2 No-Brainer Technology Stocks to Buy Right Now

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Technology stocks have been the driving force behind the market for the past decade, with eight of the S&P 500's largest weightings now in technology or tech-adjacent stocks. With technology continuing to change and advance the world we live in, there is good reason to believe that tech stocks will continue to help lead the market higher over the next decade.

Let's look at two tech-related stocks that look like no-brainer buys.

Nvidia

Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) has become the leader in artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure where its graphic processing units (GPUs) provide the computing needed to train AI models and run inference. It commands an astounding nearly 90% market share in the rapidly growing GPU space.

This dominance can be attributed to its CUDA software platform, which it long ago created to let developers program its chips outside their original purpose of speeding up graphics rendering in video games. As a result, CUDA became the de facto software on which developers learned to program GPUs, while in the years since the program was created, it has furthered its lead through CUDA X, a collection of GPU-accelerated microservices, tools, and libraries for AI built on top of CUDA.

The company has been one of the biggest AI winners and is on pace to have its second straight year of triple-digit revenue growth. However, with AI still in early innings, Nvidia should have plenty of growth still ahead. As AI models advance, they need exponentially more computing power and chips like GPUs to be trained on.

For example, the latest iteration of Meta Platforms' Llama AI model uses 10 times as many GPUs to train on than the prior iteration. Meanwhile, Nvidia's largest customer, Microsoft, just announced it would spend an astonishing $80 billion building out AI data centers this year.

Right now, there is no sign of AI infrastructure spending slowing down, which is good for Nvidia. At the same time, despite the stock's strong performance over the past few years, it is still reasonably priced and currently trades at a forward price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of below 31 times and a price/earnings-to-growth ratio ( PEG ) under 1, which typically indicates a stock is undervalued.

Between its valuation and the long runway of growth, Nvidia continues to look like a solid buy.

Artist rendering of AI chip.
Image source: Getty Images.

Amazon

Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN) is known for its e-commerce platform, but its largest business by profitability is actually its Amazon Web Services (AWS) cloud computing unit. Over the past 12 months, AWS has generated operating income of $36.4 billion compared to $24.3 billion for the rest of Amazon's businesses.