Broadcom beats on earnings and revenue, says AI chip sales will double in current quarter
Broadcom's stock is near an all-time high and has climbed 75% so far in 2025 as the company benefits from booming demand for AI infrastructure.
A Broadcom sign is pictured as the company prepares to launch new optical chip tech to fend off Nvidia in San Jose, California, U.S., September 5, 2025.
Brittany Hosea-small | Reuters
Broadcom reported fourth-quarter results that beat expectations for earnings and revenue, and issued a strong forecast for the current quarter, driven by artificial intelligence demand.
The stock initially rose in extended trading before declining more than 4% during the earnings call.
Here's how the company did, compared with estimates from analysts polled by LSEG:
Earnings per share: $1.95 adjusted vs. $1.86 estimatedRevenue: $18.02 billion vs. $17.49 billion estimatedBroadcom said revenue in the fiscal first quarter will be about $19.1 billion, which would represent 28% year-over-year growth, and is higher than the $18.3 billion average analyst estimate, according to LSEG.
CEO Hock Tan said in a statement that Broadcom expects AI chip sales this quarter to double from a year earlier to $8.2 billion, both from custom AI chips as well as semiconductors for AI networking.
Net income climbed 97% to $8.51 billion, or $1.74 per share, from $4.32 billion, or 90 cents per share, in the year-ago period.
Along with Nvidia, Broadcom has been the other major winner among U.S. semiconductor companies from the AI boom. The company's stock price is up 75% so far in 2025, after doubling last year, as its custom chips, such as Google's tensor processing units, are gaining increasing traction in the market as a rival to Nvidia's graphics processing units.
On an earnings call with analysts, the company said it had acquired a fifth customer for its custom chips, and revealed that Anthropic was the previously unnamed customer that had placed a $10 billion order for Google's TPUs during the quarter.
Investors are closely watching to see Broadcom confirm that those companies are continuing to engage and are on track to buy and deploy custom chips.
In June, Broadcom said it had three customers and four prospects for its custom AI chips. In September, it said it had a fourth mystery customer that ordered $10 billion in custom chips and the next month announced a partnership with OpenAI to develop custom chips. Tan said that he didn't expect much revenue from that partnership in 2026.
Anthropic is using the latest Google TPU called Ironwood, Tan said on Thursday's earnings call.
Tan said Broadcom's other customers "prefer to control their own destiny by continuing to drive their multi-year journey to create their own custom AI accelerators, or XPUs, as we call them."
Broadcom has a $73 billion backlog for custom chips, switches, and other data center parts for AI over the next 18 months, Tan said.
Total revenue grew 28% during the quarter, largely due to a 74% increase in AI chip sales. That would equate to $8.2 billion in AI revenue in the fourth quarter.
AI chip sales are reported in the company's semiconductor solutions business, which reported $11.07 billion in sales, up 22% on an annual basis, and topping StreetAccount's $10.77 billion estimate.
Broadcom's other major segment, infrastructure software, reported 26% growth to $6.94 billion in sales, topping Wall Street's expectations. The segment includes sales from the company's VMWare offerings.
Broadcom said that it would issue a per-share dividend of 65 cents, payable later this month, up from 59 cents.
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