Thursday, December 25, 2025

Is This the Best Stock to Own for the Next Decade of AI Expansion?

Artificial intelligence (AI) has been the primary driver of the current bull market.

AI is the theme that connects the “Magnificent Seven” companies. And their tremendous growth — combined with investors’ seemingly insatiable demand for AI-related stocks — over the past decade has put the market cap of each of the seven above $1 trillion. As a result, the seven tech giants now account for 37% of the S&P 500‘s market cap.

But I would argue that none of the Magnificent Seven stocks is the one to own for the next decade of AI expansion.

Instead, you can make a strong argument that Applied Materials (NASDAQ: AMAT) will be that stock. The company doesn’t make artificial intelligence chips like Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices. And it doesn’t provide AI services like Apple, Alphabet, or Microsoft.

But Applied Materials does make the systems used to produce most new chips and advanced displays globally. And that makes it the ultimate AI pick-and-shovel play.

A high-tech semiconductor.
Image source: Getty Images.

In fact, most of the world’s largest semiconductor manufacturers are Applied Materials customers. That includes Nvidia, Intel, Samsung, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, Broadcom, ASML Holding, Micron Technologies, and Texas Instruments. And there are many, many more.

None of these companies can manufacture their chips without the material deposition, atomic etching, precision measurement, and packaging equipment that Applied Materials supplies. It is the largest U.S. manufacturer of semiconductor equipment.

The company’s closest competitor is Lam Research, as both firms target the deposition and etch equipment categories. Applied Materials’ semiconductor equipment market share was 17.4% in 2024, while Lam’s was 13.1%. ASML Holding had the largest market share, at 20.2%, but it focuses on the high-end lithography market, so it doesn’t fully overlap with the other two firms’ target markets.

There are definitely risks related to geopolitical and trade tensions for Applied Materials. A little more than a third of the company’s revenue comes from the Chinese market, so a U.S.-China trade war would be highly detrimental to Applied Materials’ top and bottom lines. In fact, in the company’s fiscal third-quarter results, it warned of potentially lower sales in Q4 due to uncertainties related to China.

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