NASDAQ • USD • TECHNOLOGY • SEMICONDUCTORS
Current price is 55.3% of 52-week range
Last updated 7 days ago
Qualcomm’s moat is anchored by two durable engines: a leading position in premium smartphone application processors/modems (QCT) and a high-margin licensing model (QTL) tied to cellular standards. The strategic pivot toward diversification is visible in Q1 FY2026 where automotive revenue grew 15% and IoT grew 9% year over year, helping reduce reliance on handset cycles. A reported OpenAI smartphone-chip partnership would reinforce Qualcomm’s relevance in on-device AI, but it is still headline-level and not yet a quantified driver.
Financially, Qualcomm entered FY2026 with solid profitability: Q1 FY2026 GAAP net income was $3.0B and diluted EPS was $2.78 (non-GAAP EPS $3.50), with QCT revenue of $10.6B. Management guided Q2 FY2026 revenue of $10.2B–$11.0B and non-GAAP EPS of $2.45–$2.65, explicitly flagging memory supply/pricing as a near-term demand headwind. Valuation data is inconsistent across sources (trailing P/E readings vary widely), so conviction on “cheap vs expensive” is limited without a single verified multiple.
Over the next 12 months, the thesis hinges on three items: stabilization in premium Android demand, sustained auto/IoT growth to offset handset volatility, and clarity on AI-driven silicon wins translating into measurable revenue. Key risks are a deeper handset inventory correction, customer concentration (including any share loss at major OEMs), and licensing/regulatory disruption. The April 29, 2026 earnings and forward commentary should be a major catalyst given the tempered Q2 guidance range.
Recommendation: HOLD. Qualcomm has high-quality IP and improving diversification, but near-term earnings visibility is clouded by handset-related supply/demand constraints and an unclear valuation snapshot from the available data.