Stock Markets April 28, 2026 08:42 AM

Analysts Warn Qualcomm Rally May Be Driven More by Short Covering Than Fundamentals

Unconfirmed OpenAI handset report fuels a multi-day surge; analysts remain cautious ahead of the company’s upcoming earnings

By Leila Farooq QCOM
Analysts Warn Qualcomm Rally May Be Driven More by Short Covering Than Fundamentals
QCOM

Qualcomm shares jumped more than 11% on Friday and added roughly 1% on Monday after an unverified Asia-based report tied the company and MediaTek to an OpenAI smartphone processor with a 2028 production target. Several sell-side analysts say the price action looks driven by short covering and retail buying rather than clear fundamental improvement, flagging potential downside risks tied to smartphone demand, memory prices and upcoming earnings guidance.

Key Points

  • Shares rose more than 11% on Friday and roughly 1% on Monday after an unconfirmed Asia report about Qualcomm, MediaTek and OpenAI working on a smartphone processor targeting 2028 production.
  • Analysts describe the rally as driven largely by short covering and retail buying rather than clear fundamental improvements; concerns center on smartphone dynamics, Apple content roll-off, and memory-price-driven demand weakness.
  • Several sell-side analysts flagged specific risks ahead of Qualcomm’s upcoming earnings, including below-consensus fiscal 2026 EPS estimates and the potential for April 29 guidance to act as a downside catalyst.

Qualcomm shares experienced a sharp lift late last week - rising over 11% on Friday and gaining an additional roughly 1% on Monday - on momentum that analysts say should be viewed with caution ahead of the company’s earnings report on Wednesday.

The most-cited spark for the recent move was an unconfirmed report from Asia indicating Qualcomm and MediaTek are collaborating with OpenAI on a processor intended for an upcoming smartphone, with a 2028 production timeline mentioned. The report has not been verified and analysts have been measured in attributing lasting significance to the rumor.

Wolfe Research analyst Chris Caso acknowledged the market reaction but questioned its staying power. "We would be similarly skeptical that an OpenAI phone would materialize into much of a catalyst," he wrote, adding that iPhone and Android's grip on the market "would be tough to overcome." Caso also warned that if OpenAI were to capture share from Android, the effect could merely cannibalize Qualcomm's current business rather than create incremental revenue, leaving the company’s overall prospects largely unchanged.

Bernstein analyst Stacy Rasgon, who rates Qualcomm Market Perform with a $140 price target, similarly described the recent moves as lacking fundamental support. "The responses feel a bit more 'squeeze-y' than fundamental to us at this point," he wrote. Rasgon’s model for fiscal 2026 full-year earnings per share stands at $10.64, below the Street consensus of $11.02. He cited weakening smartphone dynamics and the start of a meaningful Apple content roll-off toward year-end as reasons for his below-consensus estimate.

Mizuho TMT specialist Jordan Klein was even more direct in his assessment, calling the rally a "massive short squeeze and dumb retail chasers." Klein pointed to rising memory prices as a potential drag on smartphone demand in the second half of 2026 and highlighted Qualcomm’s April 29 earnings guidance as a possible downside catalyst if it disappoints.

With momentum partly attributed to position squaring and retail flows, analysts are urging investors to weigh the market’s recent exuberance against the company’s near-term fundamentals, sector dynamics and scheduled corporate disclosures.


Summary: Qualcomm’s recent stock lift follows an unverified report linking the company and MediaTek to an OpenAI smartphone processor targeting 2028 production. Several analysts say the rally appears driven more by short covering and retail buying than by fresh fundamental evidence, citing competitive headwinds, forecasted earnings below consensus and potential pressures from memory prices and upcoming earnings guidance.

Risks

  • The recent price gains may reflect a "massive short squeeze" and increased retail activity rather than durable fundamental improvement, which could reverse if buying pressure eases - impacting semiconductor and retail investor sentiment.
  • Rising memory prices could weaken smartphone demand in H2 2026, creating headwinds for chipset suppliers and related supply chains in the smartphone ecosystem.
  • Disappointing earnings guidance on April 29 could act as a catalyst to push shares lower, particularly if company commentary confirms weakening smartphone dynamics or a material Apple content decline.

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