Broadcom's Q3 Guidance Misses Expectations by $12 Billion, After-Hours Trading Plummets Over 13%, AI Narrative "Cooling"?

marsbitPublished on 2026-06-04Last updated on 2026-06-04

Abstract

On June 3, Broadcom released record Q2 FY26 results with revenue of $22.19B, up 48% YoY, and AI chip sales of $10.8B, up 143%. Adjusted EPS of $2.44 beat estimates. However, its Q3 AI semiconductor revenue guidance of $16B, while up over 200% YoY, fell roughly $1.2B (7%) short of analyst consensus expectations of $17.2B. This miss, coupled with slightly weaker-than-expected software revenue, triggered a severe market reaction. CEO Hock Tan maintained the FY26 AI revenue outlook of over $100B but did not raise it, disappointing investors who had priced in more robust growth. The stock plummeted over 13% in after-hours trading, erasing roughly $270B in market cap. The sell-off extended to peers like Marvell. A key concern for markets, particularly for Chinese optical module suppliers, was Tan's comment that the contribution of AI networking (e.g., Ethernet switches, optical interconnect chips) to AI revenue, currently near 40%, is expected to normalize to around 30% over time, signaling a potential peak in growth for that segment. Despite the guidance shortfall, Tan reiterated that AI demand remains "insatiable" and reaffirmed the long-term target of exceeding $100B in AI revenue by FY27. The reaction highlights the heightened sensitivity and premium valuation placed on AI-exposed stocks, where anything less than stellar guidance can prompt significant profit-taking. The broader question is whether this represents a cooling AI narrative or a correction in overstretched valua...

Author: Ada, Deep Tide TechFlow

After U.S. markets closed on June 3rd EST, Broadcom announced its fiscal year 2026 second-quarter results for the period ending May 3, 2026. In absolute terms, this was a record-breaking quarterly report. Revenue reached $22.19 billion, a 48% year-over-year increase, marking the highest single-quarter growth rate for the company since January 2017. Adjusted EPS was $2.44, surpassing the analyst consensus estimate of $2.40. However, the market's focus was not on Q2, but on Broadcom's guidance for Q3 AI chip revenue: $16 billion, representing year-over-year growth of over 200%, but falling short of the sell-side consensus estimate of $17.2 billion by nearly 7 percentage points. This discrepancy, coupled with a slight miss in the company's software business expectations, triggered a sharp reaction in the stock price.

Q2 Performance Nearly Perfect, AI Semiconductor Revenue Grows for 13 Consecutive Quarters

According to Broadcom's official disclosure, Q2 AI semiconductor revenue reached $10.8 billion, a 143% year-over-year increase, exceeding the company's previous March guidance of $10.7 billion. CEO Hock Tan stated in the earnings press release that this quarter's growth was driven by the "combined strength of custom AI accelerators and AI networking demand."

Breaking down by segment, the Semiconductor Solutions business revenue was $15.009 billion, a 79% year-over-year increase, accounting for 68% of total revenue. AI semiconductor revenue within this segment rose to 72%. Non-AI semiconductor revenue was $4.2 billion, up 6% year-over-year, with a backlog exceeding $6 billion, indicating a cyclical recovery. The Infrastructure Software business (i.e., VMware) revenue was $7.178 billion, up 9% year-over-year, in line with the company's own guidance, but below the $7.32 billion analyst consensus from a StreetAccount survey, a shortfall of approximately $140 million.

Profitability performance was equally strong. Adjusted EBITDA reached $15.2 billion, accounting for 69% of revenue, setting a new historical record. Free cash flow was $10.26 billion, representing 46% of revenue. Cash balance at quarter-end was $19.63 billion, an increase of $5.4 billion from the previous quarter.

Q3 Revenue Guidance Exceeds Expectations, but AI Semiconductor Revenue "Misses by $12 Billion"

Broadcom's Q3 guidance projects total revenue of $29.4 billion, an 84% year-over-year increase, higher than the analyst consensus estimate of $28.54 billion. Semiconductor revenue is guided to be $20.5 billion, a 124% increase. However, the AI semiconductor revenue guidance within this is $16 billion, 7% lower than the $17.2 billion sell-side consensus estimate aggregated by institutions like LSEG. The gap is even larger compared to some more optimistic buy-side expectations.

More crucially, Hock Tan did not raise the fiscal year 2026 AI chip revenue guidance during the earnings call. According to CNBC, he reiterated during the call, "the company expects this momentum to continue into fiscal 2027 and maintains its guidance of AI semiconductor revenue exceeding $100 billion." Bernstein analyst Stacy Rasgon commented that it was the Q3 AI performance guidance that weighed on Broadcom's stock price.

Summing up the realized revenues for Q1 ($8.4B), Q2 ($10.8B), and the expectations for Q3 and Q4, Broadcom's projected total AI chip sales for this fiscal year are estimated to be around $56 billion, still showing a gap of about $1.6 billion compared to the analyst consensus estimate of $57.6 billion.

After-Hours Trading Plummets Over 13%, Options Market Had Already Priced in High Volatility

Broadcom's after-hours stock reaction was severe. After the earnings release at 4 PM EST on June 3rd, AVGO initially dropped about 5%. As guidance details were disclosed during the call, the decline continued to widen, with after-hours trading plunging over 15% at one point, eventually settling down 13.78%. Based on the pre-earnings closing price of approximately $479, this translates to a single-day market capitalization loss of over $270 billion.

Notably, the capital market was already preparing for significant volatility following Broadcom's earnings. Multiple media reports cited that prior to the release, the options market had priced in a single-day post-earnings volatility for Broadcom at around 7.8%, significantly higher than the historical average. This pricing reflected investor dilemma. Broadcom's stock price had rebounded over 60% from its March low entering the earnings season, with a nearly 40% gain year-to-date in 2026. Its valuation (approximately 90x P/E) is far above the semiconductor peer average of about 69x.

