The Artificial Intelligence (AI) Boom Isn't Over. 3 AI Stocks to Buy Right Now.
The stock market has ridden the excitement for artificial intelligence (AI) to new heights. It’s not all hype; according to McKinsey, AI could add as much as $13 trillion to the global economy by 2030. Sure, some stocks have risen faster than others, so perhaps some stocks have gotten too expensive.
However, there are still top-notch AI stocks worth buying today.
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Three Fool.com contributors put their heads together and selected Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (NYSE: TSM), Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA), and Qualcomm (NASDAQ: QCOM) as AI stocks that merit buying right now.
Here is the investment pitch for each.
Justin Pope (Taiwan Semiconductor): If you’re looking for a surefire winner in the AI field, Taiwan Semiconductor is as good a bet as any. It’s the world’s largest semiconductor foundry, which manufactures chips for design companies like Nvidia, AMD, and others. Taiwan Semiconductor is the world’s leading foundry, holding an estimated 62% of the global market as of Q2 2024. That positions Taiwan Semiconductor to capture explosive growth in demand for AI chips moving forward.
AMD CEO Lisa Su predicted during her company’s Q3 earnings call that AI chip demand will grow by 60% annually to $500 billion in 2028, more than the entire semiconductor industry’s size in 2023. It seems safe to say that end markets worldwide, AI and otherwise, will need increasingly more chips.
At this writing, Taiwan Semiconductor stock trades at a forward P/E ratio of just under 28. At the same time, analysts estimate the company’s earnings will grow by an average of 31% annually over the next three to five years. That’s a PEG ratio of 0.9, indicating the stock is a bargain for its expected future growth.
So, why is the stock so cheap? Taiwan is near China, which claims it is part of its territory and has threatened to invade the country. This is a legitimate risk that investors should consider before buying the stock. That said, it’s impossible to know what will happen. A forceful invasion might spark retaliation from the U.S. and other countries because of Taiwan’s importance to the world’s chip supply chain. The U.S. and Taiwan Semiconductor have taken steps to derisk from China, including cutting back shipments of advanced AI chips to China and investing roughly $65 billion to build new foundries in Arizona.
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