Profit-taking hits a key AI infrastructure supplier, but analysts see the pullback as a prelude to the next leg up.
Profit-taking hits a key AI infrastructure supplier, but analysts see the pullback as a prelude to the next leg up.

Shares of Broadcom fell as much as 4.7 percent on Tuesday as investors took profits following a steep rally driven by artificial intelligence spending, even as analysts raise price targets ahead of the company’s upcoming earnings report.
“The market is catching its breath after an explosive run, but the underlying demand for AI hardware is stronger than ever,” said one technology strategist. “This isn’t a fundamental shift in the story, it’s a technical pullback before the next leg of growth, which will be validated by the upcoming earnings.”
Broadcom (AVGO) shares dropped to an intraday low of $408.41 before recovering to close at $414.04. The sell-off comes after a period of significant outperformance for semiconductor companies, which have become the primary beneficiaries of the capital investment boom in AI infrastructure. The iShares Semiconductor ETF (SOXX) has surged 77% this year, dramatically outpacing the 14% loss seen in the iShares Expanded Tech-Software Sector ETF (IGM), as capital shifts to the hardware builders from software firms facing new competitive pressures.
The divergence between chipmakers and other technology sectors highlights a key theme for investors in 2026: the tangible, high-stakes demand for the physical infrastructure powering AI. Companies like Broadcom, Nvidia, and Amphenol (APH) are providing the critical interconnects, processors, and networking solutions required to build and operate large-scale AI models. This has created a sustained tailwind for the sector, with Amphenol, for instance, reporting record orders and a book-to-bill ratio of 1.24x in its most recent quarter, citing accelerating AI data center investments.
While Broadcom’s recent stock performance has lagged some high-flying peers like Coherent (COHR), it has outperformed others like TE Connectivity (TEL). The company’s strategy, much like Amphenol’s, involves a combination of organic growth and targeted acquisitions to create the “broadest range” of interconnect products for future AI systems. This diversification, with meaningful revenue from industrial, automotive, and defense markets, provides a buffer against reliance on any single end market.
Despite the long-term bullish narrative, investors are weighing the risks. For Broadcom and its peers, these include potential integration challenges from recent acquisitions and intensifying competition in markets like optical interconnects. The recent pullback in Broadcom’s stock may present a buying opportunity for investors who believe the positives outweigh these risks, a view that seems to be shared by analysts who continue to be bullish ahead of the company’s earnings.
Investors looking for a more diversified approach to the trend can consider ETFs like the Invesco QQQ Trust (QQQ), which offers a “barbell” strategy with exposure to both the surging chipmakers and the beaten-down software giants like Microsoft (MSFT) and Oracle (ORCL). With a price-to-earnings-growth (PEG) ratio near a 20-year low, some strategists argue the broader technology sector represented by the Nasdaq 100 remains attractively valued, forecasting 28% annual earnings growth over the coming two years. For Broadcom, the upcoming earnings report will be a critical test of whether its growth trajectory can justify a higher valuation amid the sector-wide AI gold rush.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.