NASDAQ · Technology
$193.80 at scoring
$189.39 -2.28% since scoring
A patent toll booth wearing a semiconductor costume.
Qualcomm is two businesses stapled together: a cyclical chip designer and a licensing monopoly that taxes every cellular device sold on earth. The score reflects a balance sheet and cash engine in excellent shape, undermined by concentrated customers and a geopolitical footprint that runs straight through Shenzhen and Taipei. The open question is what happens when Apple finally ships its own modem at scale and whether automotive and edge AI revenue ramps fast enough to fill the hole. The diversification story is real, but it is still a story.
14 dimensions, scored on the fundamentals.
Methodology v1Balance Sheet
Net debt is modest against $12.4B in free cash flow, with $9.7B cash and a D/E of 0.56 that comfortably supports the business.
Cash Flow
Free cash flow of $12.4B on a $204B market cap yields a 6% FCF yield, with conversion strengthened by the high-margin licensing stream.
Revenue Growth
Latest 13.7% YoY recovery follows a brutal -19% handset cycle, showing the business compounds across cycles rather than within them.
Operating Margins
25.5% operating margins reflect the blended drag of chip manufacturing against the near-pure-margin QTL licensing engine.
Scalability
QTL licensing scales like software, but QCT chip revenue carries real silicon costs that cap the blended operating leverage.
Economic Moat
The standards-essential patent portfolio across 3G, 4G, and 5G forces every handset maker to pay rent regardless of which chip they buy.
Pricing Power
Licensing rates are anchored to device ASPs and have survived repeated legal challenges from Apple, the FTC, and global regulators.
Innovation
Consistent leadership in modem technology and a credible push into automotive and edge AI compute with the Snapdragon X platform.
Leadership
Cristiano Amon has executed the diversification beyond handsets credibly, though the team lacks the founder-operator alignment of peers.
Capital Allocation
Steady buybacks and a growing dividend, but the abandoned NXP and failed Arm Holdings pursuits reveal a willingness to chase scale.
Secular Trend
5G, on-device AI, and automotive connectivity are real tailwinds, partially offset by a maturing smartphone TAM.
Geopolitical Risk
Heavy China revenue exposure and a deep manufacturing dependence on TSMC make the company a direct hostage of US-China tech policy.
Customer Concentration
Apple and Samsung together drive a disproportionate share of QCT revenue, and the Apple modem in-housing remains an unresolved overhang.
Valuation Risk
A 20.8x P/E and 7.6x book are reasonable for the cash flow, but the negative PEG flags the cyclicality the multiple is ignoring.
One stock. One sentence. Then the work behind it.
Qualcomm is two businesses stapled together: a cyclical chip designer and a licensing monopoly that taxes every cellular device sold on earth. The score reflects a balance sheet and cash engine in excellent shape, undermined by concentrated customers and a geopolitical footprint that runs straight through Shenzhen and Taipei. The open question is what happens when Apple finally ships its own modem at scale and whether automotive and edge AI revenue ramps fast enough to fill the hole. The diversification story is real, but it is still a story.
The cash is real. The customer list is the problem.