New York, March 2, 2026, 10:27 EST — Regular session
- Broadcom slipped roughly 2% in early trading, moving between $307.20 and $317.10 since the open.
- Company introduced its new VMware telco cloud platform at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona.
- Broadcom’s quarterly numbers land after the bell March 4, and investors are lining up their bets ahead of the release.
Broadcom dropped 2% to $313.18 during Monday morning’s session, with traders eyeing the chip and software company’s upcoming earnings and processing new product headlines from Europe. https://www.investing.com/equities/avago-t…
This setup is key: Broadcom stands out as one of the last heavyweight semiconductor names left to report this cycle, and nerves are already frayed over the pace at which AI investments might actually show up on the bottom line. Traders also have eyes on the U.S. jobs report due later this week, scanning it for any hints about when the Federal Reserve could move on rates. https://www.reuters.com/world/asia-pacific…
Broadcom on Monday rolled out “VMware Telco Cloud Platform 9” at Mobile World Congress, targeting telecoms after a slice of the private cloud market. The pitch: operators needing “sovereign” services—think data and operations confined inside national borders for compliance—plus support for AI. The company’s numbers: a projected 40% cut in five-year total cost of ownership compared to isolated systems, and power bills trimmed by 25% to 30%. https://finviz.com/news/326523/broadcom-an…
Hardware costs are running away, warned Paul Turner, Broadcom’s VMware Cloud Foundation CPO, in the release. He pointed to AI-fueled appetite for memory as a driver for pricier servers. Telecom cloud infrastructure is “paramount,” BT’s chief networks officer Greg McCall said. Nokia’s Kal De pitched the integration as a route for operators to unlock value from core networks and shrink their exposure to risk. Broadcom reports earnings after Wednesday’s close, March 4. https://www.stocktitan.net/news/AVGO/broad…
Equity traders are watching earnings closely. The focus is Broadcom—can the company prove demand for its AI data center chips is holding up, and at the same time, keep margins solid as custom silicon sales to major clients pick up?
Scrutiny’s sharpest on the software segment, especially after the VMware deal. Investors want details about product packaging, the pace of renewals, and how fast clients are moving to the unified stack.
Anything less than a solid report or upbeat outlook could hit chip stocks hard, given how fast investors have dumped them after earnings. Broadcom, for its part, has warned that moving toward more custom AI chips, which come with thinner margins, could weigh on profits. https://www.reuters.com/business/ai-bellwe…
Macro factors might weigh in here too. The Bureau of Labor Statistics will drop its February jobs numbers on March 6 at 8:30 a.m. ET—a release known for swinging yields and shaking up tech valuations fast. https://www.bls.gov/schedule/news_release/…