The message Qualcomm has sent to Wall Street is quite clear as it announced a $20 billion stock buyback on March 17 which points towards a sharp slump in its share price this year. The authorization is over an already established $2.1 billion repurchase capacity, and immediately re-prices sentiment in a stock that has been falling over 24% this year-to-date on March 17 after hitting its peak close to $184 in early January.
The news gave shares a lift of over 3%, with investors receiving a welcome demonstration of confidence in the middle of a memory chip crunch that is bruising smartphone demand.
Greater emphasis on stockholder payouts
Meanwhile, with the buyback, Qualcomm increased its third-quarter dividend by more than 3% to 92 cents a share compared to 89 cents, which further increases its reputation as being among the shareholder-friendly names in the large-cap semis.
CEO Cristiano Amon said:
“We remain focused on stockholder returns and executing on our ongoing diversification opportunities,”
Qualcomm’s (QCOM) stock has had a difficult start to the year, falling more than 18% year-to-date (YTD) and almost 32% below its 52-week high. Even with the notable decline, QCOM’s profits may be impacted by unfavorable memory supply industry dynamics.
It is not impossible that the stock will return to its two-year low of $120.80 given the already negative sentiment..
Beyond smartphones
There is nothing lacking in the desired settings, as the entire world loses memory supply, and slows down manufacturing of the handsets, and literally hits Qualcomm’s core Android and Apple ecosystem clients.
But the company has been progressively moving its revenue bases, with automotive and IoT divisions producing record strengths in recent quarters.
The Underperform rating for BofA is an anomaly. With an average price target of $168.48, the broader analyst consensus is at Hold, suggesting significant upside from current levels.
13 of the 37 analysts that were monitored gave the stock a buy rating, while only one gave it a sell rating. BofA is now that one sale. For a more comprehensive view of the current state of the industry, see Wall Street’s recent analysis of Qualcomm and its semiconductor competitors.
What the buyback is actually indicating?
In the short run, the expanded buyback programme must help in buffering negative volatility and any earnings of share even in case smartphone volumes continue to be stressed.
In addition, it implies that to the management, advancement in automotive, IoT, edge AI and data center adjacencies will prosper faster than the existing macro pull and re-estimate the stock as these ventures expand.
March 2026 buy back may become a pivot point with investors beginning to undervalue the company as a handset proxy and more as a structurally growing semiconductor platform.
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