2 AI Semiconductor Stocks to Consider Buying in 2025

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With Microsoft recently announcing its intentions to spend $80 billion on building data centers across the globe this year, there appears to be no let-up in spending on artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure. Meanwhile, as companies advance their AI models, they need exponentially more chips for these models to be trained on. Both Nvidia and Broadcom have talked about customers deploying AI chip clusters of 1 million or more in the near future, which is a huge jump from what recent AI models have been trained on.

Let's look at two semiconductor stocks that should nicely benefit from the continued proliferation of AI chips.

1. Taiwan Semiconductor

Today, most chipmakers, such as Nvidia and Broadcom, just design chips while leaving the manufacturing to a third party. Manufacturing semiconductors is a complex task that requires a lot of technological know-how, and there is always a push for manufacturers to shrink chip size in order to increase processing power and reduce power consumption. At the same time, building foundries (chip manufacturing facilities) is a capital-intensive business (in other words, they cost a lot of money to build), and the foundries need to run near full capacity to be profitable.

How difficult it is to run a third-party foundry business can be seen with Intel, which has poured a ton of money into building foundries only for this segment to be a big money loser. Samsung's foundry business has also greatly struggled, with the unit reporting a big loss last quarter and the company announcing plans to lay off 30% of the unit's workforce and to shut down half its production lines.

However, there is one semiconductor contract manufacturer that has emerged as the clear winner in the space: Taiwan Semiconductor (NYSE: TSM), or TSMC for short. The company has seen revenue and profits booming, spurred by the AI chip boom. Last quarter, it saw its revenue climb 36% to $23.5 billion, while its earnings per ADR soared 50% to $1.94 from $1.29 a year ago.

The company has been the go-to contract manufacturer for advanced chips, given its scale and technology advantages. As its rivals have struggled, this has also given the company tremendous pricing power, which helped push up its gross margin to 57.8% last quarter from 54.3% a year ago. There have been reports that the company has raised its prices for 2025 as well. Meanwhile, it has also been expanding its capacity by building new foundries.

TSMC is one of the companies best positioned to benefit from the continued chip boom, and its stock is attractively valued, trading at a forward price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of 19.5 and a price/earnings-to-growth ( PEG ) ratio of 0.65. A PEG ratio below 1 is generally viewed as undervalued, but growth stocks will often have PEG ratios well above 1.