Qualcomm in talks to design custom chips for ByteDance

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Qualcomm is negotiating to design custom chips for ByteDance, the parent company of TikTok. The deal would mark another step in Qualcomm’s pivot away from its smartphone business and deeper into the AI data center market.

The discussions center on developing application-specific integrated circuits, or ASICs, which are chips built for a single purpose rather than general computing. Instead of selling ByteDance off-the-shelf processors, Qualcomm would build silicon tailored specifically to the computational demands of ByteDance’s AI-powered recommendation engines and software platforms.

From smartphones to server rooms

This isn’t Qualcomm’s first deal with ByteDance. In May 2026, the two companies signed a supply agreement in which ByteDance committed to purchasing millions of Qualcomm’s AI-focused ASICs designed for data center use. Qualcomm’s stock surged nearly 5% on that news alone.

The current negotiations go further. Rather than just selling existing chip designs, Qualcomm would now provide full custom chip-design services. The custom ASICs could incorporate technology from AlphaWave Semi, a company Qualcomm acquired in 2025 that specializes in high-speed connectivity intellectual property, a critical ingredient for data center chips that need to move massive amounts of data between processors.

The timing matters. ByteDance is reportedly seeking a $20 billion loan to bolster its AI infrastructure. Qualcomm is expected to manage production ramps targeted for late 2026.

ByteDance’s chip ambitions and the China factor

ByteDance is also evaluating the feasibility of designing chips in-house, a path already taken by tech giants like Google, Amazon, and Apple.

This is a departure from the industry’s traditional playbook. For years, companies building AI infrastructure relied heavily on off-the-shelf GPUs, primarily from Nvidia. The shift toward custom ASICs reflects a growing recognition that purpose-built chips can deliver better performance per watt and per dollar for specific AI workloads.

What this means for investors

Qualcomm’s nearly 5% stock jump on the initial supply deal in May signals market receptiveness to its diversification strategy. Being hired to design custom chips is a higher-margin, stickier business relationship than selling existing chip designs.

ByteDance’s parallel exploration of in-house chip design means Qualcomm could eventually lose this customer if ByteDance successfully builds its own silicon team. That’s exactly what happened to Intel when Apple decided to design its own Mac processors.

There’s also the geopolitical wildcard. Any deal between a US chipmaker and a Chinese tech giant operates under the shadow of export controls and regulatory scrutiny.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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