Five smartphone chipmakers are riding a content-per-device repricing that has already pushed one name up 75% year to date while two others trade below their 200-day moving averages.
Smartphone silicon content is quietly repricing. On-device AI, camera stacks and RF complexity are lifting chip dollars per handset just as the next refresh cycle arrives, and the market has already begun pricing the winners.
"Accelerating activity in Physical AI and Edge AI, with increasing design wins and customer engagements," Synaptics CEO Rahul Patel said of the company's pivot that is bleeding straight back into the phone.
Synaptics, up 74.95% year to date, reported fiscal Q3 2026 revenue of $294.2 million — an 8.17% beat on non-GAAP EPS of $1.09 — and expects full-year Core IoT revenue to grow more than 40% to over $385 million. Qualcomm, the on-device compute anchor, posted $6.024 billion in handset revenue in Q2 fiscal 2026, down 13% year over year, but CEO Cristiano Amon said Chinese handset revenues are expected to bottom in Q3 and return to sequential growth the quarter after. Cirrus Logic, 92% reliant on Apple, beat Q4 EPS by 59.84% at $1.95 and grew free cash flow 52.97% to $635.76 million.
The upgrade cycle works as a content-per-device escalator across five silicon layers: Edge AI (Synaptics), on-device compute and modem (Qualcomm), audio and power (Cirrus Logic), RF front-end (Qorvo) and the combined RF platform after the pending Skyworks-Qorvo merger. One name is already up 74.95% year to date. Two are still trading below their 200-day moving averages. The gap closes when the refresh volume shows up in the September and December earnings reports.
The Edge AI Pivot That Reprices a Sleeper
Synaptics still ships touch controllers, display drivers and wireless connectivity silicon into handsets, but the real story is the Edge AI pivot. Fiscal Q3 2026 revenue hit $294.2 million, and management now expects Core IoT revenue to grow more than 40% year over year to over $385 million. Analysts have a $145.33 average price target against a current price near $127, with a forward P/E of 23. The company trades at a discount to the semiconductor peer group average of 24.76 times forward earnings, according to consensus data.
Qualcomm's Handset Trough Is the Setup
Qualcomm's Q2 fiscal 2026 handset revenue of $6.024 billion fell 13% year over year, hammered by memory supply constraints and Chinese OEM softness. That is the setup phase before the thesis takes hold. Automotive hit a record $1.326 billion, up 38% year over year, and the company authorized a $20 billion share repurchase program. Shares trade at a forward P/E in the low double digits with a dividend yield near 1.89%. The on-device AI narrative runs through Snapdragon SoCs, which sit in the flagship tier of nearly every non-Apple premium phone.
The Apple Content Escalator and the RF Punchline
Cirrus Logic is developing next-generation camera controllers and a smart power IC, according to CEO John Forsyth, translating to more silicon per iPhone in the next cycle. Full-year free cash flow surged to $635.76 million, up 52.97%, and Q1 FY27 guidance of $430 million to $490 million implies roughly 13% year-over-year growth at the midpoint. The stock trades at a forward P/E of 15 against an analyst target of $184.25.
On the RF side, Qorvo's fiscal Q4 2026 non-GAAP gross margin expanded 670 basis points year over year to 52.6%, with EPS beating consensus by 39.48% at $1.69. Management expects fiscal 2027 non-GAAP diluted EPS approaching $7.00. Skyworks, the beaten-down contrarian, trades near $60 with a forward P/E of 11 and a 4.70% dividend yield. A multi-generational design win with a leading Android OEM is expected to generate over $1 billion in revenue through 2030, directly attacking the customer concentration that has anchored the discount. The pending merger with Qorvo has already reached 81% shareholder approval.
Investor Takeaway
The content-per-device repricing spans five distinct silicon layers, and the market has only partially priced the cycle. Synaptics trades at 23 times forward earnings with a 40% IoT growth trajectory. Qualcomm sits at a low double-digit P/E with a $20 billion buyback and a handset trough already telegraphed. Cirrus Logic, at 15 times forward earnings, offers the cleanest Apple content escalator. Qorvo and Skyworks, at 13 and 11 times forward earnings respectively, carry the highest torque from the pending merger and the Android RF ramp. The gap between the winner up 75% and the laggards still below their 200-day moving averages is the trade.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.