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Broadcom, Apple extend chip supply deal through 2031

By Thomson Reuters Jul 6, 2026 | 7:07 AM

July 6 (Reuters) – Broadcom said on Monday it has agreed to expand its partnership with Apple through 2031 to develop and supply custom chips, easing concerns over the ​iPhone maker’s reliance on the chipmaker.

The chipmaker, whose shares ‌jumped nearly 4% in premarket trading, has been supplying key components to Apple for a very long time, including radio frequency chips used in iPhones for connecting to cellular networks, Wi-Fi and Bluetooth connectivity chips and other ‌networking ​semiconductors.

Apple accounts for about 20% of ⁠Broadcom’s annual revenue, according to ⁠analysts, making it one of the chipmaker’s largest customers. Despite developing its own chips, including the C1 modem, Apple relies on Broadcom for wireless and radio-frequency components.

The extended partnership reinforces ​Apple’s strategy of locking in long-term supply agreements with key chipmakers to bolster the resilience of its supply chain.

The companies ⁠had in 2023 announced a multibillion-dollar ⁠agreement for Broadcom to develop and manufacture 5G ​radio frequency components.

The boom in inference – the process by which models ​respond to user queries – has made custom chips crucial, ‌increasing the orders for advanced processors and intensifying competition.

Apple relies on Taiwan’s TSMC, the world’s largest contract chipmaker, for its in-house processors, including the M-series chips that power its Mac computers and ⁠the A-series chips in iPhones.

TSMC has been stretched thin by surging demand from AI chipmakers such as Nvidia, which Apple CEO Tim Cook ⁠said in April had ‌held back iPhone sales.

Apple is also in ⁠discussions with Intel to manufacture some chips in ​the ‌U.S., though analysts have said volume production is ​unlikely before ⁠late 2027.

The company was forced to raise prices of its MacBooks and iPads in June as memory chip costs surged as much as 98% in early 2026, driven by AI datacenter demand.

(Reporting by Akash Sriram and Anhata Rooprai in Bengaluru; Editing by Shinjini Ganguli ​and Arun Koyyur)