Apple Inc.‘s (NASDAQ:AAPL) WWDC 2026 kicks off Monday and is expected to be one of the most consequential developer conferences in years. 

Traders are looking to picks-and-shovels names that stand to benefit if Apple delivers on its AI ambitions.

The thesis is straightforward: if Apple unveils a meaningfully rebuilt Siri, deeper iOS 27 AI integration and a compelling reason for consumers to upgrade aging hardware, the replacement cycle flows straight through Apple’s supply chain. 

What the Market Is Expecting

Leaks and analyst previews point to a rebuilt Siri powered partly by Alphabet‘s (NASDAQ:GOOGL) (NASDAQ:GOOG) Google Gemini — a deal reportedly worth around $1 billion per year — alongside iOS 27’s Liquid Glass redesign, a standalone Siri app and deep cross-app AI functionality. 

If the features land as expected, Apple will hand consumers a hard-to-ignore reason to upgrade devices that won’t support the full feature set.

Silicon First

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (NYSE:TSM) is the foundational play. Every Apple Silicon chip — M5, A-series, and beyond — is fabbed at TSMC. 

A multi-generational iPhone and Mac refresh means more wafer starts. Broadcom Inc. (NASDAQ:AVGO) designs custom Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and networking silicon baked into every Apple device. More devices in consumers’ hands means more Broadcom content per unit.

Arm Holdings Plc (NASDAQ:ARM) architecture underpins every Apple Silicon chip and every new chip generation Apple announces is more royalty revenue for Arm.

The Smaller Names 

The move is also likely to be felt by smaller, purer-play Apple suppliers. 

Synaptics Inc. (NASDAQ:SYNA) could surge on bets that iOS 27’s display-intensive redesign demands higher-performance touch and display driver silicon. 

Skyworks Solutions Inc. (NASDAQ:SWKS), which supplies RF front-end chips to iPhone, could benefit from future upgrade cycles. 

Cirrus Logic Inc. (NASDAQ:CRUS), which draws roughly 90% of its revenue from Apple as the supplier of the iPhone’s audio chips, could benefit if the next iPhone’s camera and audio upgrades require more advanced silicon.

Corning Inc. (NYSE:GLW) is the maker of Ceramic Shield glass for iPhone displays and is a direct play on any upgrade supercycle.

Universal Display Corp. (NASDAQ:OLED), which licenses phosphorescent OLED technology used in iPhone and Apple Watch screens, could also get a boost. 

The Bottom Line

If Apple’s WWDC event delivers the AI hardware refresh cycle the market has been anticipating for two years, the picks-and-shovels trade — from TSMC’s fabs to Corning’s glass lines — is where the money may actually move.

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