Qualcomm (QCOM) Stock: Poised to Soar on 5G/AI, or Falling Behind? Analysts Weigh In

Qualcomm (QCOM) Stock Falls as Patent Suit, Alphawave Deal Filings and AI Chip Rollouts Define November 17, 2025

Published: November 17, 2025


Qualcomm Incorporated (NASDAQ: QCOM) finished Monday sharply lower even as the company remains in the spotlight for next‑generation AI chips, industrial processors and its $2.4 billion takeover of UK-based Alphawave Semi. At the same time, a fresh patent lawsuit, new regulatory filings around the Alphawave deal, and headlines about Qualcomm’s role in U.S.–Saudi economic talks all hit the tape.

Below is a full rundown of what mattered for Qualcomm and QCOM stock on November 17, 2025.


QCOM stock today: third straight drop amid tech selloff

Qualcomm shares closed around $166.75, down roughly 4.2% on the day, extending a three‑session losing streak. Intraday, the stock traded between about $165 and $175 on volume just over 10 million shares.  [1]

The decline came against a negative broader backdrop. Major U.S. indexes ended notably lower on Monday as investors braced for Nvidia earnings and a slate of delayed U.S. economic data, giving the tech-heavy market a risk‑off tone.  [2]

A price‑tracker note from Quiver Quantitative highlighted that the SPDR S&P 500 ETF (SPY) slipped about 0.2%, with Qualcomm among the names dragging the benchmark as QCOM fell more than 2% earlier in the session.  [3]

Despite the pullback, analysts still see upside: recent research aggregated by Quiver shows nine Wall Street firms have updated targets in the past six months with a median price target near $200, and the ratings skew strongly toward Buy/Outperform[4]


New patent suit hits Snapdragon and X Series chips

Legal risk re‑emerged for Qualcomm’s core processor business on Monday.

new patent lawsuit filed in U.S. federal court accuses Qualcomm’s Snapdragon and X Series processors of infringing three additional patents, covering several chip families and devices that use them. The same plaintiff had already sued Qualcomm last year over four other patents, and this latest complaint effectively extends that dispute.  [5]

Key points:

  • The new case alleges that multiple Snapdragon and X Series products – including chips powering smartphones and PCs – use technologies covered by the plaintiff’s patents.
  • The earlier suit involving four patents is still pending, meaning Qualcomm now faces two active sets of claimsfrom the same party.  [6]
  • No court has ruled on the merits, and Qualcomm has not yet publicly commented on this latest filing.

For investors, this doesn’t immediately change Qualcomm’s business, but it adds another uncertainty line item. Patent litigation is a recurring theme across the semiconductor industry, especially for companies like Qualcomm that license large portfolios of wireless and compute IP.


Alphawave acquisition: Rule 2.9 and Form 8.3 filings spotlight major shareholders

The November 17 news flow also underscored how central Qualcomm’s planned acquisition of Alphawave Semiremains to the equity story.

Qualcomm agreed in June to buy London‑listed Alphawave IP Group plc for about $2.4 billion in cash, a deal aimed at strengthening its position in data-center and AI connectivity. The offer values Alphawave at a hefty premium to its pre‑deal share price and is expected to close in early 2026, pending regulatory and shareholder approvals.  [7]

On Monday, several UK Takeover Code disclosures hit the wires:

  • Rule 2.9 announcement: Qualcomm confirmed it has 1,070,418,107 common shares in issue, all with voting rights and no treasury shares outstanding.  [8]
  • Vanguard Group Form 8.3: Vanguard disclosed a 10.65% interest in Qualcomm, controlling nearly 114 million shares, along with recent purchases and sales around the $174 level.  [9]
  • Geode Capital Management Form 8.3: Geode reported holding about 25.7 million Qualcomm shares, equivalent to roughly 2.4% of the company.  [10]
  • Additional disclosures: Other filings, including one from Norges Bank, also fall under Rule 8.3, which applies when investors hold 1% or more of the relevant securities during an offer period.  [11]

These filings aren’t new bids or changes to deal terms, but they show how global asset managers are positioned in Qualcomm while the Alphawave transaction navigates regulatory review. They also confirm that the UK Takeover Panel still views Qualcomm as an “offeror” in an active deal process.  [12]


Industrial PCs and RFID: Dragonwing IQ‑X and Q‑6690 keep Qualcomm in the headlines

While the stock slid, Qualcomm’s industrial and IoT roadmap continued to draw coverage.

