Broadcom Q1 FY2024 Earnings

Broadcom Q1 FY2024 Earnings

The Six Five team discusses Broadcom Q1 FY2024 Earnings.

If you are interested in watching the full episode you can check it out here.

Disclaimer: The Six Five Webcast is for information and entertainment purposes only. Over the course of this webcast, we may talk about companies that are publicly traded and we may even reference that fact and their equity share price, but please do not take anything that we say as a recommendation about what you should do with your investment dollars. We are not investment advisors and we ask that you do not treat us as such.

Transcript:

Daniel Newman: I think my tweet said one of the best run companies on the planet delivers on top and bottom once again, although it was a little light on its guidance, Broadcom. Let’s talk Hockonomics. Let’s talk a little Hockonomics right now. Company’s up 34% year-on-year, but about 11% revenue ex VMware. So this VMware add really did make a huge delta to the bottom line. The company… eight, almost $7.156 billion of EBITDA adjusted on the first year on its revenue. And I want you to guess what percentage of revenue this company’s EBITDA is, Pat. You know how much I love EBITDA, right?

Patrick Moorhead: Oh no, it’s incredible. And by the way, their margins are just, I mean, like 77% for its margins are just amazing.

Daniel Newman: But guess what’s left after that, what the EBITDA number is?

Patrick Moorhead: I don’t know. Tell me.

Daniel Newman: Take a stab just for fun. Let’s have some fun.

Patrick Moorhead: As a percent?

Daniel Newman: As a percentage of all of its revenue, how much of it’s EBITDA?

Patrick Moorhead: Oh, 20%, I’m going to guess.

Daniel Newman: 60. 60% of its revenue is adjusted EBITDA.

Patrick Moorhead: Oh, sorry, I was thinking of op. Okay.

Daniel Newman: Net Inc. Yeah, dude, don’t worry. It’s such an absurdly high number that the number you gave is very typical as to where companies land, 10, 20, 30 for a well run company. 60% of the company’s revenue.

Patrick Moorhead: Wait, 60% after R&D?

Daniel Newman: Adjusted EBITDA, yeah. Now again, the adjustments, I don’t know how much they’re really-

Patrick Moorhead: I’m embarrassed. I’ve embarrassed myself.

Daniel Newman: Yeah, we can edit that out.

Patrick Moorhead: We are live.

Daniel Newman: Pat, Take a stab, what percentage of their revenue do you think was adjusted EBITDA?

Patrick Moorhead: Typically in the industry it’s like 20%, but I’m guessing 60-ish percent.

Daniel Newman: Yeah, let’s say. That’s probably it. Actually, good job, Pat. It’s 60% on the head.

Patrick Moorhead: ka-ching.

Daniel Newman: So the company continued. It reiterated its guidance of about 50 billion with an adjusted EBITDA of 30 billion next year, Pat. So their guidance was just a little bit below consensus, but it was right there. And of course, the company is continuing to pay down debt, pay a dividend, and the stock has just been high-flying, Pat. I mean, I think it crossed $1,350 a share this week. I think it even broke $1,400, which it was trading at like 800 like six months ago. So while, yes, NVIDIA has been the fastest growing. This one has just been slow and steadily gaining about 100% year to date, in the last, sorry, year, whole year.

Just a couple of other items on the company’s business. The semiconductor business grew 4%. The infrastructure software business accretive to the VMware was up 153%. So big accretive add with the inclusion of VMware. And overall, Pat, all we can say is that Hockonomics work. Hockonomics deliver-

Patrick Moorhead: Is that a new thing? Did you just make up another one?

Daniel Newman: I’ve been talking about it for a couple of weeks now, but I’ve decided to go all in on making sure that, on the record, I’ve never heard anyone else say Hockonomics, but I’m pretty sure that this is a new way of running a business. I did say it to the board in one of my board meetings. And then I did say it to my leadership team in a meeting, that there’s something to be said for the way this man runs this company.

Patrick Moorhead: Sure is. Hey, I’m going to just try to add some filler to what you said. So some big things here. AI revenue quadrupled year-on-year, at 2.3 billion. I thought that was incredible. I got to tell you, software consolidated bookings going from less than 600 million to 1.8 billion, to over 3 billion in Q2. And by the way, that number was so big that Hock got a bunch of questions from investors in the call. And basically he was like, “We’re upselling on VMware.” It’s all about VMware Cloud Foundation, which is compute, storage, networking, virtualization. And I love that number. It’s just astounding. And you know that the investors had to do a double take when he pulled that out. Pretty big.

And then getting the semiconductors, aside from AI, it was very similar to what you would expect in the industry. They sell a lot to Apple, and Apple is down, so their wireless revenue was down. Imagine that. Storage industry is down, and therefore their storage number was down, and so was broadband related to all the carriers, which is down. And we’re going to see some very similar stuff when we talk about Marvell though. And by the way, final thing I love when Hock talks about Tomahawk. He loves talking Tomahawk. Tomahawk is essentially the basis for-

Daniel Newman: You like Tomahawk?

Patrick Moorhead: Yeah.

Daniel Newman: Tomahawk.

Patrick Moorhead: Yeah. Whoa, Dan. Jeez. God, you’re just nailing it today. No, Tomahawk is basically the glue that’s pulling all these AI systems together. And guess what, it’s off the rail. And they just keep cranking it out, cranking it out, cranking it out and printing money. So anyways, stock was down, whatever. I don’t care about it.

Daniel Newman: Down for a moment. That’s not the business we’re in. What does it mean? What does it mean?

Patrick Moorhead: I don’t even care.

