Qualcomm had a trading session on Thursday that most chip companies rarely see. Shares jumped as much as 15% before settling into a gain of around 8% to 9% by midday. Volume hit 17.9 million shares, double the stock’s 20-day average for that hour, as investors moved quickly to reprice a company that suddenly looks like it is building something bigger than its smartphone roots suggest.
Three things moved the stock
The first and most immediate catalyst was a timeline shift on a custom AI chip deal. On April 30, Qualcomm confirmed an agreement to develop custom AI silicon for a major hyperscaler data center customer. That announcement alone was significant. What sent shares higher Thursday was an updated delivery schedule. Initial chip shipments are now expected within this calendar year, moved up from a previously communicated fiscal 2027 timeline.
Breaking into the data center AI market earlier than expected opens a high-value revenue stream that analysts had not fully built into their models. The market priced that in fast.
The second driver came from Qualcomm’s product portfolio. The company announced two new Snapdragon mobile platforms targeting mid-range and entry-level smartphones. The Snapdragon 6 Gen 5 delivers 20% faster app launches, 21% better GPU performance, AI-powered camera capabilities and Wi-Fi 7 support. The Snapdragon 4 Gen 5 brings a 77% jump in GPU performance, 43% faster app launches and, for the first time in the Snapdragon 4 series, 90 frames-per-second gaming capability. Both platforms are headed to commercial devices in the second half of 2026, with manufacturers including Honor, OPPO, realme and Redmi already on board.
The third piece was a reported collaboration with OpenAI to develop a purpose-built AI smartphone chip targeting a 2028 launch. The timeline pushes any meaningful revenue well into the future, but the market rewarded the strategic positioning, particularly given what it signals about where mobile computing is heading.
What the Snapdragon expansion means for Qualcomm
Bringing capable AI chips into mid-range and entry-level phones is not a small thing for how Qualcomm grows from here. The premium smartphone segment is lucrative but limited in total volume. Extending AI features down the price curve opens faster-growing markets in regions where lower-cost devices are the norm, addressing a long-standing concern that Qualcomm depends too heavily on high-end handsets in a segment that has not grown at a strong pace in recent years.
The manufacturers already committed to H2 2026 launches on the new platforms give that expansion real commercial weight, not just a roadmap promise.
The risks investors are watching
Thursday’s rally pushed Qualcomm to an intraday 52-week high of $223.66, though shares settled below that level by midday. With the average analyst price target sitting at $170.76 heading into the session, the stock ran well past formal consensus estimates. That kind of gap typically signals that the market is moving faster than models have been updated, which cuts both ways.
The risks are real. Demand in the China Android market has been soft, and inventory adjustments have already weighed on recent guidance. Competition in data center AI from Arm Holdings and Nvidia continues to intensify. Rising memory component costs are expected to pressure gross margins in the near term.
Qualcomm’s Investor Day in June, where the company plans to detail its data center and physical AI roadmaps, will be the next meaningful test. Investors who bought into Thursday’s move will be watching closely to see whether the strategy holds up under closer examination.

