Qualcomm Incorporated (NASDAQ: QCOM) is in focus on Tuesday, December 16, 2025 as investors digest a pair of strategic deal developments tied to the company’s expanding ambitions beyond smartphones—alongside updated forecasts and valuation debates. As of the latest available trade, QCOM shares were around $175.68, down about 2% on the session.
Below is what’s driving the Qualcomm stock narrative today, plus the forecasts and analysis points that matter most for 2026 positioning.
Qualcomm stock price action: what the market is weighing
Qualcomm’s shares are trading lower on the day, despite a steady drumbeat of longer-term growth initiatives. The immediate reality for QCOM investors is that the stock sits at the intersection of two forces:
- Near-term sensitivity to device demand (especially smartphones) and broader semiconductor sentiment.
- Longer-term re-rating potential if Qualcomm’s diversification into PCs, automotive, industrial/edge AI, and data center infrastructure continues to show durable revenue and margin lift.
Today’s newsflow leans heavily toward that second category—strategic positioning and deal execution—rather than an “earnings surprise” catalyst.
Headline 1: Qualcomm’s Alphawave acquisition clears a major milestone in the UK
A key update for Qualcomm’s high-speed connectivity push: Alphawave IP Group plc announced that the UK court has sanctioned the scheme of arrangement for its recommended acquisition by Aqua Acquisition Sub LLC, an indirect wholly-owned Qualcomm subsidiary. [1]
What happened today (Dec. 16, 2025)
According to the Alphawave announcement, the court sanction means the transaction is now expected to move to completion on a defined timetable:
- The scheme is expected to become Effective on December 18, 2025 (once the court order is delivered to the registrar). [2]
- The last day for dealings in Alphawave shares is expected to be December 17, 2025. [3]
- Trading is expected to be suspended from 7:30 a.m. London time on December 18, with the listing cancelled from 8:00 a.m. on December 19. [4]
The parties also disclosed amendments to their co-operation agreement, with an updated version expected to be made available by no later than 12 noon on December 17. [5]
Why this matters for QCOM stock
Qualcomm’s Alphawave transaction has been widely framed as a move to strengthen Qualcomm’s data center and AI infrastructure footprint—particularly where high-speed wired connectivity is becoming a core bottleneck in next-generation computing.
For investors, the court sanction milestone reduces “process risk” and shifts attention to two things:
- Integration execution (how fast Qualcomm can operationalize Alphawave’s assets across product roadmaps).
- Strategic coherence (how connectivity IP complements Qualcomm’s CPU and AI efforts).
Deal terms reminder (context investors still track)
Earlier deal documentation described a cash offer that valued Alphawave at roughly US$2.4 billion, with consideration including US$2.48 in cash per share (often referenced as 183 pence per share depending on exchange rate mechanics). [6]
Even though those terms weren’t “new” today, they remain central to how investors assess whether Qualcomm is paying a fair price for strategic acceleration.
Headline 2: Qualcomm adds Ventana Micro Systems to deepen RISC‑V CPU expertise
The second major theme is Qualcomm’s CPU roadmap. Multiple industry reports circulating today highlight Qualcomm’s acquisition of Ventana Micro Systems, a specialist in RISC‑V CPU designs.
Coverage points to a consistent strategic message: Qualcomm intends to bolster CPU engineering capability by integrating Ventana’s RISC‑V instruction-set expertise, complementing Qualcomm’s existing custom Oryon CPU efforts. [7]
Why investors care: “CPU optionality” in the AI era
For years, Qualcomm’s identity in public markets has been tied to mobile modems and smartphone SoCs. But the AI era is expanding the “compute map”:
- PCs and edge devices are getting more on-device inference.
- Automotive platforms are becoming centralized compute hubs.
- Data centers are expanding not only AI accelerators, but also the “plumbing” (connectivity, CPU, orchestration, and power efficiency).
Ventana’s RISC‑V talent gives Qualcomm a potential second ISA lane alongside Arm-based designs—an “option value” play that could matter if ecosystem dynamics shift over the next several years. [8]
What’s known (and not known) about the deal
Reports indicate the financial terms were not disclosed, suggesting Qualcomm views this as a strategic engineering and roadmap acquisition rather than a near-term revenue event. [9]
From a stock perspective, that usually means:
- Minimal immediate impact to P&L guidance, but
- Potential long-term upside if the acquisition compresses development timelines or improves performance-per-watt positioning in future CPU products.
Today’s takeover-code filings: why Qualcomm’s share count and big holders are in the news
A less flashy—but notable—part of today’s QCOM story is the wave of disclosure documents tied to the Alphawave transaction under the UK Takeover Code.
