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3 AI Chip Stocks to Buy in the Nasdaq Correction

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The Nasdaq entered correction territory earlier this week, and a number of leading artificial intelligence (AI) semiconductor stocks have been swept up in the market downturn. However, spending on AI infrastructure has not suddenly dried up, and in fact it is still on the rise.

The three big cloud computing companies, for example, have budgeted spending a combined $250 billion in capital expenditures (capex) this year largely related to AI infrastructure. Meanwhile, a group of companies led by OpenAI and Softbank have pledged spending $500 billion over the next few years to go toward building AI data centers through Project Stargate. At the same time, AI start-ups and other leading tech companies are also building out AI infrastructure, including Meta Platforms, which plans to spend up to $65 billion on AI infrastructure this year. That's a lot of spending that will benefit AI chip companies this year and beyond.

Let's look a three AI chip companies set to benefit that are worth buying during the current Nasdaq correction.

Nvidia

Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) has established itself as the leading AI chipmaker through its market-leading graphics processing units (GPUs). It's been able to establish an approximately 90% market share with GPUs in large part thanks to its CUDA software platform, which was developed to allow its chips to be programmed beyond their original task of speeding up graphics rendering in video games.

Nvidia's revenue growth exploded when AI started to become mainstream due to the fast processing times of its chips, which were used to help train AI models and run inference. As AI models advanced, more and more GPUs were required to provide the needed computing power. Meanwhile, the company continued to further increase its software lead by creating a collection of libraries, microservices, and tools designed specifically for AI and high-performance computing. Today, its chips are the backbone of AI infrastructure.

Following the recent sell-off, the stock is inexpensive, trading at a forward price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of under 24 times 2025 analysts' estimates and a price/earnings-to-growth (PEG) of below 0.5, with PEGs below 1 typically considered undervalued.

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

Broadcom

While Nvidia is the leader in mass-merchant AI chips, Broadcom (NASDAQ: AVGO) has been carving out a strong niche in custom AI chips. It helps customers design application-specific integrated circuits, or ASICs. These custom chips are used for very specific tasks and as such have better performance at these tasks while using less power. However, they lack the flexibility of GPUs.