3 Top Tech Stocks to Buy in May

In This Article:

Key Points

  • As the GPU leader, Nvidia remains well positioned to benefit from increased AI infrastructure spending.

  • AMD, meanwhile, has become a leader in the CPU data center space and has a big opportunity in AI inference.

  • Taiwan Semiconductor has separated itself from the competition and the stock looks like a bargain.

  • These 10 stocks could mint the next wave of millionaires ›

With the market starting to settle down as U.S.-China trade tensions ease, now could be a great time to add some leading tech stocks to your portfolio.

Let's look at three top tech stocks to buy this month.

Artist rendering of AI chip.
Image source: Getty Images.

1. Nvidia

When it comes to artificial intelligence (AI), Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) remains one of the best-positioned companies. The company's graphics processing units (GPUs) have become the backbone of AI infrastructure, providing the processing power necessary to run AI workloads.

The company is the dominant player in the GPU space, with a market share exceeding 80%. This dominance stems from its CUDA software platform, which allows developers to easily program its chips, as well as its collection of AI-specific libraries and tools that improve its chips' performance running AI workloads.

AI-related data center spending continues to surge. The three major cloud providers -- Amazon, Microsoft, and Google -- are expected to spend a combined $250 billion this year to expand capacity and meet growing demand from customers running AI workloads. At the same time, tech giants like Meta Platforms and OpenAI are racing to build more powerful AI models, which require increasingly more computing power. Enterprises are also ramping up their infrastructure investments, adopting hybrid cloud strategies to support internal AI deployment.

For its part, Nvidia expects these tailwinds to continue, predicting that data center capital expenditures (capex) will surpass $1 trillion in 2028. If it does, the company will be a prime beneficiary given its position in the market.

At the same time, the stock remains attractively priced, trading at a forward price-to-earnings ratio (P/E) of 28 times this year's analyst estimates and a 0.56 price/earnings-to-growth (PEG) ratio, with numbers below 1 considered undervalued.

2. Advanced Micro Devices

While a distant second in the GPU market to Nvidia, Advanced Micro Devices (NASDAQ: AMD) is still seeing strong data center growth. The company has been making some inroads in the GPU space, particularly in the AI inference market. While training has been the early focus of AI infrastructure investment, inference is eventually expected to become a much larger market. That is good news for AMD.