How Broadcom Corporation Stock Could Surge to $50 Per Share

According to Street Insider, analyst Romit Shah from Nomura Securities recently upgraded shares of chipmaker Broadcom (NASDAQ: BRCM) from a "neutral rating" to a "buy." The analyst said that his team had been waiting for both a pullback and a catalyst and believes that they "got both last week."

Cheap shares; management should get more creditThe analyst notes that Broadcom "remains very cheap" at 15 times free cash flow (excluding share-based compensation). This, Shah writes, is a discount to a peer average of 18 times. This discount, he claims, "reflects distrust in management after one bad acquisition and failed attempts in baseband."

For some context, the "bad acquisition" Shah refers to is the 2011 acquisition of network processor company NetLogic for $3.7 billion. Broadcom took an impairment charge of $501 million related to the NetLogic acquisition in 2013. Further, the "failed attempts" in baseband refer to Broadcom's long and expensive attempt to become a major cellular chip provider. Broadcom purchased Beceem Communications in 2010 for $316 million to try to speed up its time-to-market into the 4G market.

Those efforts didn't work, so Broadcom picked up the former Renesas Mobile wireless assets to help get 4G products out to market faster. Renesas Mobile gave Broadcom a fully qualified LTE modem, and products based on the Renesas technology actually shipped into the market. However, facing very tough economics, Broadcom ultimately wound down its cellular efforts.

At any rate, Shah points out that management "deserves more credit." In particular, he says that "almost every company botched baseband" and then drew attention to some of the improvements Broadcom is making to "right the ship."

A more shareholder-friendly BroadcomShah was keen to point out that Broadcom is trying to "reduce stock option expense," increase capital returns, and "improve financial transparency."

Digging a bit deeper into this, note the following slide that CFO Eric Brandt showed at the company's analyst day late last year:

Source: Broadcom.

Notice the shifts here: Instead of looking at its revenue growth rate, Broadcom is now focused on how its gross profit grows. Further, instead of looking at the "sum of gross profit," Broadcom is going to focus more on its gross margin percentage (and the implication is that Broadcom cares about how it compares to peers).

The company also appears to be shifting focus from how much it spends on research and development (and how that compares to other semiconductor companies) to how much return it gets per research and development dollar spent. Finally, with respect to mergers and acquisitions, Broadcom is going to judge the success/failure of an acquisition based on the return it got from that acquisition versus going out and repurchasing its own stock.

With respect to stock option expenses, Brandt talked about how Broadcom plans to bring down share-based compensation as a percentage of revenue. It also plans to try to reduce the company's share count.

Finally, Brandt said that the company's long-term financial model would change. Excluding share-based compensation, Broadcom wants to target a gross profit margin percentage range of 54%-57% (up from 50%-52%) and operating margin range of 23%-28% (up from 20%-22%).

$50 is the analyst's price targetBroadcom stock closed Monday at $44 per share, and based on the drivers mentioned above, the analyst thinks that the stock could hit $50 (likely over the next year, as analyst price targets are generally one year out).

I don't have access to Shah's full research report, but it's not hard to see where the $50 price could be coming from. The analyst may be assuming that Broadcom sees multiple expansion as the "discount" he mentions is removed. At 18 times current year earnings-per-share estimates, Broadcom's shares would trade at around $50.

The article How Broadcom Corporation Stock Could Surge to $50 Per Share originally appeared on Fool.com.

Ashraf Eassa has no position in any stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. Try any of our Foolish newsletter services free for 30 days. We Fools may not all hold the same opinions, but we all believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

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