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Broadcom (NasdaqGS:AVGO) has introduced Symantec CBX, a cloud based cybersecurity platform that combines Symantec and Carbon Black technology.

The new AI powered XDR service is aimed at organizations that lack dedicated enterprise grade security teams or resources.

Symantec CBX integrates threat detection, incident response, and adaptive protection into a single offering delivered from the cloud.

For investors watching NasdaqGS:AVGO, this launch adds another piece to Broadcom’s broader software and security push alongside its semiconductor operations. The stock trades at $314.55, with a 1 year return of 116.8% and a 3 year return that is very large relative to the starting point. Those figures sit against a more mixed near term picture, including a 30 day return of 5.5% and a year to date return of 9.5%.

Symantec CBX gives Broadcom a way to address smaller and mid sized customers that often lack in house security expertise, which is a different audience from many of its existing enterprise offerings. For readers, the key question is how much traction this kind of AI powered, subscription based security service can gain alongside Broadcom’s established businesses over time.

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NasdaqGS:AVGO Earnings & Revenue Growth as at Apr 2026 NasdaqGS:AVGO Earnings & Revenue Growth as at Apr 2026

📰 Beyond the headline: 2 risks and 4 things going right for Broadcom that every investor should see.

Symantec CBX sits at the intersection of Broadcom’s infrastructure software push and the wider use of AI in security, and it targets a customer group that has often been priced out of enterprise tools. By combining Symantec’s prevention, data security and secure web gateway features with Carbon Black’s endpoint detection in a cloud service, Broadcom is trying to reach mid sized businesses and under resourced security teams that still face sophisticated attacks. For investors, that points to a different revenue mix versus Broadcom’s custom AI chips and large enterprise VMware contracts, with more subscription style security income layered onto the existing software base. It also puts Broadcom up against established security vendors such as Palo Alto Networks, CrowdStrike and Fortinet in a segment where ease of deployment and pricing can matter as much as technical depth. The launch sits alongside other software wins, such as the five year, US$970m agreement with the Defense Information Systems Agency, and may help counter concerns from some analysts who expect slower software growth over time if Broadcom can show meaningful adoption in this broader security market.

The CBX launch supports the existing catalyst that Broadcom is building a broader infrastructure software platform by adding cloud based security and AI powered XDR to the VMware led portfolio.

It also quietly challenges the view that software growth will stay weak, as success with CBX among smaller customers would point to a wider addressable market than large enterprise and government contracts alone.

The current community narrative focuses heavily on AI accelerators, networking and VMware Cloud Foundation, so the specific impact of a mid market security offering like CBX may not yet be fully reflected in those storylines.

Knowing what a company is worth starts with understanding its story. Check out one of the top narratives in the Simply Wall St Community for Broadcom to help decide what it’s worth to you.

⚠️ Broadcom is taking on well established cybersecurity vendors, so slower than expected CBX adoption or heavy pricing competition could limit the contribution from this product.

⚠️ Analysts have already flagged two company risks, including debt levels, so further investment in security and cloud platforms that does not translate into clear cash generation could add to concerns.

🎁 CBX opens up access to a large pool of organizations that lack enterprise grade security teams, which could broaden Broadcom’s recurring software revenue beyond its largest customers.

🎁 The use of AI powered threat correlation and incident prediction in CBX ties into Broadcom’s wider AI positioning, giving investors another way that its AI capabilities may support both chips and software.

From here, the key checks are how quickly customers adopt Symantec CBX, what Broadcom discloses about recurring security revenue tied to the platform, and whether partners such as managed security providers start to feature it in their own offerings. It is also worth watching how Broadcom talks about its software mix on future earnings calls, especially in light of research that questions the long term pace of software growth. If CBX starts to show up in customer wins alongside VMware and the recent US$970m DISA agreement, that would give a clearer picture of how important security could become within Broadcom’s overall infrastructure software story.

To ensure you’re always in the loop on how the latest news impacts the investment narrative for Broadcom, head to the community page for Broadcom to never miss an update on the top community narratives.

This article by Simply Wall St is general in nature. We provide commentary based on historical data and analyst forecasts only using an unbiased methodology and our articles are not intended to be financial advice. It does not constitute a recommendation to buy or sell any stock, and does not take account of your objectives, or your financial situation. We aim to bring you long-term focused analysis driven by fundamental data. Note that our analysis may not factor in the latest price-sensitive company announcements or qualitative material. Simply Wall St has no position in any stocks mentioned.

Companies discussed in this article include AVGO.

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