Broadcom posted $15.95 billion in revenue for its third fiscal quarter of 2025, a 22% year-over-year increase driven by accelerating demand for custom AI accelerators, networking chips, and VMware-related infrastructure software. The company’s GAAP net income reached $4.14 billion, up from a loss of $1.87 billion in the year-ago quarter. Non-GAAP net income totaled $8.4 billion, while adjusted EBITDA hit $10.7 billion—equivalent to 67% of revenue. Free cash flow reached a record $7.02 billion, representing 44% of revenue.
CEO Hock Tan said AI momentum was the primary growth engine, with AI-related semiconductor revenue growing 63% year-over-year to $5.2 billion. The company expects this figure to rise to $6.2 billion in Q4, marking eleven consecutive quarters of AI revenue growth. Semiconductor sales overall totaled $9.17 billion (+26% Y/Y), while infrastructure software revenue grew to $6.79 billion (+17% Y/Y), aided by VMware integration. Broadcom returned $2.8 billion to shareholders in Q3 through dividends.
Broadcom issued strong Q4 guidance, projecting $17.4 billion in revenue (+24% Y/Y) with adjusted EBITDA again expected to reach 67% of revenue. The company’s cash and cash equivalents rose to $10.72 billion. A quarterly cash dividend of $0.59 per share was declared, payable September 30, 2025.
- Q3 FY2025 revenue: $15.95 billion, up 22% Y/Y
- AI-related semiconductor revenue: $5.2 billion, up 63% Y/Y
- GAAP net income: $4.14 billion; Non-GAAP: $8.4 billion
- Adjusted EBITDA: $10.7 billion (67% of revenue)
- Free cash flow: $7.02 billion (44% of revenue)
- Semiconductor Solutions: $9.17 billion (+26% Y/Y)
- Infrastructure Software: $6.79 billion (+17% Y/Y)
- Q4 revenue guidance: ~$17.4 billion (+24% Y/Y)
- Q4 adjusted EBITDA guidance: 67% of revenue
- Dividend: $0.59 per share, payable Sept 30
“Broadcom achieved record third quarter revenue on continued strength in custom AI accelerators, networking and VMware,” said Hock Tan, President and CEO of Broadcom Inc. “Q3 AI revenue growth accelerated to 63% year-over-year to $5.2 billion. We expect growth in AI semiconductor revenue to accelerate to $6.2 billion in Q4, delivering eleven consecutive quarters of growth.”
Key Topics Covered During the Investor Call
- AI Inference Accelerating: Broadcom is seeing a wave of AI inference deployments layered on top of existing training infrastructure. CEO Hock Tan cited “urgent demand for inference” as a key factor behind sustained AI revenue growth into FY2026.
- AI Networking Densifying: AI networking demand remained stronger than expected, especially in scale-up environments. Hock Tan noted that switch density in scale-up deployments is now 5–10x higher than in scale-out topologies.
- Tomahawk 6 Demand Ramping: Although currently in the proof-of-concept stage, customer interest in the 102.4 Tbps Tomahawk 6 switch is described as “tremendous.” This next-gen platform is expected to enable flatter two-tier AI networks at scale.
- Co-Packaged Optics Still Early: Scale-up AI clusters are still largely interconnected via copper. Optical interconnects—including pluggables and potentially co-packaged optics—will become necessary as deployments surpass ~72 accelerators.
- Ethernet Dominance in AI Scale-Up: Despite rising interest in NVLink and UALink ecosystems, Broadcom reaffirmed its confidence in Ethernet as the dominant protocol for scale-up AI workloads, citing open standards and scale advantages.
- Custom XPU Value Proposition: Hock Tan emphasized that the value of custom XPUs lies in the tight hardware-software co-optimization. This co-design loop improves performance over time and is key to customer loyalty.
- 2026 AI Revenue Trajectory: Broadcom expects its ~60% Y/Y AI semiconductor revenue growth in FY2025 to continue into FY2026, driven by both training and inference workloads. The company reaffirmed its previous projections for multi-million-unit AI cluster deployments by three anchor customers in 2027.
- Margin Impact from XPUs: CFO Kirsten Spears confirmed that lower gross margins in Q3 and Q4 are primarily due to product mix—specifically higher XPU volumes. However, operating leverage remains strong across both semiconductor and software segments.
- VMware Subscription Transition: Broadcom is approximately two-thirds through the transition of VMware’s top customers from perpetual licensing to the full VCF (VMware Cloud Foundation) subscription stack. Remaining renewals are expected to play out over the next 12–18 months.
- Capital Allocation Priorities: Broadcom reiterated its strategy of using excess free cash flow to reduce debt (targeting <2x net leverage), while opportunistically repurchasing shares and maintaining its dividend. The company remains open to strategic M&A but emphasized it would be “significant and debt-financed.”
🌐 Analysis: Broadcom’s execution across both silicon and software segments highlights its unique position at the intersection of AI infrastructure buildouts and enterprise cloud transformation. With AI revenue potentially hitting $30B+ in 2026, Broadcom is on a path to challenge GPU incumbents via custom XPUs, Ethernet-based AI fabrics, and deep hyperscaler co-design. Meanwhile, VMware is now contributing not just revenue but strong margin expansion, with 93% gross margins in the software segment. Watch for further updates on pluggables, co-packaged optics, and scale-up Ethernet adoption.
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