A broad market rotation is underway as investors shift capital from Nvidia to a wider set of AI hardware companies, betting on new demand from AI agents and a global memory shortage.
A fundamental shift in AI investment is reshaping the semiconductor industry, as capital that once flowed almost exclusively to Nvidia Corp. is now diversifying into a broader array of hardware suppliers. The move reflects a bet that the next phase of the AI buildout requires a wider set of components, fueling massive rallies in companies like Advanced Micro Devices Inc., Intel Corp., and Micron Technology Inc.
This week provided the starkest illustration of what Mizuho analyst Jordan Klein called a "changing of the guard in AI." While Nvidia has gained about 15 percent year-to-date, its performance was dwarfed by weekly gains of approximately 25 percent for both AMD and Intel, a 37 percent surge for memory-maker Micron, and an 18 percent climb for fiber-optic supplier Corning Inc. All four have more than doubled in value this year, with Intel leading the pack with a gain of over 200 percent.
Investors are betting that the AI bull market has long legs, with two primary catalysts driving the rotation. First, a global shortage in high-bandwidth memory has sent prices surging, directly benefiting a handful of producers. Second, the evolution of AI from chatbots to more complex AI agents is reviving demand for central processing units (CPUs), a market where AMD and Intel are primary players.
Memory Shortage Fuels Historic Rally
The most powerful force has been a structural shortage in the memory market, which is dominated by Micron, Samsung, and SK Hynix. The supply crunch has turned Micron into one of Wall Street's hottest stocks; its market capitalization blew past $800 billion for the first time this week as the stock is now up over 750 percent in the past year. According to CEO Sanjay Mehrotra, key customers are only getting "50 percent to two-thirds of their requirements" due to the supply issues.
"That is what happens when a market quickly enters a material shortage condition and pricing surges higher," Mizuho's Klein wrote to clients. "You make a lot of money being overweight historic memory upturns when new capacity cannot be added fast enough."
AI Agents Revive CPU Demand
Beyond memory, the rise of AI agents—autonomous programs that can perform complex tasks—is driving insatiable demand for CPUs. Bank of America estimates the data center CPU market could more than double from $27 billion in 2025 to $60 billion by 2030. AMD's latest quarterly report crystallized this trend, with revenue guidance of roughly $11.2 billion for Q2 implying 46 percent growth.
"Agents are really driving tremendous demand in the overall AI adoption cycle, and we're very excited to be in the middle of it," AMD CEO Lisa Su told CNBC. The results prompted upgrades from Goldman Sachs and Bernstein.
Intel, which largely missed the first wave of the AI boom, is staging a comeback. The stock surged after a Bloomberg report that Apple Inc. is in talks with the chipmaker to produce processors for its U.S. devices, a development later reportedly confirmed by The Wall Street Journal.
The Investor Takeaway
While the investment thesis for AI infrastructure is broadening, some analysts are drawing parallels to the dot-com bubble of the late 1990s. Jonathan Krinksy, an analyst at BTIG, warned that the magnitude of the rally in semiconductors resembles 1999 and that the PHLX Semiconductor Index, up 66 percent this year, could face a 25 percent to 30 percent correction. For investors, the rotation presents both the opportunity to capture growth in the next phase of the AI buildout and the risk of entering an overheated market.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.