New York, Jan 13, 2026, 10:33 EST — Regular session
- Broadcom shares climbed roughly 0.6% in early trading, standing out amid a volatile session for megacaps
- Inflation figures stayed front and center, shaping rate expectations ahead of the Fed’s Jan. 27-28 meeting
- Attention shifts to Broadcom’s quarterly report due in early March and the margin outlook linked to AI chip demand
Broadcom (AVGO.O) shares edged up roughly 0.6% to $354.15 in early Tuesday trading, bouncing between $349.87 and $355.35.
This shift unfolds as chip and software leaders behave like rate-sensitive stocks once more: even small bond yield changes can quickly ripple through the sector, particularly after U.S. indexes kicked off the year with gains. (Reuters)
U.S. consumer prices climbed 0.3% in December, with core prices—excluding food and energy—up 0.2%, according to Labor Department data. (Bureau of Labor Statistics)
Investors are eyeing the Federal Reserve’s policy meeting scheduled for Jan. 27-28—the first rate decision of 2026. (Federal Reserve)
In broader markets, the S&P 500 held steady in early trading as investors digested the inflation report and the initial batch of quarterly earnings. “The Fed is likely to take its time and absorb more data,” said Skyler Weinand, chief investment officer at Regan Capital. (Reuters)
Broadcom came into Tuesday up 2.1% from Monday, having closed at $352.21. It outpaced several big chip rivals during a subdued, index-driven session. (MarketWatch)
Broadcom investors now face a key question: is this recent bounce merely a rates-and-beta play, or could it mark the beginning of a more sustained recovery in AI infrastructure stocks following December’s steep drop?
The last major driver for the company came with its December earnings, when Broadcom signaled that a higher proportion of custom AI processors might weigh on profit margins. “We expect first-quarter consolidated gross margin to be down approximately 100 basis points sequentially, primarily reflecting a higher mix of AI revenue,” CFO Kirsten Spears said during the call. (Reuters)
Broadcom projects roughly $19.1 billion in revenue for the first quarter, with adjusted EBITDA expected to hit 67% of that figure for the period ending Feb. 1. This puts pressure on the company to deliver across both its chip and infrastructure software segments. (Broadcom Investors)
But the setup swings both ways. Should inflation stick around and yields climb, long-duration tech could see rapid repricing; the Fed’s policy path remains a major driver behind valuations. (The Wall Street Journal)
Next up is the Fed decision on Jan. 28, with the following CPI report due Feb. 11. Broadcom plans to release its first-quarter fiscal 2026 results after the close on March 4, per the company’s earnings-call transcript. (Bureau of Labor Statistics)