Daniel Newman: Listen, it was a good set of results. This company, 20%, 30% of AI compute bomb is going to be networking, and you are going to need a lot of custom silicon. You’re going to need a lot of custom compute. You’re going to need a lot of networking and connectivity. I don’t think Broadcom sits in a bad position on the semi side. And then all the private AI that enterprises are going to need to build to take advantage of their data, it sure seems like VMware Cloud Foundation has the potential to be a good partner for that.

So I think whether it’s at the mainframe, in the cloud or down to the silicon layer, it’s pretty compelling.

Author Information

Daniel is the CEO of The Futurum Group. Living his life at the intersection of people and technology, Daniel works with the world’s largest technology brands exploring Digital Transformation and how it is influencing the enterprise.

From the leading edge of AI to global technology policy, Daniel makes the connections between business, people and tech that are required for companies to benefit most from their technology investments. Daniel is a top 5 globally ranked industry analyst and his ideas are regularly cited or shared in television appearances by CNBC, Bloomberg, Wall Street Journal and hundreds of other sites around the world.

A 7x Best-Selling Author including his most recent book “Human/Machine.” Daniel is also a Forbes and MarketWatch (Dow Jones) contributor.

An MBA and Former Graduate Adjunct Faculty, Daniel is an Austin Texas transplant after 40 years in Chicago. His speaking takes him around the world each year as he shares his vision of the role technology will play in our future.

Related Insights
Salesforce Turns Slack Into the Agentic Enterprise's Conversational Operating System
July 9, 2026

Salesforce Turns Slack Into the Agentic Enterprise’s Conversational Operating System

Keith Kirkpatrick, Vice President & Research Director, Enterprise Software & Di at Futurum, Salesforce's new MCP servers let Slack function as an agentic enterprise's conversational OS, connecting CRM, Data 360,...
HubSpot's Warmly Acquisition Embeds Real-Time Buyer Intent Directly Into the CRM Layer
July 9, 2026

HubSpot’s Warmly Acquisition Embeds Real-Time Buyer Intent Directly Into the CRM Layer

Keith Kirkpatrick, Vice President & Research Director, Enterprise Software & Di at Futurum, analyzes HubSpot's acquisition of Warmly and how embedding AI-powered buyer intent signals directly into the CRM layer...
Zoho Inventory MCP Brings Conversational AI to Enterprise Operations
July 9, 2026

Zoho Inventory MCP Brings Conversational AI to Enterprise Operations

Keith Kirkpatrick, Vice President & Research Director, Enterprise Software & Di at Futurum, Zoho Inventory MCP uses conversational AI to streamline multi-channel inventory management while building enterprise trust and reliability....
AWS Looks to Collapse the Search-Analytics Divide: How Its New OpenSearch Engine Fuels Agentic AI
July 9, 2026

AWS Looks to Collapse the Search-Analytics Divide: How Its New OpenSearch Engine Fuels Agentic AI

Brad Shimmin, VP at Futurum, explores how AWS is re-architecting Amazon OpenSearch Service. By fusing search and analytics and integrating native MCP support, AWS aims to slash log storage costs...
Kore.ai and Atos Bet on Sovereign Agentic AI, Will UK Enterprises Demand Proof, Not Promises?
July 8, 2026

Kore.ai and Atos Bet on Sovereign Agentic AI, Will UK Enterprises Demand Proof, Not Promises?

Kore.ai and Atos announce a strategic partnership to deliver Sovereign AI solutions to UK organizations, addressing data residency and compliance requirements in the rapidly expanding $181B AI platforms market....
Provisioned Throughput Redefines Open Model Inference Economics and Predictability
July 8, 2026

Provisioned Throughput Redefines Open Model Inference Economics and Predictability

Together AI's Provisioned Throughput offers enterprises reserved inference capacity, token-based pricing, 99% uptime SLA, and up to 90% cost savings, addressing critical production AI concerns....

Book a Demo

Welcome

The vision behind everything in Futurum’s Custom Research practice is this: research should show you what is happening, what comes next, and what to do about it. It should be personal to each audience, easy for people to grasp, and structured so LLMs can reason over it accurately. And it should be fast and turnkey; you want answers now, not another project to carry for quarters.

Whether you are defining business, channel, or go-to-market strategy; evaluating vendors or justifying ROI; or commissioning research to fill an emerging market need, we have your back, with a program that answers your questions with the objectivity and credibility to drive real decisions.

To do it, we bring unmatched data to bear: Futurum research, surveys, and market projections; validated market feeds; ETR’s 15 years of insight from 10,000 technology decision-makers; G2’s buyer and user data; and what our analysts hear every day. Add leading primary collection, from AI-moderated voice interviews to surveys and analyst-led interviews, all turnkey, and every project comes out credible, nuanced, and actionable.

And we don’t just drop the results in your lap. For internal work, we provide analyst-led sessions, interactive dashboards, and a range of formats. For market-facing work, Futurum delivers turnkey activation and amplification that actually gets seen, by people and by LLMs, through our media and share of voice. This is research that moves decisions and markets.

We will meet you wherever you are, from a fast-turn brief to a multi-year program, and shape the work to your goals, timeline, and budget. The right program for your moment.

If any of this is useful, I would love to talk.

Benjamin Brown, VP Custom Research, Futurum Research

Benjamin Brown

VP, Custom Research · The Futurum Group

Newsletter Sign-up Form

Get important insights straight to your inbox, receive first looks at eBooks, exclusive event invitations, custom content, and more. We promise not to spam you or sell your name to anyone. You can always unsubscribe at any time.

All fields are required






Thank you, we received your request, a member of our team will be in contact with you.