Today: 3 June 2026
Qualcomm (QCOM) Stock News Today: Alphawave Semi Deal Closes Early, Dividend Paid, and 2026 Forecasts in Focus (Dec. 18, 2025)

Qualcomm (QCOM) Stock News Today: Alphawave Semi Deal Closes Early, Dividend Paid, and 2026 Forecasts in Focus (Dec. 18, 2025)

Qualcomm Incorporated (NASDAQ: QCOM) is back in the spotlight on Thursday, December 18, 2025, as investors digest two developments that matter to shareholders right now: the early close of Qualcomm’s Alphawave Semi acquisition and a cash dividend landing today—all while Wall Street keeps one eye on Qualcomm’s next earnings checkpoint and its expanding AI narrative.

The day’s headlines are not just about a completed transaction—they’re about what Qualcomm is trying to become in 2026: a company that still dominates premium Android silicon, but also pushes deeper into AI infrastructure, custom CPUs, and data center connectivity, where the prize is measured in long-term platforms, not just handset unit cycles.

Qualcomm stock on Dec. 18: what the market is reacting to

Early reports tied Qualcomm’s morning strength to the Alphawave Semi close, with several market updates noting QCOM shares were higher in premarket trading after the announcement.

By the end of the regular session, historical pricing data shows QCOM traded in the mid-$170s on Dec. 18, with the day’s range spanning roughly the low-to-high $170s (high near $177, low near $173.5), before closing near $175.

That matters because it follows a softer prior session: QCOM closed $172.34 on Wednesday, Dec. 17, in a down market, and sat well below its $205.95 52-week high from late October.

The big headline: Qualcomm completes its Alphawave Semi acquisition—early

Qualcomm confirmed today that it has completed the acquisition of Alphawave IP Group plc (Alphawave Semi)—and that the deal closed about one quarter ahead of schedule. Qualcomm also disclosed a leadership detail that signals how central this is to the company’s strategy: Tony Pialis, Alphawave Semi’s CEO and co-founder, will lead Qualcomm’s data center business.

Qualcomm framed Alphawave Semi’s fit in very specific product terms—positioning Alphawave’s wired connectivity know-how as a complement to Qualcomm’s computing engines, including its Qualcomm Oryon CPU and Hexagon NPU.

What did Qualcomm buy, exactly?

In its announcement, Qualcomm described Alphawave Semi as a provider of high-speed wired connectivity, including custom silicon, connectivity products, and chiplets aimed at high-growth infrastructure use cases—data centers, AI, networking, and storage.

In other words: this isn’t a “mobile add-on.” It’s an attempt to strengthen the plumbing around compute—where modern AI data centers often live or die on bandwidth, latency, power efficiency, and how quickly platforms can be tailored for hyperscalers.

Deal terms and timeline: the UK scheme mechanics, cash price, and delisting

Additional reporting around the completion clarified the deal structure and shareholder consideration:

  • Alphawave shareholders are entitled to $2.48 per share in cash (unless they chose alternative consideration by a deadline).
  • The transaction was implemented through Qualcomm’s indirect wholly owned subsidiary Aqua Acquisition Sub LLC (Bidco), which now owns Alphawave’s issued share capital.
  • The scheme received court sanction on Dec. 16, after earlier shareholder approval (reported as meetings held on Aug. 5).
  • Alphawave shares were suspended and the process of delisting from the London Stock Exchange was underway, with payment/settlement to follow on the timetable described in the scheme documentation.

Qualcomm first announced the Alphawave agreement in June, with Reuters describing it as a move to expand into the “booming AI data center market.” Reuters

Why this matters for QCOM stock: a bet on AI compute plus connectivity

Investors have heard Qualcomm talk more aggressively about data centers over the past year—but today’s close gives that theme a tangible asset and a named executive leader.

Qualcomm’s own language around the acquisition has been consistent: the company says Alphawave Semi is meant to accelerate and provide key assets for Qualcomm’s expansion into data centers.

It also positions the combination as a way to create a stronger player in AI compute and connectivity solutions, with data center specifically called out as a high-growth target.

The strategic logic is straightforward:

  • Compute (CPU/NPU) is only half the story in modern AI infrastructure.
  • The other half is moving data efficiently—between accelerators, memory, storage, and networking fabrics.
  • Qualcomm is signaling that it wants an end-to-end platform story: energy-efficient compute plus the wired connectivity pieces that support next-gen AI data center designs.

That’s the narrative bulls will lean on. The bears will focus on execution risk: integrating teams, proving product-market fit in hyperscale environments, and avoiding the trap of “promising data center” without meaningful revenue traction.

