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Some of the biggest beneficiaries of the artificial intelligence (AI) boom have been semiconductor stocks.
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At the heart of the chip landscape is Nvidia, whose chips are in demand from trillion-dollar hyperscalers and governments across the globe.
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While Nvidia has already witnessed significant valuation expansion, several catalysts suggest the company still has meaningful long-term growth ahead.
There are only so many moments in investing when a company becomes so impactful that it transcends its peers and evolves into something greater — a true generational wealth opportunity.
In the 1980s and 1990s, Microsoft and Berkshire Hathaway were prime examples. Microsoft pioneered the personal computing era with its Windows operating system, which became the backbone of the internet age. Berkshire, under Warren Buffett’s leadership, compounded capital that consistently outperformed the broader market.
Today, I think the most compelling opportunity at the intersection of growth and value is none other than semiconductor powerhouse Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA).
The reason is simple: Nvidia isn’t just riding a single trend. Instead, it has positioned itself as the core power source at the heart of multiple revolutions, each unfolding against the backdrop of the artificial intelligence (AI) movement.
Nvidia’s rapid rise in recent years comes down to one thing: its graphics processing units (GPUs). These chips have become the gold standard of generative AI development, powering everything from large language models (LLMs) to mission-critical applications across every industry.
AMZN Capital Expenditures (TTM) data by YCharts.
Cloud hyperscalers and big tech giants have poured hundreds of billions of dollars into capital expenditures (capex) — much of which they directed toward chips and networking infrastructure.
This spending spree doesn’t appear to be slowing down, either. According to management consulting firm McKinsey & Company, AI infrastructure spend could reach $6.7 trillion by next decade — with chips continuing to capture a good portion of this investment.
What makes the infrastructure narrative even more compelling is that it extends beyond the private sector. The U.S. government is supercharging its AI ambitions through Project Stargate — a $500 billion initiative to invest in data centers and AI infrastructure over the coming years. Meanwhile, countries in the Middle East are rolling out their own sovereign AI initiatives.
Nvidia sits at the center of this activity. Its GPUs are not exclusive to powering today’s data centers — they are enabling a global race to build the foundation of tomorrow’s AI economy.