Dragonwing IQ‑X for industrial PCs

Over the past few days, multiple tech outlets have unpacked Qualcomm’s Dragonwing IQ‑X series, a new line of system‑on‑chips (SoCs) aimed at industrial PCs and edge controllers. Qualcomm announced the IQ‑X family on November 13, positioning it as an industrial‑grade sibling to its Snapdragon X PC platforms.  [13]

Key technical themes from recent write‑ups:

  • The IQ‑X5181 and IQ‑X7181 pair 8 or 12 custom Oryon CPU cores running up to about 3.4 GHz, with an Adreno GPU and up to 45 TOPS of AI performance across CPU, GPU and NPU.  [14]
  • Chips are built on a 4‑nm process and are rated for –40°C to 105°C, targeting harsh factory and outdoor environments.  [15]
  • The platform is designed for Windows 11 IoT Enterprise LTSC, supports COM module standards such as COM Express, and can slot into existing industrial carrier boards as a drop‑in upgrade.  [16]

Coverage from specialist sites and blogs framed IQ‑X as a move to put Qualcomm’s AI PCs “inside the factory walls”, not just in consumer laptops, by embedding high-performance AI compute directly into rugged industrial PCs.  [17]

Dragonwing Q‑6690 and on‑chip RAIN RFID

A separate strand of Monday’s coverage focused on Dragonwing Q‑6690, the enterprise mobile processor with integrated UHF (RAIN) RFID that Qualcomm first launched in August.  [18]

A new article from wireless IoT publication WIoT highlighted how the Q‑6690 integrates a full RFID reader on‑chip, eliminating the need for external modules in rugged handhelds, tablets and smart terminals. That reduces board space, lowers bill‑of‑materials costs, and shortens time‑to‑market for OEMs building scanners, retail POS systems and industrial devices.  [19]

Another piece, also dated November 17, showcased a collaboration between CISC and Qualcomm to leverage Q‑6690 for advanced RAIN RFID deployments, further underscoring how Qualcomm is pushing its RF and connectivity expertise deeper into industrial workflows.  [20]

Together, IQ‑X and Q‑6690 suggest Qualcomm is treating industrial edge compute and connected logistics as major growth vectors beyond smartphones.


Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5: flagship AI phone chip now shipping

In consumer devices, Qualcomm’s new flagship mobile SoC is officially “shipping now in smartphones near you,”according to an in‑depth analysis published today by Jon Peddie Research.  [21]

The article recaps Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 platform:

  • Built on TSMC’s N3P 3‑nm process, pairing the third‑generation Oryon CPU with a redesigned Adreno GPU and higher‑throughput NPU.
  • Features prime CPU cores clocked up to 4.6 GHz, which the piece notes as faster than existing mobile Arm designs, plus a large 18 MB “high‑performance memory” cache to boost bandwidth and efficiency.  [22]
  • Supports advanced graphics APIs including Unreal Engine 5, DirectX 12 and Vulkan 1.4, targeting console‑style gaming on mobile.  [23]

Handsets based on Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 began rolling out with Xiaomi 17 in late September, with additional launches from OnePlus and others through late 2025 and Samsung’s Galaxy S26 expected in early 2026.  [24]

For Qualcomm, the chip is a key driver of AI‑on‑device adoption in the Android ecosystem and a showcase for its Oryon CPU strategy across phones and PCs.


U.S.–Saudi forum: Qualcomm joins high‑profile CEO lineup

Qualcomm also appeared in geopolitical headlines.

Reuters reported that Qualcomm’s chief executive is expected among the CEOs attending a U.S.–Saudi Arabia investment forum in Washington later this week, held during Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s first U.S. trip since 2018.  [25]

According to the report:

  • The event is slated for November 19 at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts.
  • Expected participants include top executives from Chevron, Cisco, General Dynamics, Pfizer, IBM, Alphabet’s Google, Salesforce, Halliburton, Adobe, Aramco, State Street and Parsons, alongside Qualcomm.  [26]
  • Agenda topics range from artificial intelligence and energy to aerospace, healthcare and finance, underscoring Saudi Arabia’s push to attract U.S. investment and expand its digital and industrial base.  [27]

While the forum is not a Qualcomm‑specific event, inclusion in such a high‑visibility CEO lineup reinforces the company’s role as a strategic player in 5G, AI and connected infrastructure discussions at the policy level.


