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HomeMarket SpotlightBroadcom's $280 Billion Wipeout: What the AI Chip Selloff Means for Your...

Broadcom’s $280 Billion Wipeout: What the AI Chip Selloff Means for Your Retirement Portfolio

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One of the most consequential earnings reactions in recent semiconductor history unfolded on Thursday, June 4, 2026, as shares of Broadcom Inc. (NASDAQ: AVGO) plunged more than 12% by the closing bell, erasing approximately $280 billion in market capitalization in a single session. The selloff, triggered by a quarterly earnings report that beat expectations on earnings per share but disappointed on the AI chip revenue outlook, sent shockwaves through the broader technology sector and raised pointed questions about the sustainability of the AI-driven rally that has powered semiconductor stocks to extraordinary heights over the past three years.

What Happened: The Earnings Report in Detail

Broadcom reported fiscal second-quarter 2026 results after the market closed on Wednesday, June 3. On the surface, the numbers appeared strong. The company posted adjusted earnings per share of $2.44, topping Wall Street estimates, and reported total revenue of $22.19 billion. AI semiconductor revenue more than doubled year-over-year to approximately $10.8 billion for the quarter — a figure that would have been celebrated as extraordinary in virtually any other context.

The problem, analysts explained, was not what Broadcom reported but what it did not say. Investors had been expecting the company to raise its long-term AI revenue forecast, which had stood at “in excess of $100 billion” for fiscal year 2027 since it was first announced in March. CEO Hock Tan reiterated that guidance rather than raising it, and the company's forecast for third-quarter AI chip revenue of approximately $16 billion came in slightly below the most aggressive Wall Street estimates. The decision to hold guidance steady, rather than raise it in the face of surging demand, was interpreted by the market as a signal that the pace of growth may be plateauing — at least in the near term.

MetricQ2 FY2026 ActualWall Street EstimateYear-Over-Year Change
Total Revenue$22.19 billion~$22.5 billion+~40%
Adjusted EPS$2.44~$2.38Beat
AI Semiconductor Revenue~$10.8 billion~$10.5 billion+~110%
Q3 AI Revenue Guidance~$16 billion~$16.5 billionSlightly below estimates
FY2027 AI Revenue ForecastReiterated at $100B+Expected raiseUnchanged

The Selloff in Historical Context

The scale of Thursday's decline placed Broadcom's earnings reaction in rare company. According to analysis by Yahoo Finance and Bloomberg, the approximately $280 billion in market value erased in a single session ranks among the largest single-stock wipeouts in the megacap era, trailing only Nvidia and Microsoft in terms of absolute dollar losses since 2019. Broadcom entered the session with a market capitalization of roughly $2.27 trillion, having gained more than 38% year-to-date through Wednesday's close and more than eightfold since the launch of ChatGPT in late 2022.

The stock had also rallied approximately 15% in the two weeks preceding the earnings report, fueled in part by strong results from rival Marvell Technology (MRVL) and a flurry of positive AI announcements at the Computex technology conference in Taiwan. That pre-earnings run-up left little room for anything less than a blowout report, and when the results fell even marginally short of the most optimistic projections, the correction was swift and severe.

“It is a classic case of very high expectations meeting a market that wanted perfection,” said Matt Britzman, senior equity analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown. “Broadcom is one of the more exciting names in the AI infrastructure buildout, but it also came into results as one of the higher-risk names.”

Sector Contagion: The Chip Complex Feels the Heat

Broadcom's decline did not occur in isolation. The selloff rippled across the entire semiconductor sector, pulling down stocks that had been among the market's strongest performers in recent months. Micron Technology (MU) fell approximately 7–8%, its worst single-session decline since late March. Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) dropped roughly 3.4%, while Marvell Technology (MRVL) — which had itself reported strong earnings just days earlier — declined nearly 5%. Arm Holdings (ARM) shed approximately 4.5%, and Intel (INTC) and Qualcomm (QCOM) each fell between 1.6% and 6.5%.

