Qualcomm reports earnings, revenue beat and issues strong forecast

Qualcomm reports earnings, revenue beat and issues strong forecast


Qualcomm CEO Cristiano Amon delivers a keynote speech at Computex in Taipei, Taiwan May 19, 2025.

Ann Wang | Reuters

Qualcomm reported fiscal fourth-quarter results on Wednesday that beat analyst estimates on the top and bottom lines.

Here’s how the company did, compared with estimates from analysts polled by LSEG:

  • Earnings per share: $3.00 adjusted vs. $2.88 expected
  • Revenue: $11.27 billion vs. $10.79 billion expected

Revenue rose 10% from $10.24 billion a year earlier, Qualcomm said in a statement. Due to an income tax expense, the company recorded a net loss of $3.12 billion, or $2.89 a share, after reporting net income a year earlier of $2.92 billion, or $2.59 per share.

For the fiscal first quarter, Qualcomm said it expects revenue of $11.8 billion to $12.6 billion, or $12.2 billion at the middle of the range. That exceeded the average analyst estimate of $11.62 billion, according to LSEG. Adjusted EPS will be $3.30 to $3.50, the company said, while analysts expected earnings of $3.31 per share.

The company has long been a dominant provider of mobile phone chips, including the central processor and modem for high-end devices made by Samsung and modems for Apple iPhones.

Qualcomm expects to lose Apple as a customer for its modem business in the coming years, and has been working to diversify by making chips for other devices such as Windows PCs and virtual-reality headsets and smart glasses from Meta.

But the biggest opportunity is in artificial intelligence, where Nvidia has run away with the processor market and Advanced Micro Devices is trying to play catchup.

Last week, Qualcomm announced that it will release new AI accelerator chips, a disclosure that boosted the stock 11%. Qualcomm said that both the AI200, which will go on sale in 2026, and the AI250, planned for 2027, can come in a system that fills up a full, liquid-cooled server rack.

Nvidia and AMD offer their graphics processing units, or GPUs, in full-rack systems that allow as many as 72 chips to act as one computer. AI labs need that computing power to run the most advanced models.

Qualcomm shares are up 17% for the year as of Wednesday’s close, trailing the Nasdaq’s 22% gain. Nvidia and AMD, meanwhile, are up 45% and 112%, respectively.

Revenue in Qualcomm’s handsets business rose 14% to $6.96 billion in the latest quarter. Sales in the automotive unit increased 17% to $1.05 billion. Qualcomm reports its Meta revenue under its Internet of Things (IoT) division, which had $1.81 billion in sales during the quarter, up 7% from a year earlier.

All three of those segments topped estimates, according to StreetAccount.

Qualcomm’s licensing business saw revenue slide 7% from a year ago to $1.41 billion, also beating analyst expectations.

WATCH: Qualcomm CEO on new AI chips

Qualcomm CEO on new AI chips: Trying to prepare for the next phase of AI data center growth



Source

These 5 infrastructure stocks have more than tripled this year on the AI trade
Technology

These 5 infrastructure stocks have more than tripled this year on the AI trade

Wires and cables in a server room. Thomas Northcut | Digitalvision | Getty Images Nvidia has been the biggest infrastructure winner in the artificial intelligence boom, soaring in value by almost thirteenfold since the end of 2022 to a market cap of $4.6 trillion. While Nvidia’s rally continued in 2025, investors betting on other AI […]

Read More
Amazon faces ‘leader’s dilemma’ — fight AI shopping bots or join them
Technology

Amazon faces ‘leader’s dilemma’ — fight AI shopping bots or join them

Thos Robinson | Getty Images Amazon CEO Andy Jassy could see how dramatically artificial intelligence was altering e-commerce. In June, he told employees that AI agents will start to infiltrate aspects of everyday life, “from shopping to travel to daily chores and tasks.” Four months later, Jassy said on an earnings call that Amazon expects to partner with third-party agents, and has […]

Read More
‘Witch hunt’: Ex-EU commissioner Breton denounces U.S. visa ban targeting ‘censorship’
Technology

‘Witch hunt’: Ex-EU commissioner Breton denounces U.S. visa ban targeting ‘censorship’

A former EU commissioner has hit back after receiving a U.S. visa ban for alleged censorship. The Trump administration imposed visa bans on Thierry Breton, a former European Union commissioner behind the Digital Services Act (DSA), and four anti-disinformation campaigners, accusing them of censoring U.S. social media platforms. “The State Department is taking decisive action […]

Read More