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These 2 AI Stocks Will Be Worth More Than Palantir Technologies by Early 2026

Shares of Palantir Technologies (NASDAQ: PLTR) have climbed by 255% over the last year, bringing its market value to about $200 billion. However, several Wall Street analysts expect Advanced Micro Devices (NASDAQ: AMD) and Uber Technologies (NYSE: UBER) to top that market cap in the next year. Among them:

  • Jim Kelleher at Argus Research has a 12-month price target of $160 per share on AMD. That would amount to a 52% gain from its current share price of around $105, and a $260 billion market cap on the company.

  • Mark Mahaney at Evercore has set a 12-month price target of $115 per share on Uber. That implies a 55% upside from its current share price of $74, and a $240 billion market cap.

Here’s what investors should know about AMD and Uber.

AMD designs chips for four key end markets: data centers, client (laptops and desktops), video game consoles, and embedded processors. The company in recent years has consistently gained market share in central processing units (CPUs) in the client and data center segments, while Intel has lost market share. But AMD has failed to take share from Nvidia in the markets for graphics processing units (GPUs) and the similar (but more specialized) chips dubbed artificial intelligence (AI) accelerators.

Overall, AMD reported strong financial results in the fourth quarter, but the market was disappointed because its data center sales missed estimates. Total revenue increased 24% to $7.6 billion and non-GAAP net income increased 42% to $1.09 per diluted share. On the earnings call, CEO Lisa Su told analysts that AMD’s data center AI sales would increase from $5 billion in 2024 to “tens of billions of dollars of annual revenue over the coming years.”

Kelleher at Argus Research recently wrote: “Share gains in client and in data center CPUs, market leadership in console gaming, and the much-enhanced embedded business all position AMD for long-term growth exceeding that of the peer group.” He also argued that AMD’s share price does not accurately reflect its long-term growth potential as it continues to take CPU share from Intel and possibly win GPU share from Nvidia.

On that note, investors are understandably disappointed that AMD has not come close to matching Nvidia’s growth. And while I doubt that will change in the future, I do think the market has become overly pessimistic where AMD is concerned. Wall Street expects the company’s earnings to increase by 40% in 2025. That makes its current valuation of 32 times earnings look downright cheap.

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