Dividend paid today: Qualcomm shareholders get $0.89 per share

In addition to M&A headlines, Dec. 18 is also a shareholder cash-flow day. Qualcomm previously declared a quarterly cash dividend of $0.89 per common share, payable today (Dec. 18, 2025) to shareholders of record as of Dec. 4, 2025.

Some market summaries peg the annualized payout at $3.56 and put the dividend yield around the low-single-digits range based on recent prices (yields will naturally move with the stock).

For long-term holders, Qualcomm’s dividend remains a key part of the thesis—especially during periods when the stock is digesting handset cycles or investing heavily in new categories (AI PCs, automotive, data center).

Wall Street forecasts and analyst outlook: what’s being watched into 2026

Next big catalyst: Q1 FY26 earnings on Feb. 4, 2026

Qualcomm’s investor events calendar lists the Q1 FY26 Earnings Conference Call for February 4, 2026 (1:45 PM PT).

That date matters because it’s the next formal checkpoint for investors to assess whether Qualcomm’s growth story—across premium Android, automotive, IoT, and now data center ambitions—continues to translate into guidance and results.

Guidance backdrop: Qualcomm’s outlook vs. expectations

Following Qualcomm’s fiscal Q4 2025 report, Reuters reported that Qualcomm forecast first-quarter results above estimates, citing AI-driven demand in premium smartphones and providing an outlook that included revenue around $11.8B–$12.6B and non-GAAP EPS around $3.30–$3.50 for the period.

Those figures set the frame for February: investors will be watching not only whether Qualcomm hits the numbers, but also what management says about 2026 demand signals—especially as competition intensifies and large customers continue to evolve their in-house silicon strategies.

Price targets and recent analyst commentary

Some coverage published today references prior analyst actions that remain part of the current narrative—particularly as Qualcomm pivots further into AI and non-handset growth:

  • Piper Sandler has been cited as raising its Qualcomm price target to $200 following a strong quarter.
  • BofA Securities has been cited as lifting its target to $215, pointing to strength in handsets (including China) and non-handset segments.

Investors should treat any single price target as one data point—not a forecast certainty—but it does help explain why the market often reacts sharply to execution signals in Qualcomm’s earnings and strategic updates.

The “what to watch next” checklist for QCOM investors

Here are the practical signposts that are likely to drive Qualcomm stock conversation from now through the February earnings call and beyond:

  1. Integration milestones for Alphawave Semi
    The market will look for early proof that connectivity assets are being productized inside Qualcomm’s platform roadmap—and that the data center unit under Tony Pialis has clear direction.
  2. Evidence of data center traction
    Qualcomm has clearly signaled its intent. The stock will ultimately respond to customer design wins, partnerships, and revenue visibility—not just ambition.
  3. February 4, 2026 earnings and forward guidance
    This is the next “reset” moment for expectations, particularly around margins, handset demand, and how quickly non-handset categories are scaling. Qualcomm Investor Relations+1
  4. Dividend continuity
    Today’s payout reinforces Qualcomm’s shareholder-return profile at a time when the company is also investing to expand its TAM (total addressable market).

Risks to keep in mind

Even on a positive news day, Qualcomm stock carries the same core risks investors have been debating:

  • Execution risk in new markets: Data centers are a different battlefield from smartphones—longer cycles, fewer customers, higher switching costs, intense incumbency.
  • Cyclicality and sentiment: Semiconductor stocks can swing sharply with macro data, enterprise capex expectations, and broad tech risk appetite.
  • Customer concentration and platform shifts: Qualcomm has navigated these dynamics for years, but major customer transitions (and competitive pressure) remain a recurring theme in analyst discussions.

Bottom line: Dec. 18 is a strategic “proof point” day for Qualcomm stock

On December 18, 2025, Qualcomm gave the market a concrete update that supports its longer-term positioning: the Alphawave Semi acquisition is done—and done earlier than expected—with leadership aligned around building out a data center business.

At the same time, Qualcomm is delivering direct shareholder value with a $0.89 quarterly dividend paid today, reinforcing the stock’s income component even as the company invests in new growth areas.

Stock Market Today

  • Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang Predicts Marvell Technology as Next Trillion-Dollar AI Chip Stock
    June 3, 2026, 3:41 PM EDT. At the Computex trade show, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang forecasted that Marvell Technology could reach a $1 trillion market cap, sparking a 32.5% rise in its shares. Currently valued around $268 billion, Marvell is recognized for its networking infrastructure critical to AI data transmission between GPUs and data centers. Huang highlighted Marvell's role beyond its AI-focused ASIC chips, emphasizing its Ethernet switch ASICs and digital signal processors vital for scaling AI systems. Nvidia's $2 billion investment and partnership with Marvell underline the company's importance in the AI hardware supply chain. Marvell's stock has surged 243% this year, reflecting growing investor optimism amid rising demand for AI infrastructure components.

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