Qualcomm shares soar 16% on CEO comments about China orders, hyperscaler customer

Qualcomm shares soar 16% on CEO comments about China orders, hyperscaler customer


Qualcomm shares jump more than 13% on Q2 earnings beat

Qualcomm shares staged a dramatic turnaround after the bell on Wednesday as CEO Cristiano Amon said on the earnings call that it would begin shipping data center chips to “a large hyperscaler” within the calendar year.

The stock initially fell as much as 7% after the chipmaker reported second-quarter earnings that topped Wall Street estimates but fell short on forward guidance.

Amon wouldn’t disclose the customer, but said more details will come during Qualcomm’s investor day in June.

Although it’s largely fallen behind giants like Nvidia in the race for chips to power artificial intelligence, Qualcomm announced its own data center chips last year. OpenAI also announced a partnership with Qualcomm last week to develop an AI chip for smartphones that could power a coming OpenAI device run by AI agents.

“We are in a period of profound industry transformation — the rise of AI agents is reshaping our roadmap across every platform we develop,” Amon said on the earnings call.

The U.S. chipmaker reported adjusted earnings per share of $2.65, beating estimates by nine cents. Revenue was in line with expectations at $10.6 billion, but the third-quarter revenue forecast came in short of expectations.

Qualcomm expects Q3 revenue in the range of $9.2 billion to $10 billion, short of the $10.19 billion StreetAccount analysts were looking for.

Global smartphone shipments are down more than 4%, according to the International Data Corporation, breaking an upward trend that had been going since mid-2023.

When it comes to sales in China, Amon said on a call with CNBC that the current quarter will be the bottom because “customers are running out of inventory.”

Much of Qualcomm’s revenue comes from licensing fees it charges for its core technology used inside nearly every smartphone. Amon told CNBC that this part of its business, “allows us to know exactly how much stuff happens at the end market.”

Qualcomm designs chips and wireless technologies for smartphones, personal computers, cars and other devices. It’s best known for its Snapdragon processors that power Android phones and modem technology that enables mobile connectivity such as 5G.

CNBC’s Kristina Partsinevelos contributed to this report.

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