Qualcomm shares trended higher Thursday as investors focused on the growing market for agentic AI smartphones and the company’s expanding automotive partnerships, pushing qcom stock up 2.55% to $207.67 at the time of publication.
That rally lands against the backdrop of billionaire Ken Fisher holding Qualcomm as one of the top tech names in his portfolio — a reminder that big-money backers are watching the same set of catalysts that traders are pricing into the stock.
The move follows a May 5 note from Aletheia Capital reiterating a Hold rating on Qualcomm, even as the firm highlighted the company’s gains in artificial intelligence business driven by CPU and ASIC performance and said Qualcomm appears ready to produce several types of AI chips, including CPUs and lower-power accelerators.
Quantifiable industry shifts are obvious: Counterpoint Research estimates agentic AI-capable smartphone chips reached 4% market penetration by the end of 2025 and projects they could rise to 32% by 2027, a trend investors say underpins demand for Qualcomm’s AI-enabled chips. MediaTek introduced agentic AI capabilities with its Dimensity 9400 series ahead of Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 rollout, underscoring how competition is already shaping the market.
Corporate moves buttress the narrative. Aletheia’s note and Qualcomm’s own fiscal second-quarter results both point to a company in a phase of robust growth, with explicit opportunities in data centers and what Qualcomm terms Physical AI. The company’s 2021 acquisition of Nuvia and its 2025 purchase of Alphawave are cited as concrete steps that affirm those growth prospects.
Automotive ties are another fuel source. Qualcomm and Stellantis expanded a long-term partnership to integrate Snapdragon Digital Chassis chips into next-generation Stellantis vehicles, combining Qualcomm’s platform with Stellantis’ STLA Brain system to improve connectivity, cockpit technology and advanced driver-assistance features. The deal is intended to help Stellantis accelerate software updates and reduce costs through platform standardization and includes Qualcomm’s Snapdragon Ride Pilot platform, which enables features from active safety systems to Level 2+ hands-free driving across millions of Stellantis vehicles. The two firms also signed a non-binding letter of intent for Stellantis-owned autonomous driving company aiMotive to join Qualcomm Technologies, subject to certain conditions.
Still, the market reaction contains a clear tension: traders bid qcom stock well above the street’s consensus, but analysts remain cautious. The stock carries a Hold rating with an average price target of $170.52, a level materially below Thursday’s trading price. That gap highlights a disconnect between investor enthusiasm for agentic AI adoption and partnerships, and the more measured view implicit in sell-side models.
The next major test arrives on July 29, 2026, the estimated date for Qualcomm’s next earnings report. With acquisitions, AI chip ambitions and an expanded auto footprint already in place, that report will be the moment when company guidance and results either validate the rally or give analysts fresh reason to press the Hold case.
For now, the market is treating Qualcomm as a frontrunner in a fast-evolving AI-and-automotive story: the shares are higher, prominent investors like Ken Fisher count the stock among top tech holdings, and industry data points show agentic AI gaining traction — but the analyst consensus and the pending July earnings date make the path forward a test of whether the optimism is durable.



