New York, Jan 18, 2026, 18:00 EST — Market closed
- Broadcom shares closed Friday 2.6% higher, at $351.71
- Analysts’ upgrades and raised price targets pushed the stock higher heading into the holiday break
- Trading kicks off Tuesday as investors focus on chip-sector momentum and looming debt redemptions
Broadcom shares jumped on Friday, bouncing back as the long U.S. holiday weekend began. After a series of sell-side notes claimed the recent dip was exaggerated, the stock finished at $351.71, gaining 2.6% for the day.
This is significant as U.S. markets remain closed Monday for Martin Luther King Jr. Day, extending the break in price discovery. When trading resumes Tuesday, investors will put this bounce to the test, seeing if it holds up or simply reflects moves made in a thin market. (New York Stock Exchange)
Broadcom has acted as a high-beta proxy for data-center spending, especially with demand surging for custom AI chips—application-specific integrated circuits (ASICs)—and networking equipment. The stock’s moves have also tracked closely with news on VMware, the enterprise software firm Broadcom acquired in 2023.
Chipmakers steadied Wall Street on Friday, closing out a volatile week that kicked off the latest earnings season. The semiconductor sector outperformed the broader market. (Reuters)
Wells Fargo’s Aaron Rakers raised Broadcom to “Overweight” and bumped his price target up to $430 from $410, as reported in a note shared by StreetInsider. (Streetinsider)
Jefferies analyst Blayne Curtis singled out Broadcom as a leading pick for 2026, backing the idea that the chip rally still has legs. “AVGO [Broadcom] remains our Top Pick but NVDA [Nvidia] looks cheap,” he noted, per Barron’s.
Broadcom revealed in an 8-K filing a $4.5 billion senior notes offering. The company plans to use the proceeds for general corporate needs and to pay down debt, including scheduled redemptions set for Jan. 22 and Feb. 6. (Securities and Exchange Commission)
Earlier this week, Broadcom faced a market setback following reports that Chinese officials instructed local companies to halt use of cybersecurity software from over a dozen U.S. and Israeli firms, including VMware, which Broadcom owns. The stock dropped more than 4% on Wednesday, according to Reuters. (Reuters)
The catch for bulls: Broadcom’s stock is still marked by last earnings cycle’s hit, when the company cautioned that faster growth in lower-margin custom AI processors might pressure profitability. That warning rattled investors, casting doubt on returns from hefty AI investments. (Reuters)
On Tuesday, traders will keep an eye on whether Broadcom moves in step with the wider chip sector and if any new China-related news emerges over the long weekend. With liquidity often thin after holidays, price swings could be amplified.
The near-term schedule is set: U.S. markets resume trading Tuesday. Then, Broadcom faces debt redemptions on Jan. 22 and Feb. 6, according to its recent filing. (Securities and Exchange Commission)