The 2 Best Stock Ideas I Took Away From CES 2018

As you might expect from the headline, I'm about to give you a couple of stock ideas from that crazy annual tech extravaganza in Las Vegas known as the Consumer Electronics Show, or CES.

And from a tech show that has tilted in recent years toward self-driving cars, artificial intelligence, and virtual/augmented reality -- my stock ideas are better suited for the more aggressive "Rule Breakers" part of your portfolio.

With that, here are two companies I think are especially suited for long-term investors wanting exposure to what will surely be some of the biggest tech trends of the coming years.

NVIDIA Corporation

Yes, NVIDIA (NASDAQ: NVDA) was the best performer in the S&P 500 in 2016 (up 224%), and the stock gained another 81% in 2017. But the company's long-term potential remains enormous.

Thanks to its ever-improving graphics processing units, NVIDIA is a key player in the $100 billion (and growing) gaming market. But while gaming is still its core revenue driver, the company's incredible potential lies in several other areas that are all but certain to be major parts of our future existence: artificial intelligence, self-driving cars, virtual reality, augmented reality, cryptocurrency mining, and data centers.

One of CEO Jensen Huang's many announcements during CES was that Drive Xavier -- which he called the most complex system-on-a-chip the world has ever seen -- will begin delivery to customers this quarter. Drive Xavier can process 30 trillion operations per second and is 15 times more energy efficient than its predecessor.

The catchy CES phrase NVIDIA wants you to remember: NVIDIA is "The world's AI platform".

NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang presenting on stage at CES 2018.
NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang presenting on stage at CES 2018.

NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang at CES 2018. Image source: The Motley Fool.

Baidu Inc

If you're not familiar with the company, Baidu (NASDAQ: BIDU) calls itself "the Google of China". And it is very Google-like, with its dominant Internet-search business funding forays into voice-controlled smart-speaker home assistants (the Alexa of China), self-driving cars, and artificial intelligence.

Baidu's presentation ahead of CES was nearly as flashy as NVIDIA's. Chief Operating Officer Qi Lu announced an update to its self-driving platform, Apollo 2.0, which he called an example of innovation at "China speed". There are also partnerships with the likes of Intel, NXP, and yes ... NVIDIA. Baidu will incorporate NVIDIA's Drive Xavier processor in its self-driving platform.

More than anything (and much like NVIDIA), Baidu wants to be known as an artificial intelligence company. Qi Lu said at CES that the entire company pivoted to AI in 2017, has the best AI talent and assets in the country, and is "by far" the leading AI company in China.