OpenAI-Broadcom agreement sends shares of chipmaker soaring
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OpenAI-Broadcom agreement sends shares of chipmaker soaring

Why This Matters

OpenAI, the creator of ChatGPT, has inked a number of blockbuster deals this year, aiming to ease constraints on computing power.

October 13, 2025
04:08 PM
5 min read
AI Enhanced

AI·Artificial IntelligenceOpenAI-Broadcom agreement sends s of chipmaker soaringBy Dina BassBy Shirin GhaffaryBy BloombergBy Dina BassBy Shirin GhaffaryBy Bloomberg OpenAI CEO Sam Altman.Kyle Grillot/Bloomberg via Getty ImagesBroadcom Inc.

s jumped after OpenAI agreed to buy the company’s custom chips and networking equipment in a multiyear deal, part of an ambitious plan by the startup to add artificial intelligence infrastructure.

As part of the pact, OpenAI will design the hardware and work with Broadcom to develop it, according to a joint statement on Monday.

The plan is to add 10 gigawatts’ worth of AI data center capacity, with the companies beginning to deploy racks of servers containing the gear in the second half of 2026.

By customizing the cessors, OpenAI said it will be able to embed what it has learned from AI models and services “directly into the hardware, unlocking new levels of capability and intelligence.” The hardware rollout should be by the end of 2029, according to the companies.

For Broadcom, the move vides deeper access to the booming AI market.

Monday’s agreement confirms an arrangement that Broadcom Chief Executive Officer Hock Tan had hinted at during an earnings conference call last month.

Investors sent Broadcom s up as as much as 11% on Monday, betting that the OpenAI alliance will generate hundreds of billions of dollars in new revenue for the chipmaker.

But the details of how OpenAI will pay for the equipment aren’t spelled out.

While the AI startup has shown it can easily raise funding from investors, it’s burning through wads of cash and doesn’t expect to be cash-flow positive until around the end of this decade.

OpenAI, the creator of ChatGPT, has inked a number of blockbuster deals this year, aiming to ease constraints on computing power.

Nvidia Corp., whose chips handle the majority of AI work, said last month that it will invest as much as $100 billion in OpenAI to support new infrastructure — with a goal of at least 10 GW of capacity.

And just last week, OpenAI announced a pact to deploy 6 GW of Advanced Micro Device Inc. cessors over multiple years.

As AI and cloud companies announce large jects every few days, it’s often not how the efforts are being financed.

The interlocking deals also have boosted fears of a bubble in AI spending, particularly as many of these partnerships involve OpenAI, a fast-growing but unfitable .

While purchasing chips from others, OpenAI has also been working on designing its own semiconductors.

They’re mainly int to handle the inference stage of running AI models — the phase after the nology is trained.

There’s no investment or stock component to the Broadcom deal, OpenAI said, making it different than the agreements with Nvidia and AMD.

An OpenAI spokesperson declined to on how the company will finance the chips, but the underlying idea is that more computing power will let the company sell more services.

A single gigawatt of AI computing capacity today costs roughly $35 billion for the chips alone, with 10 GW totaling upwards of $350 billion.

But a chief reason OpenAI is working to develop its own chip is to bring down its costs, and it’s un what price Broadcom’s chips will command under the deal.

OpenAI might be trying to emulate Alphabet Inc.’s Google, which made its own chips using Broadcom’s nology and saw lower costs compared with other AI companies, such as Meta Platforms Inc., according to Bloomberg Intelligence analyst Mandeep Singh.

Google’s success with Broadcom might have steered OpenAI to that chipmaker, rather than suppliers such as Marvell nology Inc., Singh added.

In announcing the agreement, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman said that his company has been working with Broadcom for 18 months.

The startup is rethinking nology starting with the transistors and going all the way up to what happens when someone asks ChatGPT a question, he said on a podcast released by his company.

“By being able to optimize across that entire stack, we can get huge efficiency gains, and that will lead to much better performance, faster models, cheaper models.” When Tan referred to the agreement last month, he didn’t name the customer, though people familiar with the matter identified it as OpenAI.

“If you do your own chips, you control your destiny,” Tan said in the podcast Monday. Broadcom has increasingly been seen as a key beneficiary of AI spending, helping pel its price this year.

The stock was up 40% so far this year through Friday’s close, outpacing a 29% gain by the benchmark Philadelphia Stock Exchange Semiconductor Index.

OpenAI, meanwhile, has garnered a $500 billion valuation, making it the world’s biggest startup by that measure. By tapping Broadcom’s networking nology, OpenAI is hedging its bets.

Broadcom’s Ethernet-based options compete with Nvidia’s prietary nology. OpenAI also will be designing its own gear as part of its work on custom hardware, the startup said.

Broadcom won’t be viding the data center capacity itself. Instead, it will deploy server racks with custom hardware to facilities run by either OpenAI or its cloud-computing partners.

A single gigawatt is the capacity of a conventional nu power plant.

Still, 10 GW of computing power alone isn’t enough to support OpenAI’s vision of achieving artificial general intelligence, said OpenAI co-founder and President Greg Brockman.

“That is a drop in the bucket compared to where we need to go,” he said.

Getting to the level under discussion isn’t going to happen quickly, said Charlie Kawwas, president of Broadcom’s semiconductor solutions group.

“Take railroads — it took a century to roll it out as critical infrastructure. If you take the internet, it took 30 years,” he said.

“This is not going to take five years.” Fortune Global Forum returns Oct. 26–27, 2025 in Riyadh. CEOs and global leaders will gather for a dynamic, invitation-only event shaping the future of .

Apply for an invitation.

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