Rule 2.9: Qualcomm confirms shares outstanding
Qualcomm stated that as of close of business on December 14, 2025, it had 1,062,916,212 shares of common stock outstanding, with no shares held in treasury—effectively confirming the total voting rights figure used in takeover-code reporting. [10]
Vanguard discloses a 10.83% position
A Takeover Code Form 8.3 filing shows The Vanguard Group reported ownership/control of 115,359,938 shares, equating to 10.83% of Qualcomm’s common stock (position date shown as December 15, 2025, disclosure dated December 16, 2025). [11]
Goldman Sachs disclosure tied to the offer structure
A Form 8.5 disclosure (exempt principal trader) references Aqua Acquisition Sub LLC in the context of the Alphawave offer process, reflecting the plumbing of how large intermediaries disclose positions and dealings around UK-governed transactions. [12]
Important nuance for investors: these filings are typically procedural in UK takeover situations and do not automatically signal a sudden directional bet on QCOM—though they do provide transparency into major holdings and market activity around the transaction.
Forecasts and analysis published today: earnings, revenue, and valuation debate
With the corporate catalysts in view, investors also have fresh “numbers narratives” circulating today.
Zacks/Finviz: where consensus expectations sit
A widely-shared Zacks summary syndicated via Finviz highlights current consensus expectations that many traders track:
- Current quarter EPS:$3.38 (about -0.9% vs. year-ago quarter)
- Current quarter revenue estimate:$12.25 billion (about +5% year-over-year)
- Current fiscal year EPS estimate:$12.15
- Next fiscal year EPS estimate:$12.60 [13]
Whether or not investors follow the Zacks framework, the message is clear: the market is pricing Qualcomm as a company with continued profitability and modest growth, with the key question being whether AI/data center/auto can steepen that growth curve.
Simply Wall St: “undervalued” narrative with a specific fair value
A Simply Wall St analysis dated today argues Qualcomm may be modestly undervalued, citing:
- A “narrative fair value” estimate of $191.80 versus a referenced close of $179.26 (about 6.5% gap). [14]
- The piece also points to Qualcomm’s automotive and industrial IoT growth narrative, including a stated multi-year pipeline framing that targets $22 billion in revenue by 2029 for those segments (as described in the article’s narrative). [15]
Investors should treat this as model-driven commentary, but it reflects a common market lens: Qualcomm’s upside case increasingly depends on whether new segments scale fast enough to change the company’s perceived “smartphone multiple.”
Street analyst targets: “Moderate Buy” vs. “Hold,” depending on the dataset
Two commonly referenced consensus aggregations paint a similar—but not identical—picture:
- MarketBeat shows a “Moderate Buy” consensus rating based on 21 analysts, with an average price target of $192.94 (and a stated range of $155 to $225). [16]
- ValueInvesting.io shows an average 12‑month forecast of $194.43, a median of $198.52, and a wider range ($158.57 to $236.25), while labeling the overall consensus as HOLD based on a larger analyst count. [17]
The key takeaway isn’t the exact dollar target—it’s that consensus broadly implies high-single-digit to low-double-digit upside, but with meaningful dispersion that reflects uncertainty around demand cycles and the pace of diversification.
The macro crosscurrent: 2026 smartphone shipments are forecast to fall
One of the biggest “risk rails” for Qualcomm is still the smartphone market. A Reuters report today citing Counterpoint forecasts that global smartphone shipments could fall 2.1% in 2026, pointing to rising chip costs (a 20–30% increase for some components) and weaker demand dynamics. [18]
Even if Qualcomm continues to diversify, smartphones remain an earnings engine—so any sustained volume decline can pressure:
- premium handset silicon demand,
- OEM inventory behavior,
- and near-term earnings visibility.
This is one reason why Qualcomm’s AI/data center and automotive story is so central: it’s not just about growth—it’s about reducing dependence on the most cyclical end market in its portfolio.
What to watch next for Qualcomm stock (QCOM)
Here are the concrete items that can move the Qualcomm narrative after today:
- Alphawave deal completion timeline (Dec. 18 expected effective date) and any follow-up integration commentary. [19]
- Signals on data center strategy execution—how Qualcomm links connectivity assets (Alphawave) and CPU strategy (Oryon + RISC‑V talent) into a coherent roadmap investors can underwrite. [20]
- Smartphone demand indicators heading into 2026, especially if shipment forecasts soften further or costs remain elevated. [21]
- Institutional positioning transparency from takeover-related disclosures (helpful context, even if mostly procedural). [22]
References
1. www.investegate.co.uk, 2. www.investegate.co.uk, 3. www.investegate.co.uk, 4. www.investegate.co.uk, 5. www.investegate.co.uk, 6. www.investegate.co.uk, 7. evertiq.com, 8. www.theregister.com, 9. www.datacenterdynamics.com, 10. www.sharesmagazine.co.uk, 11. www.webdisclosure.com, 12. www.tradingview.com, 13. finviz.com, 14. simplywall.st, 15. simplywall.st, 16. www.marketbeat.com, 17. valueinvesting.io, 18. www.reuters.com, 19. www.investegate.co.uk, 20. www.theregister.com, 21. www.reuters.com, 22. www.webdisclosure.com


