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Qualcomm eyes modular AI deal as stock falls on tech selloff pressure

Qualcomm eyes modular AI deal as stock falls on tech selloff pressure
Ananthu C U
24 June 2026, 00:35 AM

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Qualcomm (QCOM) buy

Buy QCOM. The stock is down on broad tech selling, but the Modular deal (≈$4B) is a clear catalyst: it strengthens Qualcomm’s AI software/inference deployment story across hardware/cloud, not just chips. Pair that with the investor day focus on next-gen processors and a likely major custom data-center chip customer—this can re-rate the multiple if guidance ties AI demand to revenue.

Key Risk: Deal falls apart or gets materially renegotiated (price/terms), making the AI software push look like hype.

Tenstorrent (private) exposure via QCOM

Buy QCOM again as the “hardware leg” optionality. The article flags talks to acquire Tenstorrent for $8–10B. Even if Modular closes first, the market will start pricing a broader AI platform (software + custom silicon). QCOM is the liquid way to own that second leg without waiting for a private-company outcome.

Key Risk: Regulatory or competitive push blocks the Tenstorrent deal, and investors conclude Qualcomm’s AI M&A strategy won’t convert into completed assets.

  • Qualcomm falls 6% despite $4 billion Modular AI deal talks.
  • Stock up 72% in 3 months ahead of investor day updates.
  • Tenstorrent talks signal broader Qualcomm AI expansion push.

Qualcomm Inc. shares moved lower on Tuesday, falling about 6% in trading as a broader technology selloff weighed on sentiment, even as fresh reports pointed to an expansion of its artificial intelligence ambitions.

The decline came despite Bloomberg reporting that Qualcomm is in advanced talks to acquire AI infrastructure software company Modular Inc. in a deal valued at around USD 4 billion (approx. $5.8 billion).

A transaction could be announced in the coming weeks, though sources emphasized that a final agreement is not guaranteed and terms could still change.

Qualcomm stock has been one of the stronger performers in the semiconductor space in recent months, rising 72% over the past three months and gaining around 30% year to date.

Investors have been positioning ahead of the company’s investor day on Wednesday, where Qualcomm is expected to provide updates on its next-generation processor strategy and potentially identify a major customer for a custom data-center chip.

Modular acquisition would expand Qualcomm’s AI software push

Modular Inc., founded in 2022 in Silicon Valley by Chris Lattner and Tim Davis, two former Google employees, focuses on building software tools designed to simplify the deployment of artificial intelligence models across different hardware systems and cloud environments.

According to its website, the founders created the company after becoming “frustrated by AI’s fragmented infrastructure.”

The startup has positioned itself in a growing segment of the AI market focused on inferencing and cross-platform deployment, an area increasingly seen as critical as AI workloads expand beyond training into real-world applications.

Modular raised USD 250 million (approx. $364.3 million) in a September funding round at a USD 1.6 billion (approx. $2.3 billion) valuation, bringing total capital raised to USD 380 million (approx. $553.8 million).

The reported acquisition price of roughly USD 4 billion (approx. $5.8 billion) would represent more than a 2.5-times increase in valuation in less than two years.

The company is backed by investors including DFJ Growth, Factory, General Catalyst, Google Ventures, Greylock Partners and US Innovative Technology Fund.

Qualcomm pursues broader AI acquisition strategy

The Modular discussions are part of a wider acquisition strategy aimed at strengthening Qualcomm’s position in artificial intelligence.

The Information in a seperate report said that the company is in talks to acquire AI chip startup Tenstorrent for between USD 8 billion (approx. $11.7 billion) and USD 10 billion (approx. $14.6 billion).

If completed, the two deals would reflect a dual-track AI expansion strategy: hardware capabilities through Tenstorrent and software infrastructure through Modular.

Qualcomm has previously pursued similar expansion efforts through acquisitions, including its agreement to buy Alphawave IP Group Plc for about USD 2.4 billion (approx. $3.5 billion) in cash.

Its earlier attempt to acquire NXP Semiconductors NV was ultimately scrapped due to regulatory hurdles.

The company is expected to use its upcoming investor day to provide further details on its AI roadmap, including custom chip development and potential major customer relationships.

Despite the acquisition momentum, Qualcomm shares remain under pressure in the near term amid a broader tech sector downturn.