The State Street SPDR S&P Semiconductor ETF (XSD) had surged more than 170% over the prior year, a run that many analysts had flagged as increasingly stretched. Broadcom's earnings reaction provided the catalyst for a broad reassessment of valuations across the sector. Notably, Nvidia (NVDA), the undisputed leader of the AI chip trade, also pulled back modestly, though it remained well above its year-to-date lows.

The Broader Market: A Tale of Two Sectors

In a striking illustration of sector rotation, the broader market largely absorbed the technology selloff without significant damage. The Dow Jones Industrial Average surged 875 points, or 1.7%, to close at a new all-time record of 51,561.93 — its best single-day performance in weeks. The gains were led by UnitedHealth Group (UNH), which rallied approximately 5% after Bank of America upgraded the stock to “buy” and raised its price target to $450, citing improving medical cost trends. Goldman Sachs (GS) and Merck (MRK) also contributed meaningfully to the Dow's advance.

The S&P 500 gained 0.41% to close at 7,584.31, demonstrating the index's resilience even as its technology sector — the largest by weight — was under pressure. The Nasdaq Composite, more heavily weighted toward technology and semiconductors, finished down a modest 0.09% at 26,830.96, a relatively contained decline given the magnitude of the Broadcom selloff.

Oil prices retreated sharply, with West Texas Intermediate crude falling nearly 3% to approximately $93.20 per barrel, following reports that Israel and Lebanon had renewed their ceasefire agreement and that the Trump administration had signaled restraint in its approach to Iran. The 10-year Treasury yield edged down to approximately 4.48%, providing some relief to rate-sensitive sectors. Gold advanced 0.9% to above $4,500 per ounce, drawing safe-haven demand.

What Analysts Are Saying

Despite the sharp selloff, the analyst community remained broadly constructive on Broadcom's long-term prospects. At least 22 analysts raised their price targets on the stock following the earnings report, pushing the median price target to approximately $500 — implying more than 4% upside from Wednesday's close, and considerably more from Thursday's depressed levels. Goldman Sachs reiterated its “buy” rating and raised its price target to $525, implying nearly 30% upside from the post-earnings price.

Bernstein analyst Stacy Rasgon offered a measured perspective: “We suspect the shares may take a pause for the next couple of quarters. But the story gets interesting again once we enter 2027. If we have to wait a quarter or two for that story to re-emerge, that's OK, we'll wait for it.”

William Blair analysts noted that investors may have been specifically hoping for Broadcom to provide a new target beyond the $100 billion AI chip sales forecast for fiscal 2027, but said they remain confident “that Broadcom can maintain its robust growth trajectory.” CEO Hock Tan himself expressed confidence in the company's direction, noting that Broadcom now expects to ship more than 10 gigawatts of AI chips in 2027 — a slight increase from prior estimates — and that the company has secured memory chip supply through both 2026 and 2027.

The Broader AI Investment Narrative: Cracks or Consolidation?

Thursday's events prompted a broader conversation about the state of the AI investment cycle. Billionaire investor Ray Dalio recently added his voice to a growing chorus of AI bubble warnings, cautioning that investors risk confusing buying AI stocks with actually investing in the underlying technology — a distinction that proved costly in the dot-com era. The parallel is imperfect but not without merit: Broadcom trades at approximately 30 times forward earnings, while Marvell trades at over 61 times, and the broader S&P 500 trades at roughly 28 times.

At the same time, the fundamental demand picture for AI infrastructure remains robust. Alphabet announced an $80 billion stock offering earlier in the week to fund AI data center construction, and the five major hyperscalers — Alphabet, Microsoft, Amazon, Meta, and Oracle — are collectively on track to spend more than $700 billion in capital expenditures in 2026 alone. Broadcom's own AI revenue trajectory, growing from $20.2 billion in fiscal 2025 to a projected $100 billion-plus in fiscal 2027, represents one of the most dramatic revenue expansions in semiconductor history.

