Qualcomm seems to be a runaway winner as it managed to tie the knot with Google's Nexus 7.2 and Motorola's upcoming X8. However, this does not mean the company has stopped working on increasing their market share in an industry dominated by Intel.

For the last 12 months, Intel and Qualcomm have been competing for the market share of chips. The industry has high demands but its conditions are also unstable. While Intel seems to be on top of the game currently, Qualcomm may see a surge in their stocks soon.

The company has sealed the deal with Google's new Nexus 7 tablet and Motorola.

According to Wall Street, Qualcomm's shares have been rising in pre-market transactions following the company's achievement is besting the analysts expectations. Google's announcement of the Nexus 7 running on a Qualcomm SoC even improved the company's chances in the market.

Reports also showed that Motorola Mobility, a subsidiary of Google, recently licensed IP for the X8. The X8 is a brand new chip that the company will be using to power up some of its upcoming Android smartphones. While the deal with the Google Nexus 7 means a considerable amount of sales for Snadragon, Qualcomm's way of quietly positioning the company at the forefront of this IP will definitely bring in long term results.

This can spell out long term lucrative results that can give Intel a run for its money. Many people do not know that Snapdragon's mother company already has 300 licenses under its sleeves. These include a number from competing companies such as Intel, Samsung, Mediatek and AMD. The company is also responsible for some of the blue chip firms including Panasonic and Toshiba.

Qualcomm's expert knack to transform its technologies into flexible resources continues to push it forward.