Qualcomm stock jumped 9.38% on Thursday as buyers stepped in after a rough stretch driven by analyst downgrades and broader market pressure.
QUALCOMM Incorporated, QCOM
The rebound came alongside gains across the large-cap tech and semiconductor space. Qualcomm is down roughly 23% year-to-date heading into the session.
Two headwinds have dominated the narrative around QCOM this year: Apple’s move away from Qualcomm modems, and a smartphone memory shortage. Both are real, and the market has priced them in hard.
But there’s a growing case that the sell-off has overshadowed what Qualcomm is quietly building in edge AI — running artificial intelligence directly on devices rather than routing everything through the cloud.
Qualcomm’s Snapdragon chips already power a large share of premium Android phones. The company has been pushing that same architecture into cars, laptops, and robotics. That diversification is starting to show up in the numbers.
Automotive revenue reached $1.1 billion in the most recent quarter, up 15% year-over-year. The company has a $45 billion design-win pipeline in that segment alone.
IoT and automotive combined are projected to make up nearly half of Qualcomm’s chip revenue by 2030 — a very different business from the smartphone modem story the market keeps telling.
Edge AI is exactly what Qualcomm has been building toward for years. Local processing is faster, more private, and doesn’t need a constant internet connection.
As AI gets embedded in vehicles, industrial equipment, and consumer devices, routing everything through centralized data centers becomes costly and impractical. Qualcomm’s power-efficient compute architecture is built for this environment.
The company also recently launched the Dragonwing IQ10, a chip purpose-built for humanoid robots. Its acquisition of Arduino adds another angle — Arduino is the development platform used by around 32 million engineers worldwide, meaning Qualcomm silicon is now baked into how the next generation of industrial designers learn to build.
In March, Qualcomm’s board authorized a $20 billion share repurchase program — about 15% of its market cap. That kind of commitment tends to put a floor under a stock, and it’s doing some of that work here.
The company generates 32% operating cash flow margins. It currently trades at roughly 12x forward earnings, compared to about 36x for Broadcom and over 40x for Marvell.
Marvell is an interesting comparison. MRVL is up roughly 85% year-to-date after the market slowly recognized its role in AI data center connectivity. The parallel to Qualcomm’s edge AI positioning isn’t lost on analysts watching this space.
Qualcomm reports earnings on April 29. That print will likely determine whether Thursday’s bounce has legs.
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