Investing 30-04-2026 11:31 1 Views

Nvidia, AMD or Broadcom: which chip stock should you own in 2026?

The semiconductor trade is still being powered by one enormous number as global chip sales are on track to reach $1 trillion in 2026, after a 25.6% jump in 2025.

The hyperscalers, led by Microsoft, Alphabet, Amazon and Meta, are projected to spend more than $600 billion this year on AI-related infrastructure.

That spending is flowing straight into chips, data centers and networking gear.

Nvidia, Broadcom and AMD are all positioned to benefit, but they are not the same trade.

One is the market’s AI anchor, one is the efficiency story, and one is the higher-risk option on the next phase of demand.

Nvidia stock: The core holding

Nvidia stock remains the centre of gravity in AI semiconductors.

The company said fourth-quarter fiscal 2026 revenue rose 73% year on year to $68.1 billion, while data-center revenue jumped 75% to $62.3 billion.

Full-year revenue reached $215.9 billion, up 65%. That scale is still unmatched in the sector.

Yet the stock has not been immune to nerves about whether AI spending can keep compounding at the same pace.

The investors are looking past strong results and worrying that Nvidia keeps putting capital back into the AI ecosystem rather than immediately maximizing returns.

In a Morgan Stanley note quoted by, Nvidia was described as “still the nucleus for the AI trade,” while the bank said it remains overweight on both Nvidia and Broadcom, with preference still leaning to Nvidia.

Broadcom stock: The efficiency-era winner

Broadcom stock is the most convincing alternative if the AI race shifts from raw compute to efficiency, networking and custom silicon.

The company reported first-quarter fiscal 2026 revenue of $19.3 billion, up 29%, while adjusted EBITDA margin held at 68%.

AI revenue hit $8.4 billion, up 106%, and Broadcom said it expects AI semiconductor revenue of $10.7 billion in the current quarter.

Broadcom’s AI chip revenue could surpass $100 billion by 2027, helped by long-term deals with Google, Meta and Anthropic.

Morgan Stanley’s Joseph Moore said Broadcom offers “the proven and enduring accelerator story beyond CY2026,” while noting that custom silicon growth and networking remain strong.

AMD stock: The higher-risk patience trade

AMD stock is the most interesting name for investors willing to wait.

It reported record fourth-quarter 2025 revenue of $10.3 billion, up 34%, and data-center revenue of $5.4 billion, up 39%, showing that its AI franchise is growing, even if it still trails Nvidia in scale.

The company also entered 2026 with two major customer signals: a multi-year OpenAI chip supply deal that could bring in tens of billions of dollars in annual revenue, and a separate Meta agreement worth around $60 billion over five years.

The deals gave AMD much better visibility into future AI demand.

Public.com’s analyst snapshot shows a Buy consensus with a 2026 price target of $276.11, which suggests Wall Street sees room for gains if the product cycle and customer ramps continue.

But unlike Nvidia and Broadcom, AMD still has more to prove on execution.

For 2026, the real question is not which chip company wins. It is the version of the AI trade you want to own.

Nvidia is the core holding, Broadcom is the efficiency-era compounder, and AMD is the higher-beta bet on a bigger second act.

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