Key HighlightsInvestors at Qualcomm’s March 17 annual meeting voted against a measure addressing China-related business risksThe chipmaker received a downgrade from Seaport Research Partners this week due to market headwinds and memory cost pressuresCompany green-lit a massive $20 billion share repurchase program while boosting its dividend payoutTechnical indicators show RSI at 35.12, approaching oversold levelsWall Street analysts maintain a consensus price target of $161.77 with a 2.6 recommendation ratingQualcomm’s 2026 annual shareholder gathering brought notable developments as investors weighed in on seven separate proposals during the March 17 meeting. Among them, a measure focused on China-related business risks failed to gain approval.QUALCOMM Incorporated, QCOMThe vote outcome attracted significant attention given the chipmaker’s substantial revenue exposure to China’s smartphone manufacturing ecosystem. Though detailed voting statistics weren’t publicly disclosed, SEC documentation verified the proposal’s defeat.Beyond the China-focused measure, six additional proposals came before shareholders during the meeting, with the China risk assessment generating the most interest among financial analysts and market watchers.Wall Street Firm Reduces QCOM RatingSeaport Research Partners downgraded Qualcomm earlier in the week, highlighting contracting market conditions and escalating memory component prices as primary concerns driving the rating adjustment.The semiconductor industry has witnessed widespread increases in memory pricing. For Qualcomm specifically, these elevated costs compress profit margins during a period when smartphone market expansion isn’t robust enough to compensate.The downgrade from Seaport contributed to mounting skepticism surrounding the equity. Technical analysis reveals QCOM’s RSI currently registers 35.12, positioning the shares near oversold thresholds.Valuation metrics show the price-to-sales multiple hovering around its two-year floor at 3.22. Meanwhile, the price-to-earnings ratio stands at 27.12, significantly beneath its historical peak of 49.87.Wall Street sentiment remains divided. Analysts collectively target $161.77 per share with a recommendation score of 2.6—landing between buy and hold territory.Institutional holders control 76.6% of outstanding shares, demonstrating continued substantial positioning by major investment firms.Capital Allocation InitiativesNotwithstanding market challenges, Qualcomm has moved aggressively on shareholder return programs. Management approved a $20 billion stock repurchase authorization and increased quarterly dividend payments—decisions reflecting leadership’s confidence in financial strength.The company’s financial performance supports this optimism. Qualcomm generated $44.87 billion in revenue with gross margins reaching 55.1%. Operating margins registered 27.2%.Balance sheet health appears robust. The current ratio measures 2.51 while the debt-to-equity ratio sits at 0.64. Interest coverage stands at 18.19, indicating ample capacity to meet debt obligations.The Altman Z-Score calculates to 5.39—well within the safe zone for financial stability.One notable trend: insider transactions have skewed toward sales, with 12,947 shares sold over the previous three months. While not necessarily concerning in isolation, this activity warrants consideration alongside broader analyst caution.Qualcomm commands approximately $140 billion in market capitalization. With a beta of 1.44, the stock typically exhibits greater volatility than the overall market.Future developments will likely center on tariff policy changes and any modifications to licensing agreements with Chinese smartphone manufacturers.Seaport Research Partners issued its downgrade this week, representing the latest significant analyst action on the semiconductor company.The post Qualcomm (QCOM) Stock: Shareholders Dismiss China Risk Concerns as $20B Buyback Gets Green Light appeared first on Blockonomi.