Today: 8 June 2026
Best Stock To Buy Today? Qualcomm’s OpenAI Chip Report Puts QCOM Back In The Market’s AI Trade
27 April 2026
2 mins read

Best Stock To Buy Today? Qualcomm’s OpenAI Chip Report Puts QCOM Back In The Market’s AI Trade

NEW YORK, April 27, 2026, 06:31 EDT

  • Qualcomm shares jumped in premarket after analyst Ming-Chi Kuo reported that OpenAI is teaming up with Qualcomm and MediaTek on processors for smartphones.
  • Qualcomm is set to report its fiscal second-quarter results after the bell on April 29, with the move landing just ahead of that release.
  • The risk here: OpenAI’s device report is still early—companies haven’t confirmed anything, and that analyst report points out mass production wouldn’t even kick off until 2028.

Qualcomm shares surged more than 10% in premarket action, making it the standout U.S. stock to watch—and, for traders scanning headlines, potentially the top buy of the day—after a report linked the chip giant to OpenAI’s ambitions in smartphone hardware. According to Reuters, Qualcomm was up 10.6% ahead of the bell, easily outstripping the subdued moves in futures.

Timing is crucial. Index futures opened the week flat, oil ticked up, and traders zeroed in on upcoming Big Tech results alongside the Fed’s call. In a market like this, one company with an AI driver can grab outsized attention.

OpenAI is teaming up with Qualcomm and MediaTek on smartphone chips, according to TF International Securities analyst Ming-Chi Kuo, who cited industry sources. Luxshare, he said, will take on co-design and manufacturing duties. Mass production isn’t expected until 2028, per , so for now, this looks more like a long-term wager on Qualcomm’s role in the AI hardware race than a short-term needle-mover.

According to Kuo, as cited in market reports, AI phones could shake up how quickly consumers upgrade their devices. For Qualcomm, that’s the straightforward bet right now: this isn’t simply another chip deal for phones, but potentially a crack at a fresh device segment, pulling more processing onto the handset itself.

There’s another reason Qualcomm is drawing attention right now. The company is set to release its fiscal second-quarter earnings after the bell on Wednesday, April 29. Its conference call kicks off at 1:45 p.m. Pacific, according to Qualcomm. For investors, that’s a chance to weigh the OpenAI headlines against actual figures—think handsets, automotive chips, margins.

The mixed peer read is part of the story behind today’s action. MediaTek showed up in the OpenAI processor report along with Qualcomm. Apple still looms as a bigger, longer-term concern for Qualcomm, since it’s both a major customer and a competitor in custom silicon, and Samsung’s own chip push adds to the pressure, according to Reuters earlier this year.

Intel added another 2.7% ahead of the open, building on its 23.6% surge from the prior session, according to Reuters. The chipmaker’s rally follows an earnings bounce of its own. Qualcomm, meanwhile, trades on a different narrative this Monday—potential OpenAI hardware ties, right before its results hit.

It hasn’t been smooth sailing. Back in February, Qualcomm flagged a global memory-chip crunch squeezing smartphone demand. “I just wish we had more memory,” CEO Cristiano Amon told Reuters. The chipmaker projected second-quarter revenue in the $10.2 billion to $11 billion range, missing what Wall Street had penciled in. Reuters

Qualcomm’s efforts to move beyond phones haven’t slowed. In March, the company rolled out a $20 billion stock buyback and bumped its quarterly dividend up to 92 cents per share. CEO Amon said the goal is still to drive stockholder returns while also pursuing “diversification opportunities.” Reuters

QCOM stands out as the stock with the freshest bull case on the board today—though not necessarily the safest. There’s a live catalyst here: a key earnings report is on the horizon, shareholder payouts are steady, and QCOM has direct skin in the AI-device game just as appetite for AI picks up again. William Blair macro analyst Richard de Chazal told Reuters equity players “are back on the AI technology trade,” while commodity markets are reacting differently to the Iran risk. Reuters

Here’s the catch: Qualcomm and OpenAI haven’t said a word about working together on smartphone chips, and any mass production isn’t coming until 2028—hardly around the corner. Should earnings on Wednesday reveal more trouble for handsets, tighter margins, or sluggish movement beyond mobile chips, that OpenAI-driven bump from Monday could disappear quickly.

Stock Market Today

  • Southern Cross Gold Joins S&P/TSX Composite Index, Boosting Market Profile
    June 8, 2026, 6:52 AM EDT. Southern Cross Gold Consolidated Ltd (TSX: SXGC) will be added to the S&P/TSX Composite Index on June 22, 2026. This inclusion reflects the company's market scale, trading liquidity, and rising profile among investors. The index is the main benchmark for Canadian equities, influencing many institutional funds and index strategies. Southern Cross Gold's key asset is the Sunday Creek gold-antimony project in Australia, notable for high-grade drill results and strategic importance due to antimony's role in defence and technology amid export restrictions from China. CEO Michael Hudson highlighted that joining the index enhances access to institutional capital and supports ongoing development efforts at Sunday Creek.

Latest articles

American Airlines Stock Faces Fuel Question as United Merger Buzz Fades

American Airlines Stock Faces Fuel Question as United Merger Buzz Fades

8 June 2026
American Airlines shares closed at $13.50 Friday, up 1.5% on the day but down 5.9% from the prior Monday, as surging fuel costs and a rejected United merger overture keep the stock under industry stress; Brent crude jumped 4.47% to $97.15 a barrel, and American warned fuel expense could rise by over $4 billion this year, with second-quarter earnings guidance ranging from a 20-cent loss to a 20-cent profit.
Delta Back in Hong Kong, but United in Focus

Delta Back in Hong Kong, but United in Focus

8 June 2026
Delta Air Lines relaunched daily Los Angeles-Hong Kong flights, directly challenging United and Cathay Pacific amid high fuel costs and heavy competition; the move tests whether Delta’s premium cabins, cargo capacity, and LAX connections can drive growth as IATA slashes 2026 profit forecasts due to elevated fuel prices and regional disruptions.
FTSE 100 Dips While £2.7bn Takeover Drives London Headlines

FTSE 100 Dips While £2.7bn Takeover Drives London Headlines

8 June 2026
Tate & Lyle soared nearly 13% after Ingredion agreed to buy the British ingredients group for 595p per share in cash, valuing its equity at about £2.7 billion; meanwhile, the FTSE 100 slipped 0.28% as oil’s surge on renewed Middle East tensions lifted BP and Shell but pressured airlines and tech stocks, with higher bond yields adding further drag.
Air Liquide Shares Appear Down 10% as Bonus-Share Reset Takes Effect

Air Liquide Shares Appear Down 10% as Bonus-Share Reset Takes Effect

8 June 2026
Air Liquide shares fell 0.90% to €165.22 in Paris after a 1-for-10 bonus-share adjustment, with Eurex using a €183.40 closing price and a 0.90909091 adjustment factor; the move was technical, not a change in fundamentals, as investors await a June 9 shareholder meeting and July 28 first-half results.
Rheinmetall Stock Rises After €1 Billion Bundeswehr Deal, But Investors Still Want Delivery
Previous Story

Rheinmetall Stock Rises After €1 Billion Bundeswehr Deal, But Investors Still Want Delivery

US Stock Futures Today: Oil Spike Tests Wall Street Rally Before Fed and Big Tech Earnings
Next Story

US Stock Futures Today: Oil Spike Tests Wall Street Rally Before Fed and Big Tech Earnings

Go toTop