Shares of Qualcomm declined 3.1% to $133.81 during premarket hours on Tuesday following Bank of America’s resumption of coverage with an Underperform designation. The chipmaker’s stock has now fallen 19% since the beginning of the year.
QUALCOMM Incorporated, QCOM
Bank of America assigned a $145 price objective to the stock — representing approximately 5% potential upside from Monday’s closing price. Analyst Vivek Arya pointed to sluggish expansion prospects and intensifying competition throughout Qualcomm’s primary business segments.
The most significant concern centers on Apple. By fall 2027, Qualcomm’s cellular modems are anticipated to be completely removed from iPhones as Apple transitions to internally developed chips. Bank of America calculates the revenue impact at approximately $7–8 billion.
Apple, Samsung, and Xiaomi collectively accounted for roughly 54% of Qualcomm’s fiscal 2025 revenue. This heavy customer concentration creates substantial vulnerability for the semiconductor company.
Samsung is pursuing a parallel strategy. According to Bank of America, Qualcomm’s presence in Samsung’s fall 2026 Galaxy product line will decline from complete coverage to approximately 75%. This represents another significant revenue stream under threat.
Meanwhile, Xiaomi has allocated $7 billion toward in-house chip development — sending a strong message that the Chinese manufacturer also intends to decrease dependence on external semiconductor suppliers.
Qualcomm has been aggressively expanding into automotive and Internet of Things segments to counterbalance declining smartphone revenue. Bank of America forecasts automotive and IoT chipset sales will expand at approximately 19% annually, potentially reaching $17.7 billion by fiscal 2028.
The company is also targeting AI infrastructure opportunities. However, even with a 10–20% capture of the ARM-based server processor market, Bank of America calculates this would generate merely $1–2 billion in revenue and contribute $0.20–$0.40 to earnings per share. This contribution barely dents the $7–8 billion revenue gap.
Escalating memory component costs are creating headwinds across the smartphone ecosystem. This dynamic could suppress sales of budget-oriented devices, although Qualcomm’s focus on premium markets provides some insulation.
Bank of America anticipates Qualcomm’s revenue will expand at merely 2% per year through fiscal 2028. By comparison, the overall semiconductor industry is projected to achieve approximately 17% growth during the identical timeframe.
The investment bank noted that expansion into faster-growing markets is “largely offset by the potential loss of ~$7bn in Apple modem revenue and competitive share losses at Samsung.”
Qualcomm reported disappointing financial results in early February, issuing below-consensus guidance for the upcoming quarter. This announcement sparked a significant stock decline that has persisted throughout March.
The shares currently trade at $133.81 in premarket activity, notably beneath Bank of America’s $145 price objective — which the bank nonetheless considers a sell recommendation.
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