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Been thinking about the AI investment landscape lately, and honestly, the narrative around whether we're in a bubble or not might be missing the real opportunity. What actually matters is finding the right companies to buy AI stock exposure through - and I've narrowed it down to three that genuinely stand out.
Let me start with ASML. Most people don't realize this, but ASML is literally the only company on the planet that makes the extreme ultraviolet lithography machines needed for next-gen chip manufacturing. Every major chipmaker - Nvidia, Broadcom, AMD - they all need ASML's equipment. As AI chips get more advanced and require crazy precision levels, demand for these machines isn't going anywhere. If you're thinking about buying AI stocks, understanding the infrastructure layer is crucial, and ASML is basically the gatekeeper.
Then there's Nvidia. Yeah, everyone knows Nvidia, and sure, competition is heating up with custom chips from Broadcom and AMD gaining ground. But here's the thing - Nvidia's still dominating the data center space with their GPUs and rack-scale solutions. Whether it's Oracle taking share from AWS or Claude competing with ChatGPT, Nvidia wins either way because they're embedded across the entire stack. The net profit margin sitting at 53% is insane. Even if margins compress from competition, this company's fundamentals are ridiculous.
Microsoft might be the smartest play though if you want balanced exposure. They've got Azure for cloud infrastructure, they're invested in OpenAI, and they control enterprise software and gaming. Basically, Microsoft touches every part of the AI value chain - hardware, models, applications. It's the perfect way to diversify within AI exposure. They're also returning cash through dividends and buybacks, trading at 30x forward earnings.
Here's what I think people get wrong about buying AI stocks - they either go all-in on chipmakers or chase pure software plays. The real move is spreading positions across the value chain. You get multiple profit vectors while protecting yourself against the inevitable volatility. The S&P 500 is up 79% over three years, so yeah, valuations are stretched. But history shows that owning fundamentally strong companies through market cycles tends to work out. If you're serious about AI stock opportunities, these three give you that balanced exposure.