Broadcom Q1 Report Could Prove CA Tech Buy Enhances Risk/Reward Case

 | Mar 13, 2019 20:20

  • Reports Q1 2019 results on Thursday, March 14 after the market close
  • Revenue expectation: $5.83 billion
  • EPS expectation: $5.23
  • It’s not a good time to get bullish about the semiconductor industry. The demand for chips that are used in smartphones, gaming hardware, and cryptocurrencies is drying up and investors have dumped shares of some of the largest producers including former high-flyers Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA) and Advanced Micro Devices (NASDAQ:AMD).

    In this environment of uncertainty, the first-quarter earnings of Broadcom (NASDAQ:AVGO), the last major chipmaker to report in the current earnings cycle, is likely to provide some fresh air. One factor which is helping the San Jose, California-based Broadcom is its better product mix and lower operating expenses.

    Chipmakers got a big jolt in January when Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) cut its iPhone sales forecast for 2019 in early January, citing a sharp slowdown in China. That gloomy prediction from the world’s largest smartphone maker also clouded the future of many chipmakers who supply a lot of parts to the mobile-phone industry.

    But Broadcom seems to be in a good position to weather this downturn after its $19-billion acquisition of CA Technologies last year. The deal, which the market didn’t like initially, is separating Broadcom from rest of the crowd, and providing its revenue base with a nice diversification.

    Its shares, which closed yesterday at $269.63, are up 16% in the last six months, outperforming the Semiconductor Index, which only gained around 9% in the same period. According to Broadcom chief executive, Hock Tan, after the CA acquisition, the company is in a better position than any of its peers to sustain a slowdown.