This isn't just a headline number. Apple accounts for about 17% of Qualcomm's revenue, and roughly 60% of total revenue comes from a small group of top handset OEMs, making customer concentration an acute structural risk . If other handset partners follow Apple's lead on in-house silicon, the impact would multiply.
Beyond the Apple overhang, a global DRAM shortage has squeezed mid-range Android smartphone production, and Bank of America forecasts a 15% drop in global handset unit volumes this year . That combination of a softening top-line market and a departing whale customer has kept pressure on the stock even as Qualcomm posts record headline revenue.
On May 26, 2026, Qualcomm struck an agreement to supply TikTok owner ByteDance with millions of customized ASICs for AI data centers, directly supporting the Doubao chatbot and AI agent infrastructure . The deal was described as "the largest AI deal in its history" and sent Qualcomm shares up 11.6% to an all-time high near $258
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ByteDance chose custom Qualcomm ASICs rather than relying entirely on traditional GPUs that bottleneck global supply chains . The agreement validates Qualcomm's $2.4 billion Alphawave Semi acquisition and its broader data center push, which also includes a separate Arm server CPU project with Meta as lead customer
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Crucially, analysts see the ByteDance deal as commercial proof that Qualcomm can compete in AI infrastructure beyond smartphones—a re-rating catalyst that challenges the old narrative of a handset-only chip designer .
While AI grabbed headlines, Qualcomm's automotive segment posted a record $1.3 billion in fiscal Q2 2026, up 38% year over year . Management expects the automotive business to exceed a $6 billion annualized run rate by late fiscal 2026
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This isn't a one-quarter spike. Automotive has now delivered multiple consecutive billion-dollar quarters, and the Snapdragon Digital Chassis platform sells a full architecture—not just individual chips—with average selling prices scaling from single dollars to hundreds . The segment has become a structural second leg for revenue alongside handsets.
A simple side-by-side shows why the market is divided:
The automotive business alone nearly fills the gap on an annualized basis, but it hasn't done so in disclosed numbers yet. The ByteDance deal is qualitatively massive—described as Qualcomm's largest AI deal ever—but lacks a publicly quantified dollar value for a direct comparison .
Analyst opinions are split. The Futurum Group contends that automotive and IoT growth "should more than make up for the loss of iPhone's business" . Others caution that even record automotive growth trails the Apple hole in disclosed dollars, and the ByteDance deal's revenue contribution remains private
. Some bulls point out that the stock had already priced in the worst of the Apple headwinds before the ByteDance rally, implying the market sees the new growth as upside rather than catch-up
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The bottom line: Qualcomm is trading a known, quantified revenue loss of $7.3B+ from Apple modems for two growth engines that are scaling fast—record automotive revenue and a historic AI ASIC deal. The combined trajectory is closing the gap, but based on publicly disclosed figures, it hasn't fully bridged it yet. Whether the market believes in the bridge depends on whether you think the ByteDance deal's unit volume signals a revenue runway that the headlines haven't yet quantified.
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