
In a recent announcement, the Magnificent Seven tech giant Meta Platforms (NASDAQ: META) unveiled four customized artificial intelligence (AI) chips. This comes on the heels of semiconductor design behemoth Broadcom’s (NASDAQ: AVGO) earnings report, where CEO Hock Tan made it a point to specifically address Meta.
Now, Meta is giving a wink back to Broadcom in a development that has clear positive implications for AVGO. Still, there are other negative factors worth noting. What does this news mean for Broadcom going forward?
META and AVGO Confirm MTIA Partnership
For some time, market watchers and analysts have generally believed that Meta is one of Broadcom’s custom AI processor buyers. However, Broadcom itself has never referred to Meta in this capacity during its earnings calls, until now. In Broadcom’s Q1 2026 call, Tan said, “Contrary to recent analyst reports, Meta's custom accelerator MTIA road map is alive and well. We're shipping now.”
MTIA, which stands for Meta Training and Inference Accelerator, is a custom chip lineup developed in collaboration with Broadcom. Tan’s statement came after reports that Meta halted the development of its most advanced custom AI training chip, codenamed Olympus.
Notably, Meta specifically mentioned Broadcom in its custom chip press release. The company said, “Meta Training and Inference Accelerator (MTIA), our family of homegrown AI chips developed in close partnership with Broadcom, has remained and will continue to be an important part of Meta’s AI infrastructure strategy.”
Markets already generally accepted this partnership, but the fact that both companies are specifically acknowledging this now removes any doubt.
The Good: META-AVGO Partnership Expands Into GenAI
The title of Meta’s post, “Four MTIA Chips in Two Years: Scaling AI Experiences for Billions," provides direct support for the bullish scenario Broadcom laid out in its earnings. Hock Tan noted that the majority of its customers are moving to develop two custom chips with AVGO a year, the exact pace of development that the post describes. This lends legitimacy to Tan’s statements and the idea that Broadcom is deepening its relationships with customers.
Meta is using MTIA for a variety of purposes. This includes training and inference on its ranking and recommendation (R&R) models. Training is the process of developing more intelligent models, while inference is the process of deploying those models to answer questions and perform tasks.
R&R training and inference allow the company to deliver increasingly engaging content and more targeted advertisements to its users. The company has 3.5 billion users across its apps, or more than 40% of the world’s population. Thus, Meta has huge needs in this space that it is relying on Broadcom to meet.
The MTIA series also extends beyond R&R. The company will use MTIA 450 and MTIA 500 to enable GenAI inference, with mass deployments coming in 2027. GenAI inference likely refers to chatbot queries, video and image generation, and AI business agents in WhatsApp.
Experts have not considered Meta’s LLaMa models state-of-the-art compared to others like ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini. However, that doesn’t mean they can’t be useful and generate revenue for the company. Notably, Meta AI has over 1 billion users, providing an opportunity to do just that.
For Broadcom, the expansion of MTIA chips beyond R&R and into GenAI is positive. As Broadcom supports Meta’s core workloads and those that are emerging, the logical conclusion is more chip sales.
The Bad: META-AVGO GenAI Training Chip Takes a Back Seat
However, it is also important to note that Meta’s announcement did not include a GenAI training chip. This adds weight to reports that Meta is rolling back Olympus development. Meta's Chief Financial Officer, Susan Li, also recently made a statement that aligns with this at the Morgan Stanley Technology Conference. She said Meta “expects” and is “hopeful” that it can expand its use of custom silicon to train AI models "eventually."
This is a negative for Broadcom, which would presumably also be co-developing Olympus with Meta. However, it is good to see that Meta isn’t saying its GenAI training chip ambitions are dead; it still wants to develop them over time. Still, the timeline for Broadcom generating significant revenue through that project may have just become much longer.
AVGO and META: Powering the Growth in AI Inference
Overall, Meta’s relationship with Broadcom is now fully substantiated and appears to be growing significantly outside of GenAI training.
Importantly, many expect inference to overtake training as the dominant AI workload in the coming years. McKinsey predicts that inference will grow by a compound annual rate of 35% over the next five years, accounting for over half of AI compute by 2030.
This supports Broadcom's outlook, as its relationship with Meta—especially when it comes to inference—is clearly deepening.
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The article "Why Meta's AI Chip Announcement Has Broadcom Investors Paying Attention" first appeared on MarketBeat.