Should You Forget Tesla and Buy 2 Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stocks Right Now?

1 week ago

Share

Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA) is evolving beyond electric vehicles (EV) to become a bonafide artificial intelligence (AI) company. Its plans for an autonomous Robotaxi fleet and its work in humanoid robotics could eventually make it, as CEO Elon Musk believes, the world's most valuable company.

The problem is that time hasn't come yet. Tesla stock has soared nearly 70% this year. Yet its autonomous driving technology is only rated at the Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE) level two, requiring driver intervention. Tesla aims to begin selling its humanoid robot in 2026, but the company is infamous for missing promise dates.

The stock trades at 169 times forward-earnings estimates, a nonsensical valuation for a company analysts estimate will grow earnings by an average of 8% annually over the long term. In other words, analysts want to see real-world success from Tesla's ambitious projects before factoring them into expectations.

Perhaps investors should do the same. At the very least, Tesla's current valuation reflects future growth; it diminishes the stock's upside for those buying at these prices. It might be wise to temporarily put Tesla stock on the back burner and focus instead on some fantastic AI companies already making things happen and trading at attractive prices.

Here are two prime examples:

Technology giant Alphabet (NASDAQ: GOOG) (NASDAQ: GOOGL) is best known for its Google brand, which includes the search engine and Workspace, a collection of cloud-based productivity tools. But Alphabet stretches beyond that, including YouTube and businesses in cloud computing, smartphone software, autonomous driving, and quantum computing. Google's Waymo has already begun selling rides in vehicles that operate at SAE level four -- a higher autonomy level than Tesla. Additionally, Alphabet is an early power player in artificial intelligence, having developed an AI model (Gemini) and accumulated the computing resources to train and operate it, and it has loads of first-party data from its Google products.

If anything, Alphabet is such a powerful company that regulators have begun attacking it. The U.S. government successfully sued Alphabet earlier this year for anticompetitive tactics in its search engine business and is now going back after Google for its digital ad practices. The litigation injects some uncertainty into the investment picture. Still, Alphabet figures to remain a powerful technology force even if it must break off pieces of its empire to please regulators. Any spin-offs could unlock value for investors, and Alphabet's products may continue dominating anyway.


background

Stay Ahead with StockBurger!

Real-time meme stock trends powered by social media insights. Be the first to know about new market waves.

hand