The artificial intelligence infrastructure race is heating up, and Broadcom (AVGO) is projected to retain its leadership as an AI server compute ASIC design partner with 60% market share in 2027, according to Counterpoint Research.
As tech giants like Alphabet (GOOGL) (GOOG), Amazon (AMZN), Microsoft (MSFT), and Meta (META) accelerate their shift toward custom AI chips, the entire ASIC market is poised for explosive growth.
AI server compute ASIC shipments are expected to triple by 2027 as hyperscalers build out massive infrastructure to support their AI ambitions. This surge is driven by the rampant demand for specialized chips that power everything from Google’s Gemini models to Amazon’s Trainium clusters and Microsoft’s Maia processors.
What makes this trend particularly compelling for investors is the structural shift happening across the industry. “In-house AI Server Compute ASIC design growth is validating the in-house custom XPU era, where AI accelerators are tailor-made for special and specific workloads,” explained Counterpoint analyst Neil Shah.
As power and space constraints intensify, hyperscalers are increasingly turning to custom silicon solutions, and Broadcom is at the center of this transformation as the dominant design partner enabling it.
Broadcom is cementing its position as a dominant player in the booming artificial intelligence infrastructure market.
In fiscal 2025 (ended in October), Broadcom reported AI sales of $20 billion, up 65% year-over-year (YoY).
It expects AI revenue to double in fiscal Q1 of 2026 to over $8 billion.
Notably, CEO Hock Tan’s compensation incentives are tied to growing AI revenue to over $120 billion by 2030.
Broadcom has a comprehensive product portfolio in the AI data center segment. Beyond custom AI accelerators, it provides critical networking components, including Tomahawk switches, digital signal processors, optical components, and PCI Express switches.
The company currently holds over $73 billion in AI-related backlog expected to ship over the next 18 months, with $53 billion of that tied to custom accelerators alone. The market dynamics are shifting in Broadcom’s favor as hyperscalers adopt custom silicon solutions optimized for their specific workloads.
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