New York, June 10, 2026, 12:03 EDT
- Broadcom slipped around 4% Wednesday. The move came after Broadcom announced a new AI infrastructure platform with Apollo and Blackstone.
- The deal aims for over 20 gigawatts of AI compute power by 2028. Still, investors are watching last week’s AI revenue guidance.
- The stock is still sensitive to valuation, customer concentration, and new AI financing models’ margin impact.
Broadcom Inc. shares dropped Wednesday, down 4.0% at $376.42 as of 11:59 a.m. EDT, after news of its $35 billion AI infrastructure plan with Apollo and Blackstone did little to hold the stock up. Investors shifted focus back to the doubts over whether Broadcom’s custom AI chip sales can still outpace Wall Street’s high hopes. On Tuesday, shares had an implied close of $392.16.
Tech and AI names dropped on Wednesday as part of a wider market slide, Reuters said. Nvidia, Micron, and Broadcom lost between 2.6% and 4.2%. The S&P 500 tech index slid 1.6%. Traders were watching high valuations in tech, unrest in the Middle East, and new inflation readings that kept rate talk in play.
No shortage of AI news since Tuesday. Broadcom is launching the AI XPV Platform, bringing in Apollo and Blackstone’s Credit & Insurance Business as first anchor investors. The company says the platform targets over 20 gigawatts of compute capacity through 2028, making use of Broadcom’s XPUs—its own AI compute processors—and networking gear for frontier AI names like Anthropic and OpenAI.
The first chunk is big. Apollo is leading $35 billion, with Blackstone, backing Anthropic’s earlier plan to build out more than 1 gigawatt of compute capacity at Fluidstack-run sites from mid-2026. A gigawatt is a measure of how much power a site can use. In AI data centers, that size has become the shorthand for scale. Reuters said a gigawatt can power about 750,000 homes.
Broadcom’s deal opens a new path into AI, not just selling chips. Reuters reported the partnership supports Broadcom’s push to expand AI, while tech firms look for ways to ease dependence on Nvidia’s GPUs, which still dominate in AI.
Broadcom CEO Hock Tan said the new platform is a “historic inflection point,” pitching it as a way to link long-term capital with Broadcom’s AI roadmap. Investors didn’t bite on the optimism. The stock traded lower as traders waited for more details—specifically, that the financing platform will drive revenue, cash flow and margins big enough to support Broadcom’s share price. Broadcom Inc.
Skepticism started after last week’s earnings. Broadcom posted second-quarter revenue at $22.187 billion, up 48% from a year ago. AI semiconductor revenue hit $10.8 billion, up 143%. CEO Hock Tan said in the earnings release the AI jump came from strong demand for custom AI accelerators and AI networking.
Reuters said the quarter came in short of Wall Street’s $22.27 billion revenue target. Broadcom posted a $16 billion outlook for current-quarter AI chip revenue, just under the $16.36 billion analysts wanted, according to Visible Alpha. The company left its $100 billion AI chip sales target untouched, which could worry investors looking for more upgrades from a stock trading on those hopes.
That’s why news of AI financing didn’t give Broadcom’s stock an automatic lift. The company is still a big part of the shift to custom chips for both training and inference—where inference covers when an AI model answers a prompt. But the market is now breaking out “huge demand” from “better-than-expected demand.” Reuters flagged Marvell as another player gaining ground in custom chips. Nvidia is still the main competitor in AI processors. Reuters
Broadcom’s new 10-Q, filed June 9, put more on investors’ radar. The company disclosed that one semiconductor solutions distributor made up 42% of its net revenue in the quarter, while its top five end customers brought in about 45%. Broadcom said losing a major customer or seeing a big demand drop could hit its results hard.
Broadcom isn’t short on AI orders. The company said in the same filing that XPU-based AI racks and systems may increase operating margin but could push gross margin down or squeeze it. Also, Broadcom flagged risks tied to new ways of financing or letting customers pay later, opening the door to credit or default issues. Broadcom trades at a 62.63 price-to-earnings ratio, according to Google Finance. That means even modest misses can sting the stock.
Cash flow remains a factor. Broadcom reported $10.262 billion in free cash flow for the second quarter, after capital spending. Semiconductor solutions revenue climbed 79% to $15.009 billion. Infrastructure software revenue was up 9% to $7.178 billion.
The next thing to watch is if the $35 billion Anthropic tranche turns into real shipments and revenue, and if that happens without hitting gross margin. Investors have also set a bar for Broadcom’s AI chip revenue this quarter at $16 billion, making it the key number for momentum or disappointment.