The question for investors is not whether AI demand is real — it clearly is — but whether current valuations have already priced in years of future growth, leaving little margin for any deviation from perfection. Thursday's reaction suggests that, at least for now, the market's tolerance for anything less than upside surprises in AI has narrowed considerably.

Semiconductor circuit board with multiple chips representing AI chip technology
The semiconductor sector experienced broad-based selling pressure following Broadcom's earnings report. Photo: Unsplash

Investment Implications for Retirement-Focused Investors

For investors aged 45 and older who are managing portfolios with an eye toward retirement security, Thursday's events carry several important lessons and actionable considerations.

Concentration risk is real and can be sudden. Investors who hold significant positions in individual semiconductor stocks or concentrated AI-themed ETFs experienced a stark reminder that even fundamentally strong companies can lose 10–15% of their value in a single session when expectations are not met. For those within 10–15 years of retirement, a 13% decline in a large position can meaningfully set back a portfolio's trajectory. Diversification across sectors — including the healthcare and financial stocks that powered the Dow to a record on the same day — provides a natural buffer against this type of event-driven volatility.

Sector rotation presents opportunities. The same day that technology sold off, healthcare and financial stocks surged. UnitedHealth's 5% gain and the Dow's record close illustrate that capital does not simply leave the market during tech corrections — it rotates into other areas. Investors who maintain balanced exposure across sectors are better positioned to participate in these rotational moves rather than sitting entirely in cash during periods of tech weakness.

Historical patterns favor patience over panic. Yahoo Finance's analysis of Broadcom's own history is instructive: since 2009, the stock has had 39 one-day drops of 6% or more, and it was higher one month later nearly 80% of the time, higher three months later nearly 90% of the time, and higher one year later in all but one instance. The median return after such drops was approximately 61% over the following year. This does not guarantee future results, but it does suggest that panic selling after a sharp earnings-driven decline has historically been a poor strategy for long-term investors.

The AI theme remains intact, but selectivity matters. Broadcom's $100 billion AI revenue forecast for fiscal 2027 — up from $20.2 billion in fiscal 2025 — represents genuine, extraordinary growth. The selloff was a valuation reset, not a fundamental repudiation of the AI investment thesis. For retirement investors, the key is to gain exposure to AI's long-term growth potential through diversified vehicles such as broad technology ETFs or semiconductor ETFs, rather than concentrating in single stocks that carry outsized event risk.

Looking Ahead: Key Catalysts to Watch

Several near-term catalysts will shape the trajectory of semiconductor stocks and the broader market in the weeks ahead. On Friday, June 5, the Bureau of Labor Statistics will release the May nonfarm payrolls report. Economists surveyed by Dow Jones Newswires expect employers added approximately 80,000 jobs in May, down from 115,000 in April. A stronger-than-expected report could reignite inflation concerns and push Treasury yields higher, adding pressure to rate-sensitive growth stocks. A weaker report could revive Federal Reserve rate cut expectations and provide a tailwind for equities.

Beyond the jobs report, investors will be watching for any updates from Nvidia, which is widely expected to report its own quarterly results in the coming weeks. Given that Broadcom's results have raised questions about the pace of AI chip demand growth, Nvidia's guidance will be scrutinized with particular intensity. Any upside surprise from Nvidia could quickly reverse the negative sentiment that Broadcom's results have introduced into the sector.

The SpaceX IPO also loomed large in investors' minds on Thursday. The company filed regulatory documents indicating it expects to sell 555,555,555 shares at $135 apiece, raising approximately $75 billion — which would be the largest IPO raise in history — at a valuation of roughly $1.75 trillion. The offering is expected to draw significant institutional demand and could serve as a barometer for risk appetite in the broader market.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial advice. Market conditions can change rapidly, and past performance does not guarantee future results. Always conduct your own research and consider consulting with a qualified financial advisor before making investment decisions.

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