3 Stocks to Buy This Year

3 Stocks to Buy This Year


Late last year, Sam Altman, the CEO of OpenAI, stated that his company is committed to investing $1.4 trillion to develop another 30 gigawatts of computing power. The ultimate goal he has in mind is to add 1 gigawatt of compute every week. Each gigawatt currently carries a price tag of about $40 billion.

Now, whether or not OpenAI’s press releases are writing checks its account balance can’t cash remains to be seen. But what Altman’s statement does demonstrate is the sheer amount of money pouring into the infrastructure needed to support artificial intelligence (AI).

Where to invest $1,000 right now? Our analyst team just revealed what they believe are the 10 best stocks to buy right now, when you join Stock Advisor. See the stocks »

That means chip manufacturers, data center companies, and even energy providers are all set to benefit from the AI infrastructure shopping spree. The three companies in this article are the ones to profit most from it.

3 Stocks to Buy This Year
Image source: Getty Images.

Let’s start with the company that needs no introduction: Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA). All the biggest AI developers use Nvidia hardware. Even Alphabet, which is trying to shift to its own Tensor Processing Unit (TPU) hardware, still uses some Nvidia hardware.

The company controls about 85% of the AI chip market. That dominance has propelled it to a colossal market cap of $4.58 trillion and quarterly revenue that grew 62% year over year to exceed $57 billion as of Q3 2025.

Now, while there are competitors emerging aside from Alphabet, namely Advanced Micro Devices and Qualcomm, Nvidia remains the top dog. In Q3 2025, the company’s cloud graphics processing units (GPUs) sold out, and its new Blackwell chip is going gangbusters.

Nvidia got to the top by producing top-notch hardware, and it’s still producing extremely high-end equipment. The entire market moves when it reports earnings. And I don’t see its near-monopoly on AI hardware coming to an end anytime soon.

AI is hungry for resources, chips, power, water — the works. But the one resource that its demands are causing a shortage of is memory. That is, random access memory (RAM) and dynamic random access memory (DRAM), the components that allow your computer to store and recall information.

TrendForce, a Taiwanese research company, expects DRAM prices to rise between 50% and 55% in the first quarter of 2026. Companies that produce this vital hardware are seeing their revenues spike dramatically as a result.

Look no further than Micron Technology (NASDAQ: MU), which actually exited the consumer PC memory market to capitalize on the AI market’s demand.


finance.yahoo.com
#Stocks #Buy #Year

Share: X · Facebook · LinkedIn

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *