TradesZ

Is AVGO a buy? — what our data shows

⚡ TradesZ research ·Updated June 22, 2026 ·~2 min read ·Grounded in SEC data

Broadcom is one of the world's biggest chip and software companies — it makes the semiconductors that power everything from internet routers and data centers to the AI infrastructure that the whole tech industry is racing to build.

What our data shows

Our coverage on Broadcom is focused on one thing: congressional trading activity. Five different U.S. lawmakers have filed reports disclosing trades in Broadcom — including names like David J. Taylor, Jared Moskowitz, Julia Letlow, and Gilbert Cisneros. Here's the honest caveat though: these filings tell us that members of Congress traded the stock, but they don't tell us whether they were buying or selling. So while it's genuinely interesting that multiple lawmakers have had Broadcom on their radar, we can't read too much into the direction from this data alone.

Congressional trades
What you see
5 lawmakers reported a trade in AVGO (incl. Hon. David J. Taylor, Hon. Jared Moskowitz, Hon. Gilbert Cisneros).
What it means
Politicians with possible information advantage traded this stock.
How to read it
Can be a signal — the exact direction (buy/sell) is not always in the official filing.
→ See congressional trades

The takeaway

Neutral

Broadcom is clearly a stock that people in high places are paying attention to — but if you want to dig deeper into what the smart money is actually doing with it, that's where you'd want to look beyond what we currently hold.

But watch out
Smart-money signals lag the market (13F filings ~45 days) and never guarantee direction — always check the latest price and news yourself.

Have your own question?

Ask in plain English — our data answers. Free for retail readers.

Ask a question →

Informational research, not personalized investment advice.