Community and ecosystem: Indonesia Hackathon 2025 winners named

On the ecosystem front, Ericsson announced the winners of Indonesia Hackathon 2025, an event co‑hosted with Qualcomm and Indonesia’s Ministry of Industry and Ministry of Communication and Digital Affairs.  [28]

The competition highlighted 5G and AI solutions across manufacturing, healthcare and agriculture, with the top teams recognized for building real‑world prototypes in line with Indonesia’s Digital Vision 2045. Qualcomm’s regional government‑affairs leadership emphasized that the program fits into its broader commitment to nurturing local digital talent and deploying advanced wireless and AI technologies in emerging markets.  [29]

Though not material to near‑term earnings, these programs help Qualcomm cultivate future developers and use cases for its platforms.


Institutional flows and insider activity: mixed signals

Beyond UK takeover disclosures, there was fresh data on how institutions and insiders are trading QCOM:

  • Nomura Asset Management cut its QCOM stake by about 31% in Q2, selling roughly 555,000 shares and ending the period with just over 1.21 million shares, valued around $193 million, or about 0.5% of its portfolio.  [30]
  • Citizens Financial Group Inc. RI increased its holdings by 13.5% to roughly 48,000 shares, adding nearly 5,800 shares over the quarter.  [31]
  • Avantax Advisory Services and Dorsey & Whitney Trust Co. reported smaller portfolio adjustments, with Avantax buying more QCOM and Dorsey trimming its position by just over 3% to around 124,000 shares[32]

Meanwhile, QuiverQuant data shows 37 open‑market insider transactions in the past six months – all sales, largely from CEO Cristiano Amon and CFO/COO Akash Palkhiwala exercising options and selling shares.  [33]

Insider selling doesn’t automatically signal trouble—especially when tied to compensation plans—but combined with institutional rotation and the current stock pullback, it’s a dynamic many investors will watch.


Earnings backdrop: solid fundamentals, distorted GAAP numbers

All this news lands less than two weeks after Qualcomm reported Q4 and full‑year fiscal 2025 results:

  • Q4 FY25 revenue: $11.27 billion, up 10% year‑over‑year, with QCT (chips) revenue rising 13% to about $9.82 billion[34]
  • Q4 non‑GAAP EPS: $3.00, up 12% YoY and above analyst expectations.  [35]
  • Full‑year FY25 revenue: $44.3 billion on a GAAP basis, up 14%, with non‑GAAP EPS climbing 18% to $12.03[36]

However, GAAP numbers were overshadowed by a $5.7 billion non‑cash tax charge linked to new U.S. legislation informally dubbed the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act.” That charge pushed Q4 GAAP net income to a $3.1 billion loss, versus a profit a year earlier, even though cash taxes should be lower going forward.  [37]

From a fundamentals standpoint, QCT’s non‑Apple revenues grew 18% for the year, and combined Automotive and IoT revenues climbed 27%, reflecting Qualcomm’s push into cars, factories and connected devices beyond smartphones.  [38]


How today’s news fits the longer‑term Qualcomm story

Putting it together, November 17, 2025 was a busy but mixed day for Qualcomm:

  • Negative near‑term drivers
    • fresh patent lawsuit adds legal overhang to Snapdragon and X Series product lines.  [39]
    • QCOM stock extended its recent slide as part of a broader tech risk‑off move.  [40]
    • Persistent insider selling may worry some investors, even if largely driven by stock‑based compensation.  [41]
  • Supportive or neutral factors
    • Alphawave‑related disclosures reaffirm the scale of large institutional holders and progress under the UK Takeover Code, without signaling any change to deal terms.  [42]
    • Qualcomm’s Dragonwing IQ‑X and Q‑6690 platforms continue to receive positive technical coverage, reinforcing its ambitions in industrial PCs, edge AI and RFID‑enabled mobility[43]
    • The Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 rollout, plus participation in the upcoming U.S.–Saudi investment forum, keep Qualcomm at the center of strategic conversations about AI and 5G.  [44]

For long‑term investors, the day’s headlines mainly add nuance rather than changing the core thesis: Qualcomm remains a highly profitable IP‑rich chip company transitioning from a smartphone‑centric model toward a diversified mix spanning AI phones, PCs, cars, factories and data centers.

Short‑term, however, litigation risk, macro volatility and deal‑related disclosures may continue to drive choppy tradingin QCOM stock.


Important note: This article is for information and news purposes only. It is not investment advice or a recommendation to buy, sell, or hold any security. Always do your own research or consult a licensed financial adviser before making investment decisions.

Qualcomm Acquires AI-Powered Patents in $2.4 Billion Deal

References

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