Broadcom signs long-term deal to develop Google’s custom AI chips

April 6, 2026 6:37 PM EDT

FILE PHOTO: A Broadcom sign is pictured as the company prepares to launch new optical chip tech to fend off Nvidia in San Jose, California, U.S., September 5, 2025. REUTERS/Brittany Hosea-Small/File Photo

April 6 (Reuters) - Broadcom said ‌on Monday ​it ​has signed a long-term agreement with Google to develop and supply future generations of custom artificial ‌intelligence chips and other components for the company's next-generation ⁠AI racks through 2031.

The chip firm also signed a deal with ‌Anthropic to provide the ‌AI startup access to about 3.5 gigawatts of AI computing capacity drawing on Google's AI processors, starting in 2027.

Financial ​terms of the deals were not disclosed.

Shares of Broadcom rose about 3% in extended trading.

Demand for custom chips ⁠such as Google's tensor processing units (TPUs), used for AI workloads, has surged in ​recent years as businesses seek alternatives to Nvidia's pricey graphics processors.

Reuters reported in December that Google ​was pushing to make its TPUs ‌a viable alternative to Nvidia's market-leading GPUs. TPU sales have become a crucial growth engine ⁠of Google's cloud revenue as it seeks to prove to investors that its AI investments are generating returns.

Anthropic said on Monday that ⁠the new deal builds on the company's commitment to invest $50 billion ​in strengthening U.S. computing infrastructure.

Demand for its AI model Claude has accelerated in 2026, with the startup's run-rate revenue now surpassing $30 billion, up ‌from about $9 billion at the end of 2025, it said.

Anthropic said it trains and runs ‌Claude on a range of AI hardware, including Amazon Web ⁠Services' Trainium, Google TPUs, ‌and Nvidia GPUs.

Amazon ​remains Anthropic's primary cloud provider and training partner.

(Reporting by Harshita Mary Varghese in Bengaluru; Editing by Leroy ‌Leo)



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