Marvell Technology vs Broadcom: One Stock is Better Positioned for the AI Boom
AVGO posted $10.8 billion in AI semiconductor revenue, up 143%, while MRVL shares surged 39% post-earnings on just $2.4 billion in total revenue.
Marvell raised $2 billion and closed two acquisitions to build capability; Broadcom returned capital on free cash flow margins of 46%.
Hock Tan guided $16 billion in Q3 AI semiconductor revenue, a 200%-plus year-over-year jump that sets a bar any miss will quickly punish.
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Marvell Technology (NASDAQ:MRVL) and Broadcom (NASDAQ:AVGO) both reported AI-heavy quarters within a week of each other.
Marvell posted Q1 FY2027 results on May 27, 2026, leaning on custom silicon and optical interconnects. Broadcom followed on June 3, 2026 with record AI chip sales and a blockbuster forward guide. Both serve hyperscalers, yet the scale gap and strategic posture make this comparison unusually clean.
Marvell's quarter was anchored by its Data Center segment, which delivered $1.83 billion in revenue, 76% of the total and up 27% year over year. Total revenue reached $2.418 billion, up 27.6%, and management guided Q2 to $2.70 billion, roughly 35% growth.
CEO Matt Murphy told investors, "We are seeing exceptional AI-related bookings, and as a result, we are significantly raising Marvell's revenue outlook for both fiscal 2027 and fiscal 2028." That tone matters because the optical interconnect roadmap and custom XPU pipeline only pay off if hyperscalers keep ordering.
Broadcom played a very different game. Total revenue hit $22.187 billion, up 47.9%, with AI semiconductor revenue of $10.8 billion, growing 143% year over year. Hock Tan was direct: "In Q3 we expect semiconductor revenue from AI to grow over 200 percent year-over-year to $16 billion." Operating leverage looks unreal, with free cash flow of $10.262 billion, or 46% of revenue.
Custom AI accelerators plus AI networking
Marvell is in acquisition mode. It closed Celestial AI for photonic fabric tech in February 2026, picked up XConn Technologies for chiplet connectivity, and raised $2 billion through a Series A Convertible Preferred. That is a company stretching to bolt on capability before competitors catch up.
Broadcom is doing the opposite. It paid $0.65 per share in dividends and ran $600 million in buybacks while still throwing off cash. Two postures, two stories.
Investor reaction split sharply. Marvell shares climbed 39.78% since its earnings report. Broadcom shares dropped 22.15% over the same window, even after beating. Expectations were already sky high for AVGO heading into the report.
For Marvell, I want to see Celestial AI photonic fabric move from announcement to revenue, and I want to confirm the custom XPU ramp does not concentrate further into one or two customers. Insider direction is net selling, which sits awkwardly next to a P/E of 92. For Broadcom, the bar is the $16 billion AI semi guide for Q3. Miss that, and the multiple compresses fast.
On steadier compounding metrics, Broadcom screens stronger. The AI numbers are larger, the cash generation is heavier, and the VMware software stack provides a buffer that Marvell does not have. The recent pullback also resets the entry.
On a higher-variance profile, Marvell stands out. A 227% year-to-date move says the market already believes, but if photonic fabric and custom XPU revenue ramp the way Murphy implied, the FY2028 guide raise could come earlier. the next earnings report on both will be the key catalyst to watch, especially with Marvell's 9.78% drop last week hinting that some of the AI premium is already cooling.
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