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Nasdaq Sell-Off: 2 Solid Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stocks to Buy Hand Over Fist Before They Soar 70% to 85%, According to Wall Street

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Technology stocks have taken a big beating in recent months as the Trump administration's policies have led investors to press the panic button amid concerns that the tariff-fueled global trade war could hurt the U.S. economy and may even send it into a recession.

Investors have become risk-averse, which explains why high-flying tech stocks that were benefiting big time from the rapid adoption of cloud computing and artificial intelligence (AI) have pulled back substantially. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite index, which hit its most recent high on Dec. 16 last year, has shed nearly 23% of its value since then and now trades in bear territory.

Tech investors got another big shock on April 3 as the Nasdaq Composite fell 6% in a single day in the wake of the wide-ranging tariffs announced by the Trump administration. That's not surprising as the trade war is expected to escalate manufacturing costs for tech companies with overseas supply chains. All this negativity explains why tech companies saw big sell-offs despite robust growth in recent quarters.

However, the Nasdaq sell-off also means that there are solid companies that can be bought at attractive valuations right now. Let's take a closer look at two such names that are growing at an attractive pace and seem like great bargains right now.

These AI leaders could keep growing despite the trade war

AI leader Nvidia's (NASDAQ: NVDA) stock price fell 13% last week following the announcement of what the Trump administration labeled as "reciprocal tariffs." Broadcom (NASDAQ: AVGO) saw a similar drop. The U.S. levied import taxes of 32% on products coming from Taiwan.

Both Nvidia and Broadcom are fabless chipmakers that rely on Taiwan-based foundry giant Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing (NYSE: TSM) to fabricate their chips. Not surprisingly, both semiconductor stocks were in sell-off mode after tariffs were announced. However, a key thing to note here is that semiconductor imports are exempt from the tariffs levied last week, which should come as a reprieve for Nvidia and Broadcom (at least for now).

The growing consensus is that chip stocks could see less of a headwind during the ongoing trade war. Truist Securities analyst William Stein adds that the race to develop AI applications, even at high costs, by customers of Nvidia and Broadcom could help them maintain their healthy growth levels.

Another thing worth noting here is that President Donald Trump has adopted a soft stance on TSMC after the latter announced a $100 billion investment to build advanced chipmaking facilities in the U.S. This planned outlay will take TSMC's investment in the U.S. to $165 billion and is reportedly one of the reasons why semiconductor imports have been exempted from reciprocal tariffs.