How Does Broadcom Make its Money?
Broadcom is a global technology company that designs, develops, and sells semiconductor and infrastructure software solutions. Through its November 2023 acquisition of VMware for $69 billion, Broadcom transformed itself from primarily a chip company into a diversified technology conglomerate with two major pillars.
On the semiconductor side, Broadcom is a leading supplier of networking chips, broadband processors, storage controllers, and custom AI accelerators (ASICs) for hyperscale data centers. On the software side, Broadcom now controls VMware’s virtualization platform alongside existing Symantec and CA Technologies enterprise software products.
Revenue Breakdown
| Segment | FY2024 (Oct) | FY2023 (Oct) | YoY Growth |
|---|---|---|---|
| Semiconductor Solutions | $30.1B | $28.2B | +6.7% |
| Infrastructure Software | $21.5B | $7.6B | +182.9% |
| Total Revenue | $51.6B | $35.8B | +44.1% |
Semiconductor Solutions — 58% of Revenue
Broadcom’s legacy business and a crown jewel of the semiconductor industry. Key product lines include:
- Networking — Ethernet switching and routing chips (Memory, Memory) used by nearly every major data center and cloud provider. Broadcom is the dominant supplier of data center networking silicon.
- Custom AI accelerators (ASICs) — Broadcom designs custom chips for hyperscalers like Google (TPU), Meta, and others who want purpose-built AI silicon rather than Nvidia’s general-purpose GPUs. This is a rapidly growing business.
- Broadband — Chips for cable modems, DSL, fiber, and set-top boxes.
- Storage — SAS/SATA controllers, RAID adapters, and fiber channel networking for enterprise storage.
- Wireless — RF filters and Wi-Fi/Bluetooth chips, notably supplying Apple’s iPhone.
Infrastructure Software — 42% of Revenue
This segment tripled in revenue following the VMware acquisition. It now includes:
- VMware — The industry-standard virtualization platform. Broadcom is converting VMware’s licensing to a subscription model, which depressed short-term revenue but creates more predictable, recurring income.
- CA Technologies — Mainframe and enterprise software.
- Symantec Enterprise — Cybersecurity software for businesses.
Income Statement Overview
| Metric | FY2024 | FY2023 |
|---|---|---|
| Total Revenue | $51.6B | $35.8B |
| Cost of Revenue | $19.4B | $14.2B |
| Gross Profit | $32.2B | $21.6B |
| Operating Expenses | $13.8B | $11.1B |
| Operating Income | $18.4B | $10.5B |
| Net Income | $12.0B | $7.3B |
Key Financial Metrics
- Gross Margin: 62.4% — Strong and improving as VMware transitions to higher-margin subscriptions. Semiconductor margins are consistently above 60%.
- Operating Margin: 35.7% — Broadcom is known for aggressive cost management. CEO Hock Tan typically acquires companies and then dramatically improves their margins through cost cuts and focused investment.
- Revenue Growth: +44.1% — Primarily driven by VMware. Organic semiconductor growth was a more modest 7%, though AI-related chip revenue is accelerating.
- Free Cash Flow: ~$19B — Broadcom is a free cash flow machine, which is critical for servicing the debt taken on for the VMware acquisition (~$40B in incremental debt).
What to Watch
- Custom AI chip momentum — Broadcom is the #2 player in AI chips behind Nvidia, but through custom ASICs rather than GPUs. As hyperscalers seek alternatives to Nvidia’s pricing power, Broadcom’s design partnerships could scale significantly.
- VMware integration and monetization — Broadcom’s aggressive conversion of VMware licenses to subscriptions and price increases has generated customer pushback. Execution here directly impacts software segment growth and retention.
- Networking and AI infrastructure — Every AI cluster needs Broadcom’s networking chips. As data center buildouts accelerate, Broadcom’s networking revenue should benefit regardless of which AI chip architecture wins.
- Debt reduction — Broadcom took on massive debt for VMware. Rapid deleveraging through free cash flow will be important for the stock’s multiple expansion.
- Apple dependency — Broadcom derives a meaningful portion of semiconductor revenue from Apple. Any changes to Apple’s supply chain (Apple has been designing more chips in-house) could impact revenue.