Broadcom (AVGO) Stock After 56% One Year Surge Is The Valuation Still Sensible
Broadcom Limited AVGO | 0.00 |
- If you are wondering whether Broadcom's current share price still makes sense after a long run, the key question now is how that price stacks up against what the business might reasonably be worth.
- The stock recently closed at US$385.57, with the share price broadly flat over 7 days, down 7.5% over the past month, up 10.9% year to date and up 56.3% over the last year, while the 3 year return is very large.
- Recent headlines have focused on Broadcom's role in semiconductors and infrastructure software, as investors reassess how those businesses might support long term demand. This context helps explain why the stock has seen both strong multi year gains and shorter term pullbacks as expectations reset.
- On Simply Wall St's six point valuation framework Broadcom scores 5 out of 6. The rest of this article will walk through the main valuation methods behind that score, and then finish with a more complete way to think about what the stock could be worth.
Approach 1: Broadcom Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) Analysis
A Discounted Cash Flow, or DCF, model takes estimates of the cash a company could generate in the future and discounts those amounts back to today to arrive at an estimate of what the business might be worth now.
For Broadcom, Simply Wall St uses a 2 Stage Free Cash Flow to Equity model, based on cash flow projections in $. The latest twelve month free cash flow is about $32.8b. Analyst and extrapolated estimates suggest free cash flow could reach $165.5b by 2030, with a detailed path of projected cash flows between 2026 and 2035 that are discounted back to the present.
When those discounted cash flows are added up, the model points to an estimated intrinsic value of about $416.61 per share. Compared with the recent share price of $385.57, the DCF output implies the stock is around 7.5% undervalued. This sits in the margin where the price and the model are broadly in line.
Result: ABOUT RIGHT
Broadcom is fairly valued according to our Discounted Cash Flow (DCF), but this can change at a moment's notice. Track the value in your watchlist or portfolio and be alerted on when to act.
Approach 2: Broadcom Price vs Earnings
For a profitable company like Broadcom, the P/E ratio is a useful way to link what you pay for each share to the earnings that the business is currently generating. It helps you see how much the market is willing to pay today for each dollar of earnings.
What counts as a "normal" or "fair" P/E depends on how fast earnings are expected to grow and how risky those earnings are. Higher expected growth and lower perceived risk can justify a higher P/E, while lower growth or higher risk usually point to a lower P/E.
Broadcom currently trades on a P/E of 62.57x. That sits below the peer average of 84.09x and also below the Semiconductor industry average of 67.75x. Simply Wall St's Fair Ratio for Broadcom is 78.96x. This is its proprietary estimate of what the P/E might be given factors like earnings growth, industry, profit margin, market cap and risks.
The Fair Ratio is more tailored than a simple comparison with peers or the industry, because it incorporates those company specific traits rather than treating all stocks as the same. With Broadcom's actual P/E at 62.57x compared with a Fair Ratio of 78.96x, the stock screens as undervalued on this measure.
Result: UNDERVALUED
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Upgrade Your Decision Making: Choose your Broadcom Narrative
Earlier we mentioned that there is an even better way to understand valuation, so this is where Narratives come in, letting you connect your view of Broadcom’s story to a set of numbers like fair value, future revenue, earnings and margins, then compare that story with the current share price.
On Simply Wall St’s Community page, Narratives are short, structured stories created by investors that link a company’s role in the world to a financial forecast and then to a fair value estimate. Instead of only looking at a P/E or DCF in isolation, you see the reasoning that sits behind those numbers.
For Broadcom, one investor might frame it as a long term “digital infrastructure” company with a fair value around US$651.05 based on certain growth, margin and discount rate assumptions. Another might focus on AI related risks and cyclicality and arrive at a fair value closer to US$258.71. Narratives make those different assumptions explicit so you can decide which feels closer to your own view.
Because Narratives on Simply Wall St are tied to live data, they update automatically when new forecasts, news or earnings are released. This helps you quickly see whether your preferred fair value still looks attractive compared with Broadcom’s current price or whether the gap has narrowed enough that it might be time to reassess your thesis.
For Broadcom, however, we will make it really easy for you with previews of two leading Broadcom Narratives:
These sit on opposite sides of the debate, so you can see how different assumptions about AI demand, customer concentration and long term infrastructure needs translate into very different fair values.
Fair value: US$651.05
Implied undervaluation vs last close: about 40.8%
Revenue growth assumption: 22%
- Frames Broadcom as a “digital infrastructure” company at the center of data processing, connectivity, networking and software, rather than just an AI chip stock.
- Highlights long term demand for more computing, bandwidth and data movement across AI, cloud and enterprise software as the key driver, supported by strong free cash flow and disciplined capital allocation.
- Flags elevated expectations and AI enthusiasm as the main risk, with potential valuation compression if hyperscaler spending or custom silicon adoption slows, but notes diversification and cash generation as important sources of resilience.
Fair value: US$338.83
Implied overvaluation vs last close: about 13.8%
Revenue growth assumption: 34.07%
- Argues that Broadcom is increasingly reliant on a concentrated group of AI hyperscaler customers, so any slowdown in their spending or move to in house chips could hit revenue and margins hard.
- Points to geopolitical pressures, export controls, intense competition and ongoing R&D and capex needs as factors that could squeeze pricing power and earnings stability even if revenue keeps growing.
- Builds a fair value around US$338.83 using relatively strong growth and margin forecasts but a lower future P/E multiple, reflecting concern that current market expectations may already be too optimistic.
Together these two Narratives show the current spread of views on Broadcom, from a long term digital infrastructure compounder with plenty of runway to a stock where AI enthusiasm, customer concentration and sector risk could leave less room for error.
Do you think there's more to the story for Broadcom? Head over to our Community to see what others are saying!
This article by Simply Wall St is general in nature. We provide commentary based on historical data and analyst forecasts only using an unbiased methodology and our articles are not intended to be financial advice. It does not constitute a recommendation to buy or sell any stock, and does not take account of your objectives, or your financial situation. We aim to bring you long-term focused analysis driven by fundamental data. Note that our analysis may not factor in the latest price-sensitive company announcements or qualitative material. Simply Wall St has no position in any stocks mentioned.
