Broadcom, Marvell, Synopsys: The Chips That Might Not Crumble In The Coming Storm

Zinger Key Points

The semiconductor sector is bracing for a shakeup, and JPMorgan’s Harlan Sur isn't mincing words. "Expect in-line results but tariff/trade related dynamics to drive weaker 2Q/2H25 and negative earnings revision cycle." That's Wall Street-speak for buckle up – it's about to get bumpy.

Tariff Troubles: A 15-25% EPS Trim Ahead?

As first-quarter earnings begin to roll in, Sur says the Street should prepare for a "kick off negative earnings revision cycle," with forward EPS estimates potentially being slashed by 15-25% over the next few quarters. Investors hoping that semi stocks had already hit bottom after a ~25% tariff-driven slump may be in for another jolt – Sur sees another 10-15% downside from here.

But this isn't just about numbers. The broader concern is about confidence, or lack thereof. "Rapidly changing tariff headlines are negatively impacting consumer and business confidence," Sur notes, with turn business — which can make up 20-30% of guidance – now at risk due to reduced visibility. Add in China's latest tariff volley against U.S.-fabricated chips, and names like Intel Corp INTC, Texas Instruments Inc TXN, Qorvo Inc QRVO, and Skyworks Solutions Inc SWKS suddenly look exposed.

Read Also: Qorvo Stock Bounces, But Charts Still Bearish – Starboard’s Jeffrey Smith Sees A Comeback Play

AI And Datacenter: The Only Bright Spots

That said, JPMorgan isn't throwing out the entire chip basket. Sur urges a "selective" approach, spotlighting Broadcom Inc AVGO, Marvell Technologies Inc MRVL and Analog Devices Inc. ADI as top picks – all tied closely to AI and data infrastructure. These are the companies best positioned to ride the "strong demand in accelerated compute/AI," even if GPU giants like Nvidia Corp NVDA and Advanced Micro Devices Inc AMD face potential downside from tightening China restrictions and "upcoming AI diffusion rules."

EDA, Semicap: Downturn-Proof Darlings

In the tools-of-the-trade corner, KLA Corp KLAC and Synopsys Inc SNPS also earn JPM's stamp of approval. EDA players like Synopsys are seen as resilient. "R&D budgets don't get cut in downturns," Sur says, a mantra every long-term investor in chip design software should pin to their monitors.

Meanwhile, the "flat-to-down" outlook for WFE (wafer fab equipment) in 2025 spells more caution for semicap names, though JPMorgan still favors Applied Materials Inc AMAT, KLA Corp, and Lam Research Corp LRCX – all expected to outperform thanks to "rising capital intensity" and growing service revenue.

The Down-Cycle Playbook Moment Is Here

The macro backdrop remains fraught. JPM economists now peg the chance of a U.S. recession at 60%, as the tariff storm clouds hang heavy. Demand pull-forward in smartphones might make the first quarter look fine, but "incremental conservatism" is expected to dominate the second quarter and H2 guidance.

Bottom line?

This is a "down-cycle playbook" moment. The sector's long-term structural story — AI, content tailwinds, and rising chip complexity — remains intact. But for now, it's all about threading the needle between "inevitable slowdown" and the pockets of AI-driven strength.

And as Sur says, "remain selective on stocks."

Read Next:

Photo: Shutterstock

Got Questions? Ask
Which semiconductor stocks might be undervalued?
How will tariffs impact Intel and its earnings?
What opportunities exist in AI-focused companies like Broadcom?
Which EDA tools could thrive despite the downturn?
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Which companies may benefit from rising R&D budgets?
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What are the risks for Nvidia amid tightening restrictions?
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