Investors are broadening their AI bets beyond Nvidia, and three semiconductor stocks are getting more attention as a result: Micron Technology, Advanced Micro Devices, and Marvell Technology.
The moves reflect a shift in how Wall Street is thinking about the AI buildout. Building AI data centers requires more than just graphics processors. It takes memory, custom chips, networking hardware, and storage systems.
Micron was the standout performer, with its stock rising nearly 17% to trade near a fresh 52-week high. The move signals growing investor confidence in AI memory demand.
Micron Technology, Inc., MU
Modern AI systems require large amounts of memory to train and run large language models. High-bandwidth memory and advanced DRAM are becoming critical as data centers scale up operations.
Micron is one of the few major U.S.-listed memory chipmakers. That puts the company in a strong position if AI-driven demand keeps prices elevated over a longer period.
Memory has historically been a boom-and-bust market, with prices rising and falling sharply with supply cycles. The argument now is that sustained AI demand could reduce that volatility and support stronger pricing for longer.
Advanced Micro Devices rose nearly 6%, bringing its stock close to a 52-week high. The company is widely seen as the main alternative to Nvidia in AI accelerators.
Advanced Micro Devices, Inc., AMD
AMD is working to grow its presence in AI GPUs, server CPUs, and data-center chips. Cloud providers and enterprise customers increasingly want more than one source for AI hardware, and AMD is well-placed to fill that role.
The company’s high valuation shows investors already expect strong future growth from its AI chip roadmap. The question is whether AMD can deliver the revenue to match those expectations.
Nvidia still holds a dominant position in AI GPUs. AMD needs to keep winning customers and improving its product performance to close that gap over time.
Marvell Technology gained more than 5% and has put together a strong 12-month run. Its story is different from AMD’s. Marvell focuses on custom chips, optical connectivity, and data-center networking rather than competing head-to-head in the GPU market.
As AI data centers grow, moving data efficiently between chips, servers, and storage systems becomes critical. Marvell’s product lineup addresses that part of the infrastructure stack.
Hyperscalers — large cloud companies like Amazon, Google, and Microsoft — are increasingly ordering custom chips built for specific workloads. Marvell is positioned to benefit from that trend.
All three stocks have already seen large gains, and their valuations leave limited margin for error. If AI spending softens or earnings disappoint, these stocks could pull back quickly.
For now, investor demand remains strong. Micron, AMD, and Marvell each represent a different piece of the AI infrastructure buildout that extends well beyond Nvidia’s core GPU business.
The post Micron, AMD, and Marvell Rally as Investors Look Beyond Nvidia appeared first on CoinCentral.


