Got $5,000? 3 Tech Stocks to Buy and Hold for the Long Term.

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Earlier this week, many technology stocks sold off sharply on news of DeepSeek R1, the groundbreaking, low-cost AI model from China that materially lowered the cost of deploying AI.

But has that sell-off opened up a buying opportunity? Here are three tech stocks that should not only weather the current AI disruption, but also thrive on the other side.

Amazon

Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN) founder Jeff Bezos once said, "Your margin is my opportunity." So if artificial intelligence becomes more commoditized and the largest-scale, lowest-cost player wins, there's perhaps no company better positioned than Amazon.

If the cost of artificial intelligence comes far down, that will level the playing field for a lot of digital businesses. However, it's still hard to challenge large-scale players in the physical world. In other words, it may be easy to use AI to spin up a digital website and offer services, but it's another thing to deliver millions of items to people's doorstep within a day. So Amazon's e-commerce moat stands to endure the AI revolution. And Amazon should also be able to implement AI robotics to further optimize its delivery ecosystem and lower costs even further.

Meanwhile, Amazon Web Services may also have an advantage. AWS is the oldest and largest cloud platform and has committed to giving customers as much choice as possible at the lowest possible costs.

Since Amazon's rival Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT) leapt out and invested early in OpenAI, it had been thought by some that AWS was behind in the AI races. However, if large models become more commoditized, that Microsoft-OpenAI first-mover advantage won't mean much.

But rather than tying itself to one AI leader, Amazon has committed to hosting a variety of large language models on its Amazon Bedrock platform. Meanwhile, Amazon has also invested in OpenAI rival Anthropic, based on the results and usage it was seeing for Anthropic's Claude models on AWS.

Amazon is also committed to drive down the cost of training and inference with its homemade Trainium and Inferentia chips. By designing its own hardware in-house, Amazon offers dramatically lower costs than renting Nvidia GPUs. In fact, even Antrhopic, as a leading frontier model builder, has committed to training future models on Trainium. That could give it a cost advantage over other model-builders.

On a big-picture level, Amazon's history shows it has continually invested in new ideas and innovations, perhaps at the expense of near-term profits. It also usually vertically integrates, solidifying a cost advantage and increasing its moats versus its rivals in large industries.