When You Look Back in a Few Years, You’ll Wish You’d Bought These 2 “Magnificent Seven” Stocks

Date:

Back in 2023, Bank of America analyst Michael Hartnett first applied the nickname the “Magnificent Seven” to a group of tech powerhouses that were standing out for their size and recent trend of outperforming the broader market. The rest of Wall Street quickly picked up the phrase. Those companies and their current market caps are:

  1. Nvidia: $4.4 trillion
  2. Microsoft: $3.7 trillion
  3. Apple: $3.3 trillion
  4. Alphabet (GOOG +0.02%)(GOOGL +0.02%): $2.5 trillion
  5. Amazon: $2.4 trillion
  6. Meta Platforms (META +0.01%): $1.9 trillion
  7. Tesla: $1.1 trillion

All are leaders in their segments of the technology sector, and each is now investing heavily in artificial intelligence (AI) — outlays that could fuel substantial growth down the line.

Generally speaking, it would probably be a good idea to own all seven of these stocks over the long term, but Meta Platforms and Alphabet look like particularly attractive buys now due to their unique AI strategies and their relatively cheap valuations. When investors look back on this moment in a few years, here’s why they might be glad they added those two names to their portfolios.

Two people laughing while looking at a smartphone.

Image source: Getty Images.

The case for Meta Platforms

Meta owns a family of popular social networks, including Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp — apps that are used by more than 3.4 billion people every day. The company monetizes those platforms by selling advertising slots to businesses, so it makes more money when users spend more time online, because that means they see more ads.

Meta is using AI in its recommendation algorithms to learn what type of content each user likes to see, so it can feed them more of it. During the second quarter, this strategy drove a 6% increase in the amount of time users were spending on Instagram compared to the year-ago period, and a 5% increase for Facebook.

Meta also uses AI in its ad-recommendation engine to target users more effectively, which led to a modest increase in conversions on both Instagram and Facebook during Q2. Since higher conversions give businesses greater returns on their advertising spend, this will allow Meta to charge more money per ad.