Meet the Stock-Split Stock That Soared by 11,210% Over the Past 15 Years. Now, It's Poised to Join Nvidia, Apple, Microsoft, Amazon, Alphabet, Meta, and Tesla in the $1 Trillion Club by 2026

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Technological advances over the past 20 years have been nothing short of profound, and nowhere is that progress more evident than in the sizes of the world's largest companies. Two decades ago, General Electric and ExxonMobil were the world's largest companies by market cap, clocking in at $319 billion and $283 billion, respectively.

Now, the list of the largest companies is dominated by businesses at the cutting edge of technology. Nvidia, Apple, and Microsoft are each worth more than $3 trillion, and each has spent time atop the chart at some point in 2024. Other tech-centric members of the $1 trillion club include Amazon, Alphabet, Meta Platforms, and Tesla, boasting valuations of between $1 trillion and $2.2 trillion.

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With a market cap of roughly $812 billion (as of this writing), Broadcom (NASDAQ: AVGO) seems ordained to earn membership in this exclusive fraternity. The company offers a wide range of products that are staples in the data centers where most artificial intelligence (AI) systems reside, and Broadcom's critical technology could push it past the $1 trillion milestone sooner rather than later.

A golden bull statue poised on the edge of a laptop.
Image source: Getty Images.

A chip off the old block

Broadcom is one of the world's leading custom chipmakers, but also supplies a host of complementary products and services to players in the mobile, broadband, cable, and data center industries. Management estimates that "99% of all internet traffic crosses through some type of Broadcom technology." This helps explain why its technology is crucial to the expansion of generative AI, much of which resides in data centers and the cloud.

Broadcom's acquisition of VMWare last year also represents a compelling opportunity for the company. Management has said it's making progress in converting VMWare's software sales from a perpetual model to a subscription license model, which will continue boosting recurring revenue into 2025. Furthermore, as the integration of VMWare wraps up, Broadcom is guiding for improved operating margins and greater profits.

The results paint a compelling picture. In its fiscal third quarter (which ended Aug. 4), Broadcom's revenue climbed 47% year over year to $13.1 billion, while its adjusted earnings per share (EPS) increased by 18% to $1.24. Management is predicting the growth streak will continue, and boosted its full-year revenue forecast to $51.52 billion, which would amount to growth of roughly 44%.

This maintained the company's track record of consistent operating performance and impressive stock price gains, which prompted the 10-for-1 stock split Broadcom completed in July.