Broadcom's Stock Drops 10% as Its Non-AI Business Struggles: An Earnings Report Deep Dive

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Shares of Broadcom (NASDAQ: AVGO) dropped 10.4% on Friday, following the semiconductor and infrastructure software maker's release on the prior afternoon of its report for the third quarter of fiscal 2024 (ended Aug. 4).

The decline was likely largely driven by guidance for fourth-quarter revenue being a bit lower than Wall Street had expected. In the current environment for artificial intelligence (AI) stocks that have run up considerably, simply meeting or slightly beating Wall Street's estimates is often not enough to protect against a post-earnings release decline. These companies must often post results and issue guidance notably higher than Wall Street projections to satisfy investors.

Some investors might have also been dissatisfied with Broadcom's Q3 results. Both the top and bottom lines beat the analyst consensus estimates -- but only by a little.

In addition, broader market dynamics likely played a smaller role in Broadcom stock's decline. Major indexes got clobbered on Friday due to a weaker-than-expected jobs report for August.

Broadcom's key numbers

Metric

Fiscal Q3 2023

Fiscal Q3 2024

Change YOY

Revenue

$8.88 billion

$13.07 billion

47%

GAAP operating income

$3.86 billion

$3.79 billion

(2%)

Adjusted operating income

$5.54 billion

$7.95 billion

44%

GAAP net income

$3.30 billion

($1.88 billion)

Flipped to negative from positive

Adjusted net income

$4.60 billion

$6.12 billion

33%

GAAP earnings per share (EPS)

$0.77

($0.40)

Flipped to negative from positive

Adjusted EPS

$1.05

$1.24

18%

Data source: Broadcom. YOY = year over year. GAAP = generally accepted accounting principles. Fiscal Q3 2024 ended Aug. 4.

Broadcom's revenue growth was driven nearly entirely by its acquisition of VMware in November 2023. Excluding the contribution from this acquisition, revenue grew just 4% year over year.

In general, investors should focus mainly on the adjusted numbers for operating and net income, which exclude one-time items. That said, GAAP numbers should also get attention.

The GAAP net loss "included a one-time discrete non-cash tax provision of $4.5 billion from the impact of an intra-group transfer of certain IP [intellectual property] rights to the United States as a result of supply chain realignment," the company said.

Wall Street was looking for adjusted EPS of $1.22 on revenue of $12.98 billion, so Broadcom slightly surpassed both expectations.

In the quarter, Broadcom generated cash of $4.96 billion running its operations, up 5% from the year-ago period. It generated free cash flow (FCF) of $4.79 billion, or 37% of revenue, up 4% year over year. FCF excluding restructuring and the integration of VMware was $5.3 billion, up 14% year over year.