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Skyworks vs. Qorvo: Two RF Chip Giants Fighting for the Same 5G Dollar
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Skyworks Solutions (SWKS) posted $1.035B in Q1 FY26 revenue beating estimates for a fourth consecutive quarter with 41% non-GAAP gross margin, while Qorvo (QRVO) reported $1.058B revenue with industry-leading 49.7% non-GAAP gross margin in Q2 FY26, positioning both as targets for a planned $22B merger expected to close in early 2027. Both companies are diversifying beyond smartphones, with Skyworks winning Wi-Fi 7 and AI server power supply design wins and Qorvo targeting 50%+ margins while deliberately shrinking lower-margin Android business. Skyworks and Qorvo announced a merger that would create a major RF and analog semiconductor company, with execution risk hinging on regulatory approval, shareholder lawsuits, and whether Qorvo’s defense/aerospace segment margins sustain growth through the deal’s early 2027 closing. The analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks. Get them here FREE. Skyworks Solutions (NASDAQ:SWKS) and Qorvo (NASDAQ:QRVO) just reported earnings as direct RF chip competitors, but here is the twist: they announced a merger that would create a roughly $22 billion combined RF and analog semiconductor company, expected to close in early 2027. These may be the last meaningful earnings to compare as separate businesses. Skyworks posted Q1 FY26 revenue of $1.035 billion, beating estimates, with CEO Phil Brace noting "We delivered results above our expectations for the fourth consecutive quarter, with outperformance across revenue, gross margin, and non-GAAP earnings." Four consecutive beats is not luck. That is a management team that has reset expectations conservatively and then executed. The growth beyond mobile is real. Skyworks called out Wi-Fi 7 design wins, expanded automotive connectivity programs, and next-gen isolation solutions for AI server power supplies. Broad Markets is still smaller than Mobile, but it diversifies the story away from Apple dependency. READ: The analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks Qorvo's most recent reported quarter showed ACG revenue of $777 million, up 36% sequentially, with non-GAAP gross margin of 49.7%. That margin profile is genuinely impressive for a mobile-heavy chip supplier. CEO Bob Bruggeworth pointed to defense and aerospace alongside wearable power management ICs as growth contributors beyond smartphones. Metric Skyworks (Q1 FY26) Qorvo (Q2 FY26) Revenue $1.035B $1.058B Non-GAAP Gross Margin ~41% 49.7% Dividend Yield 5.1% None Market Cap ~$8.2B ~$7.2B Skyworks is building toward a world where RF matters beyond the smartphone. Wi-Fi 7 modules, LoRaWAN front-end chips for IoT, and AI server power isolation represent sticky, design-win-driven revenue that compounds quietly. The risk is that Mobile still dominates, and Q2 FY26 guidance points to a roughly 20% sequential Mobile revenue decline due to seasonality. Qorvo is taking a more surgical path. Management is deliberately resizing its lower-tier Android business, with a $300 million revenue decline projected in fiscal 2027, while targeting gross margins above 50% and EPS approaching $7 in that same year. That margin-for-revenue trade only works if the HPA defense and infrastructure segments keep growing. The real forward-looking question is not which company wins the next quarter. It is whether this deal closes cleanly. Merger terms give Qorvo shareholders $32.50 in cash plus 0.960 Skyworks shares per share, with Qorvo holding roughly 37% of the combined entity. Shareholder lawsuits, activist pressure from Starboard Value, and regulatory scrutiny all create real execution risk between now and early 2027. Watch Skyworks' Broad Markets growth rate and Qorvo's HPA margin trajectory as the two most meaningful signals of how the combined company may perform post-close. Skyworks' $0.71 quarterly dividend and four straight beats reflect a management team executing consistently. Whether the combined entity's margin restructuring thesis plays out will depend on Qorvo's HPA segment growth and regulatory approval before early 2027. Wall Street is pouring billions into AI, but most investors are buying the wrong stocks. The analyst who first identified NVIDIA as a buy back in 2010 — before its 28,000% run — has just pinpointed 10 new AI companies he believes could deliver outsized returns from here. One dominates a $100 billion equipment market. Another is solving the single biggest bottleneck holding back AI data centers. A third is a pure-play on an optical networking market set to quadruple. Most investors haven't heard of half these names. Get the free list of all 10 stocks here.