The AI stock rally has moved well beyond chips. Investors are now looking across the full AI supply chain — from the factories that make chips to the software that puts AI into everyday office tools.
Five stocks cover that range right now: Nvidia, Applied Materials, Cisco, Broadcom, and Microsoft.
Each one plays a different role in the AI economy. Together, they give investors exposure to chips, equipment, networking, custom silicon, cloud, and enterprise software.
Nvidia is still the most watched AI stock on the market.
NVIDIA Corporation, NVDA
Its chips power the data centers that run AI models for cloud companies, research labs, and large businesses. Nvidia also sells networking products and software tools that deepen its role in AI infrastructure.
Investors are watching its next earnings report closely. Strong demand and a positive outlook could support the broader AI trade. But the stock has already had a major run, so expectations are high.
Any weakness in demand or margins could bring volatility.
Applied Materials makes the equipment used to manufacture advanced chips. It does not compete with Nvidia or AMD — it supplies the tools that chipmakers need to build their products.
Applied Materials, Inc., AMAT
That puts it in a strong position as AI drives demand for more advanced semiconductors. Companies like TSMC and Samsung need production equipment, and Applied Materials is a key supplier.
The company recently posted strong earnings, driven by AI and data center demand.
The question for investors is whether that equipment spending continues at its current pace.
Cisco spent years being seen as a slow-growth networking stock. AI is changing that view.
Data centers built for AI need large amounts of networking capacity, security, and optical connections. Cisco supplies all of those. The company has reported rising AI-related orders, driven largely by hyperscaler customers.
Cisco is also shifting its focus toward AI, silicon, optics, and security. Investors have responded positively to that direction.
It may not move as fast as smaller AI names, but it offers a more stable way to invest in AI infrastructure.
Broadcom makes custom AI chips for large cloud companies and provides high-performance networking products.
Its close relationship with major tech companies means it benefits directly when hyperscaler AI spending increases. That gives it a different profile from Nvidia, which sells standard GPUs at scale.
Broadcom sits at the intersection of custom silicon and AI infrastructure — two areas that continue to attract spending.
Microsoft is the leading large-cap AI software and cloud stock.
Azure is the main growth driver. If businesses keep adopting AI cloud services, Microsoft grows. Its products like Microsoft 365 Copilot bring AI into everyday workplace tools used by millions of people.
Microsoft’s OpenAI partnership gives it a direct connection to some of the most advanced AI models available.
The main concern is whether its heavy investment in data centers will produce strong enough returns to satisfy investors.
The AI trade now covers a wide range of companies. Nvidia leads in chips. Applied Materials supplies the equipment to make them. Cisco handles the networking. Broadcom builds custom silicon. Microsoft monetizes AI through cloud and software.
Each stock plays a different role, and investors are paying attention to all of them.
The post The Best AI Stocks to Watch Right Now: Nvidia, Broadcom and Microsoft Lead appeared first on CoinCentral.


