, that reading eased only to 1.09. The volume ratio even rose from 0.51 to 0.54 on fresh put buying. The options crowd kept paying for downside protection rather than chasing upside.
Why It Matters
The flow had been fading before the print. The Chaikin Money Flow (CMF), a proxy for institutional buying and selling pressure, remains positive at 0.11, but has dropped from about 0.5 in early May.
Details
AI semiconductor revenue reached $10.8 billion, up 143%, and bookings topped $30 billion against $10.8 billion shipped. That backlog extends demand visibility into 2028.
The guidance went further. Management guided third-quarter revenue to about $29.4 billion, up 84%, put full-year 2026 AI revenue near $56 billion, around 180% growth, and reiterated more than $100 billion for 2027.
Software helped too. Infrastructure software added $7.2 billion, up 9%, with annual recurring revenue up 17%.
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Analysts responded. Morningstar lifted its target to $650 from $550, per FinViz, followed by Bank of America. Broadcom stock is up 37.86% this year and has rallied about 70% since late March.
Those records, however, hide a per-share story that helps explain the selloff.
The Quiet Numbers Under Broadcom Stock’s Hood
Pull up the multi-quarter picture, and the three charts disagree. Sales are a clean climb, from $11.96 billion in early 2024 to $19.31 billion, then $22.2 billion this quarter.
GAAP earnings per share are not clean. GAAP earnings are the official bottom-line profit per share, calculated after all costs. That includes one-time items like the bill for buying other companies, which is why the line jumps around.
EPS ran $0.28, then $0.44, then posted a $0.40 loss in one 2024 quarter due to acquisition charges. It recovered unevenly to $1.50 and the latest $1.91.
The share count is the quieter tell. It has crept up from 4.63 billion to 4.74 billion, so dilution works against holders even as the company buys back stock.
The current quarter shows the same squeeze on quality. Gross margin, the share of sales left after the direct cost of making the chips, was 77.1%. That is down 230 basis points, or 2.3 percentage points, from a year earlier.
Broadcom guides that figure to about 74% next quarter. The reason is the AI mix itself. Custom AI chips carry lower margins than the legacy chip and software lines. So the faster they grow, the more they pull down the blended margin.
That is the quiet warning in a record quarter. The same AI demand driving the headline numbers is also making each new dollar of sales less profitable. Records on the top line, thinner quality underneath.
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