Prediction: 1 AI Stock Will Be Worth More Than Palantir Technologies by Year-End in 2025

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Palantir Technologies was the best-performing member of the S&P 500 (SNPINDEX: ^GSPC) in 2024. Its share price surged 340% last year as growing demand for its artificial intelligence platform excited investors. Palantir has grown into a $181.9 billion business, but I think semiconductor comany Arm Holdings (NASDAQ: ARM) can top that figure in 2025.

Here's what that would mean for shareholders: Arm is currently worth $148 billion. So its stock price would need to advance 23% to $174 per share for its market value to hit $182 billion. I see that as a likely outcome in 2025 because of growing demand for power-efficient AI infrastructure. And the following Wall Street analysts have set target prices that support my prediction.

  • Morgan Stanley analyst Lee Simpson: $175 per share.

  • Evercore analyst Mark Lipacis: $176 per share.

  • Bank of America analyst Vivek Arya: $180 per share

  • Loop Capital Ananda Baruah: $180 per share.

Here's what investors should about this semiconductor stock.

Arm chips are ubiquitous in smartphones and gaining share in data centers

Arm is a semiconductor company that doesn't sell semiconductors. Instead, it designs central processing unit (CPU) architectures, and licenses the intellectual property (IP) to customers. The customers can then use the IP to design custom chips optimized to their needs, while Arm earns revenue through licensing and per-unit royalties.

Arm also provides related technologies like systems IP and software development tools. The former helps engineers bring together CPUs, GPUs, memory, and other hardware to design Arm-based systems. The latter simplifies application development on Arm-based chips across domains like artificial intelligence (AI), robotics, and scientific computing.

Arm chips have historically been more power efficient than competing processors built on the x86 architecture from Intel and AMD. Consequently, Arm chips are ubiquitous across mobile devices, including 99% market share in smartphones. But the company has made strides in improving performance, such that its data center market share has increased six percentage points in the last two years.

Importantly, the three largest public clouds have designed Arm-based chips for their data centers: Graviton processors from Amazon Web Services, Axiom CPUs from Alphabet's Google Cloud, and Cobalt CPUs from Microsoft Azure. Additionally, Arm CEO Rene Haas recently wrote, "Ten of the world's largest hyperscalers are developing and deploying Arm-based chips into their data centers."

One potentially important example is the Nvidia Grace-Blackwell superchip, which pairs Nvidia GPUs with Arm CPUs. CEO Jensen Huang believes the Blackwell platform will be the most successful product in company history, and perhaps the most successful product in the history of computing. That bodes well for Arm because the company collects per-chip royalties.