Meet Wall Street's Newest $1 Trillion Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stock -- but Don't Rush to Buy It Just Yet

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Up until the market opened on Friday, Dec. 13, America was home to seven technology companies worth $1 trillion or more:

  1. Apple: $3.7 trillion.

  2. Nvidia: $3.3 trillion.

  3. Microsoft: $3.3 trillion.

  4. Amazon: $2.4 trillion.

  5. Alphabet: $2.3 trillion.

  6. Meta Platforms: $$1.5 trillion.

  7. Tesla: $1.4 trillion.

However, an eighth company just joined the ranks. Broadcom (NASDAQ: AVGO) stock surged 24% last Friday following the release of its financial results for fiscal 2024 (ended Nov. 3), catapulting the company into the exclusive $1 trillion club.

Investors were impressed with Broadcom's soaring artificial intelligence (AI) revenue, which comes from selling custom chips and networking equipment for data centers. Plus, the company issued a very bullish forecast for its future AI revenue, which points to substantial potential growth ahead.

However, before you rush to buy Broadcom stock, you'll have to get comfortable with its lofty valuation. Here's what you need to know.

Broadcom is becoming a serious player in AI hardware

Broadcom was solely a supplier of semiconductors and electronics components for a variety of computing applications up until 2016, when it merged with fellow chip giant Avago Technologies. From there, the new-look Broadcom went on to spend around $100 billion acquiring other companies like semiconductor equipment supplier CA Technologies, cybersecurity vendor Symantec, and cloud software titan VMware.

Those companies helped Broadcom diversify its business, and they are now important contributors to the company's overall revenue. In other words, they paved the way for it to become the $1 trillion giant it is today. But thanks to the spending boom on AI infrastructure from some of the world's leading tech giants, investors are currently laser-focused on Broadcom's semiconductor and networking businesses.

The company makes custom AI accelerators (a type of data center chip) for three hyperscale customers, and while their identities are not disclosed, hyperscalers typically include Microsoft, Amazon, Alphabet, and Oracle. During Broadcom's fiscal 2024 fourth quarter, it said shipments of AI accelerators doubled compared to the year-ago period.

Here's why that's important. Nvidia's graphics processing units (GPUs) for the data center are currently the most sought after chips in the AI industry. While each of the above hyperscalers are Nvidia customers, Broadcom gives them the ability to design their own chips, which means they can tailor their infrastructure to their own specific needs -- not to mention significantly reduce costs (Nvidia's hardware is very expensive).