Precisely due to these valuation concerns, the market's implicit threshold for Broadcom's earnings was "across-the-board major beats." Any guidance falling short of this "blowout" performance could trigger profit-taking.

AI Networking Revenue Share to Decline from 40% to 30%

For the A-share optical module sector, a statement by Hock Tan during the call regarding the AI networking business might be more damaging than the overall AI guidance.

According to Yahoo Finance citing call content, Hock Tan confirmed that the AI networking business accounted for "close to 40%" of AI semiconductor revenue this quarter. However, he also stated that this proportion is expected to "normalize over time to a level closer to 30%, not stay at the 40% range."

This marks the first time Broadcom management has explicitly provided a path for the decline in the AI networking business share. AI networking (including Ethernet switch chips, optical transceiver module interconnect chips, and related segments) is precisely the downstream narrative underpinning the core revenue sources for leading A-share optical module companies like Zhongji Innolight (中际旭创), Sunsea AIoT (新易盛), and Tianfu Communication (天孚通信). The stock prices of these three companies have already surged significantly this year, with their combined market capitalization once exceeding that of Kweichow Moutai. Zhongji Innolight's forward P/E is about 66x, while Tianfu Communication's reaches 139x. Their valuation assumptions are built on expectations of sustained high-speed growth in AI networking.

Hock Tan's latest statement implies that even if AI computing power demand remains robust, the networking segment's share may peak first. If this signal is accepted by the buy-side, the previous valuation premiums for A-share optical module leaders will face direct scrutiny.

Spillover Effect: Marvell Drops After-Hours, Asian AI Chain Under Pressure Today

Broadcom's guidance effect has already begun to spill over. Marvell's after-hours stock price fell about 9%, narrowing to around 6% at the time of writing. Other companies related to the AI networking/connectivity theme, such as Astera Labs and Credo Technology, also faced pressure after-hours. Notably, on June 2nd, Marvell surged 32% in a single day after Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang called it "the next trillion-dollar company." On June 3rd, the stock continued to rise 3.73% during regular trading, but the after-hours pullback suggests concentrated profit-taking pressure on the "Nvidia premium" from the previous day.

For the Asian market, there are two key points to watch today. First, whether the A-share optical module leader trio "Yi Zhong Tian" (易中天, likely referring to the mentioned companies) can digest Hock Tan's statement about the declining network share. Second, whether South Korean HBM suppliers like SK Hynix and Samsung Electronics will be dragged down by an overall cooling of the AI narrative. Considering that Zhongji Innolight's single-day trading volume on June 2nd exceeded the total daily volume of half the sectors in the A-share market, the sector's emotional reaction might be amplified.

However, the earnings report itself did not negate the long-term prosperity of AI computing power. Hock Tan once again described AI chip demand as "insatiable" during the call and reaffirmed the goal of exceeding $100 billion in AI chip revenue for fiscal 2027. Institutions like UBS have previously entered a "buy-the-dip" logic following similar post-earnings declines for Broadcom back in December. Whether this round of correction marks a narrative inflection point or is merely a routine profit-taking event for high-valuation stocks requires observing subsequent earnings calls from leading companies and capital expenditure trends from hyperscale cloud providers to determine.

Related Questions

QWhat was the key factor that triggered Broadcom's sharp stock price decline after its Q2 2026 earnings report?

AThe key factor was Broadcom's Q3 AI chip revenue guidance of $16 billion, which was approximately 7% lower than the $17.2 billion consensus sell-side estimate. This gap, combined with a slight miss in software revenue expectations, triggered the sell-off.

QWhat did Broadcom's CEO Hock Tan specifically say about the future proportion of AI networking revenue, and why is this significant for Chinese optical module companies?

AHock Tan stated that the AI networking segment accounted for nearly 40% of AI semiconductor revenue in Q2 but is expected to 'normalize over time to the neighborhood of about 30%, not 40%.' This is significant for leading Chinese optical module companies like Zhongji Innolight, Suzhou TFC Optical Communication, and Eoptolink, as their high valuations are based on expectations of sustained high growth in AI networking demand. His statement suggests this segment's growth may peak sooner than anticipated, potentially challenging their valuation premiums.

QHow did the market price Broadcom's potential volatility ahead of its earnings report, and what does this indicate about investor sentiment?

AAhead of the earnings report, the options market priced in a potential single-day price swing of around 7.8% for Broadcom, which is significantly higher than its historical average. This indicates that investors were braced for a significant move, reflecting a 'tough to please' sentiment. Given Broadcom's substantial stock price run-up (over 60% from March lows) and high valuation (~90x P/E), the market's implicit threshold was for 'blowout' results, making the stock vulnerable to profit-taking on any guidance that wasn't overwhelmingly positive.

QBesides Broadcom, which other related company saw its stock price affected after the earnings report, and what was a contributing factor to its prior surge?

AMarvell Technology saw its stock price drop approximately 9% in after-hours trading following Broadcom's report. This decline came after a 32% surge on June 2nd, which was largely attributed to Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang calling Marvell a 'potential next trillion-dollar company.' The post-Broadcom sell-off represented a sharp reversal and suggested profit-taking on the 'Nvidia premium.'

QDespite the negative market reaction to the guidance, what positive long-term outlook did Broadcom's CEO reiterate?

ADespite the guidance miss, CEO Hock Tan reiterated the long-term positive outlook for AI chip demand, describing it as 'insatiable.' He also reaffirmed the company's target for AI semiconductor revenue to exceed $100 billion for the fiscal year 2027.

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