| Qualcomm Soars After Taking Aim at Nvidia With New AI Chips By  Ian King
 October 27, 2025 at 10:00 AM EDT
 Updated on
 October 27, 2025 at 4:36 PM EDT
 
 Takeaways  by Bloomberg AI
 Qualcomm Inc. shares  rose to their highest price in 15 months after the company unveiled  chips and computers for the lucrative AI data center market, aiming to  challenge  Nvidia Corp. in the fastest-growing part of the industry.Qualcomm Inc. shares rose to their highest price in 15 months after unveiling chips and computers for the AI data center market.The company's new AI200 lineup will start shipping next year, with the first customer being Saudi Arabia's AI startup Humain.Qualcomm  is trying to break into the market for AI accelerators, which is  already dominated by Nvidia Corp., with a different approach that  utilizes new memory-related capabilities and power efficiency.
 
 The  company’s new AI200 lineup will start shipping next year, Qualcomm said  on Monday. The first customer will be Saudi Arabia’s AI startup Humain,  which  plans to deploy 200 megawatts’ worth of computing systems based on the chips starting in 2026.
 
 Qualcomm  is trying to break into the market for AI accelerators, which are used  to create and run artificial intelligence models. It’s an area that’s  already transformed the semiconductor industry, with hundreds of  billions of dollars being spent on data centers to power AI software and  services. The torrid growth has turned market leader Nvidia into the  world’s most valuable company.
 
 Qualcomm,  the largest maker of smartphone processors, looks to gain a foothold in  this market with a different approach. It argues that new  memory-related capabilities and the power efficiency of Qualcomm’s  designs — that owe their roots to mobile device technology — will  attract customers, despite its relatively late entry.
 
 The shares climbed 11% to $187.68, their biggest single-day jump since April and the highest price since July 2024.  Arm Holdings Plc, which develops some of the underlying technology used by Qualcomm, gained 4.7% to $178.62 at the close in New York.
 
 The Humain deal suggests there’s “early traction” for Qualcomm’s new AI accelerators, Bloomberg Intelligence analysts Kunjan Sobhani and Oscar Hernandez Tejada said in a note.
 
 “Though  it’s too soon to call this a serious challenge to Nvidia’s dominance,  even modest share gains in the over $500 billion AI accelerator market  could translate into billions in incremental revenue,” they said.
 
 Qualcomm’s  AI200 product will be offered in a range of forms: a standalone  component, cards that can be added into existing machines or as part of a  full rack of servers provided by Qualcomm. Those debut products will be  followed by the AI250 in 2027, the San Diego company said.
 
 If  supplied only as a chip, the component could work inside gear that’s  based on processors from Nvidia or other rivals. As a full server, it  will compete with offerings from those chipmakers.
 
 The  new offerings are built around a neural processing unit, a type of chip  that debuted in smartphones and is designed to speed up AI-related  workloads without killing battery life. That capability has been  developed further through Qualcomm’s move into laptop chips and has now  been scaled up for use in the most powerful computers.
 
 Under Chief Executive Officer Cristiano Amon,  Qualcomm is trying to diversify away from its dependence on  smartphones, which are no longer increasing sales as quickly as they  once did. The company has branched out into chips for cars and PCs, but  is only now offering a product in what’s become the biggest single  market for processors.
 
 Qualcomm has been “quiet in this space, taking its time and building its strength,” according to Durga Malladi,  a company senior vice president. Qualcomm is in talks with all of the  biggest buyers of such chips on deploying server racks based on its  hardware, he said.
 
 Winning orders from companies such as  Microsoft Corp., Amazon.com Inc. and  Meta Platforms Inc.  would offer a significant new revenue source for Qualcomm. The company  has posted solid, profitable growth over the last two years, but  investors have favored other tech stocks. Qualcomm shares had gained 10%  in 2025 through the end of last week, lagging behind a 40% surge by the  Philadelphia Stock Exchange Semiconductor Index.
 
 Nvidia, which remains atop the AI computing world, is on target to generate more than $180 billion in revenue from its data center unit this year, more than any other chipmaker – including Qualcomm – will get in total, according to estimates.
 
 Qualcomm’s  new chips will offer an unprecedented amount of memory, according to  Malladi. They’ll have as many as 768 gigabytes of low-power dynamic  random access memory.
 
 Memory  access speed and capacity are crucial to the rate at which the chips  can make sense of the mountain of data handled in AI work. The new chips  and computers are aimed at inference work, the computing behind running  AI services once the large language models that underpin the software  have been trained.
 
 AI  growth also could help Qualcomm offset a loss of business from Apple  Inc., according to Bloomberg Intelligence. After years of generating  about 20% of Qualcomm’s revenue, the iPhone maker is switching to  in-house chips.
 
 (Updates with closing share prices in the fifth paragraph.)
 
 bloomberg.com
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