Broadcom (AVGO) stock is down about 8% year to date, but its latest quarter made one thing hard to ignore.

The AI trade may not be cooling as much as investors feared.

Broadcom is now generating real AI-driven revenue from hyperscalers, not just talking about future potential.

At the same time, VMware is shifting the business toward more recurring software revenue, helping support margins and stability.

The question now is whether this momentum can continue.

In simple terms, Broadcom helps power the infrastructure behind AI, supplying custom chips and networking solutions used by hyperscalers, while also owning a growing software platform through VMware.

Its advantage comes from deep relationships with large customers and a model that combines high-margin software with mission-critical hardware.

If AI demand holds and execution stays strong, the long-term story looks compelling.

AI revenue becomes a scaled profit driver

Broadcom’s fiscal first-quarter 2026 report made clear that AI infrastructure is now a meaningful earnings engine, not just a long-term narrative.

The company posted first-quarter revenue of $19.31 billion, up 29.5% from a year earlier, topping guidance as hyperscaler demand for custom AI accelerators and networking gear moved into volume deployment.

CEO Hock Tan noted on the earnings call that “growth was driven by AI semiconductor revenue, which grew 106% year-on-year to $8.4 billion, way above our outlook. In Q2, this momentum accelerates, and we expect semiconductor revenue to be $14.8 billion, up 76% year-on-year.”

That underscored that AI is already showing up in reported results at scale.

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UBS analyst Timothy Arcuri said the company’s fiscal 2027 outlook “seems very conservative,” and raised his AI chip revenue estimate to over $130 billion, up from $106 billion.

That also strengthens Broadcom’s standing as one of the clearest AI spending beneficiaries outside Nvidia.

VMware lifts software quality and margin durability

Broadcom’s quarter also showed that VMware is integrating more smoothly than many investors expected, with subscription conversion into VMware Cloud Foundation improving the software mix.

Broadcom reported GAAP net income of $7.35 billion and non-GAAP net income of $10.19 billion in the first quarter.

The bigger story was the quality of those earnings, as a larger recurring software base can support stronger margins and reduce dependence on swings in the semiconductor cycle.

If VMware Cloud Foundation adoption and annual recurring revenue conversion continue to run ahead of plan, investors have a stronger case for assigning a higher multiple based on steadier cash flow and lower cyclicality.

CEO Hock Tan noted in the first quarter call that, “We are confident that the growth in generative and agentic AI will create the need for more VMware, not less.”

With software helping anchor the earnings base, the next question is how much more Broadcom can capture from AI infrastructure spending beyond custom silicon.

Ethernet momentum expands Broadcom’s AI wallet share

Ethernet is increasingly being viewed as a credible architecture for large training clusters.

As Broadcom’s COO Charlie Kawwas said, “We’ve announced with multiple hyperscalers and many of our peers in the semiconductor industry that Ethernet scale-up is the right choice… We’re being asked to scale-up through Ethernet, and we’re happy to enable that.”

If hyperscalers keep building AI systems around Ethernet fabrics, Broadcom’s opportunity widens beyond custom compute silicon and into switching and interconnect, increasing the company’s content per deployment.

That gives Broadcom a broader claim on AI infrastructure budgets through platforms tied to Tomahawk and Jericho, rather than leaving the company reliant on any single accelerator program.

Bloomberg via Getty Images As the Ethernet debate shifts from whether it can scale in AI to how fast adoption grows, Broadcom’s networking portfolio looks increasingly central to the next leg of AI buildouts.

Broadcom’s upside could come from:

  • Expanding custom AI chip deployments as hyperscaler partners scale XPU programs into broader production,
  • Higher AI networking attach rates that increase revenue per customer alongside accelerator demand,
  • Continued strength in hyperscaler and enterprise AI spending that supports sustained semiconductor growth,
  • VMware’s transition to subscription contracts is improving revenue visibility and recurring cash flow,
  • Operating leverage from a richer mix of software and AI-driven revenue supporting margin expansion,
  • Deeper multi-product relationships with large cloud customers that increase switching costs and long-term revenue durability,
  • Strong free cash flow generation enabling faster debt paydown and potential shareholder returns.

Key risks that could pressure Broadcom

  • A slowdown in hyperscaler AI infrastructure spending that delays custom silicon ramps,
  • Failure to convert current AI design wins into large-scale, long-term production programs,
  • Integration risks from VMware, including potential customer churn or pushback on pricing changes,
  • Margin pressure if revenue mix shifts toward lower-margin hardware or if operating costs rise,
  • Increased competition in custom AI silicon from players like Nvidia (NVDA) and Advanced Micro Devices (AMD),
  • Concentration risk with a small number of large hyperscaler customers driving a significant portion of growth,
  • Broader enterprise or cloud spending slowdowns that weigh on infrastructure and software demand.

Broadcom’s key takeaways

Broadcom’s fiscal Q1 2026 revenue jumped 29% year over year to $19.3 billion, showing AI demand is already flowing through the numbers.

Hyperscalers are ramping custom accelerators and networking, expanding Broadcom’s role across AI infrastructure, while VMware is boosting recurring revenue and supporting margins through subscription growth.

Ethernet adoption in AI clusters adds another upside lever, though risks remain if AI spending slows, competition intensifies, or VMware execution slips.

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