These five AI stocks have much higher potential from here than some of Wall Street’s more overheated names
Before we know it, AI will be part of our everyday lives. Market experts say artificial intelligence will lead the next wave of economic growth and productivity for at least the next couple of decades. But many AI stocks have earned a cautious outlook from the Street.
We all know the strengths and weaknesses of stocks like Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA), Advanced Micro Devices (NASDAQ:AMD) and Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA), but their challenges are separate from some other heavily AI-influenced stocks.
To find the best investing opportunities in AI right now, we looked for five stocks with a “strong buy” or “moderate buy” consensus rating from the Street’s top analysts. These are analysts with the highest success rate and average return. By limiting the ratings to best-performing analysts, we cut out analysts with poor track records to find recommendations investors can trust.
Stocks with “strong buy” ratings are also more likely to have significant upside potential from the current share price.
Salesforce (CRM)
When cloud computing giant Salesforce.com (NYSE:CRM) launched its Einstein Analytics platform back in 2017, everyone was buzzing. “We have more customer data than ever before and we need AI to turn data into something actionable for the business user,” says CRM exec Arijit Sengupta.
Salesforce wants a slice of the fast-growing AI market. A report by IDC and commissioned by CRM found that AI technologies will create more than 800,000 new jobs and add $1.1 trillion to global GDP by 2021.
CRM also has a very strong outlook from the Street.
Microsoft (MSFT)
Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) acquired Canadian AI company Maluuba as its primary entrance into the AI fray. Maluuba teaches machines to think and ask questions through deep learning. You may have heard of Maluuba when it made the impossible possible and used AI to beat the notoriously difficult Ms. Pac-Man arcade video game.
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella says he wants to “democratize AI” and bring the technology to more industries such as healthcare, education and manufacturing.
After taking a bit of a beating at the end of 2018, Microsoft has surpassed its previous highs.
Alphabet (GOOGL)
Alphabet Inc (NASDAQ:GOOGL,
NASDAQ:GOOG) has made the most AI purchases out of any tech firm, calculated research firm Quid, which says that GOOG has made 20 AI acquisitions, including predictive analytics platform Kaggle in Q1 of 2017.
Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai long has spoken about Google’s “AI first” future. At Google’s developer conference, he showed the Google Lens (a camera that can recognize what it sees) and AutoML, which uses neural networks to build better neural networks.
Google is rife with “buy” ratings and very few sell or hold ratings, and it has meaningful upside.
Baidu (BIDU)
Chinese internet company Baidu (NASDAQ:BIDU), the “Google of China,” has been investing heavily in AI. It thinks artificial intelligence can give it an edge over local rivals Tencent (OTCMKTS:TCEHY) and Alibaba (NYSE:BABA).
Baidu spent $2.9 billion on R&D in just 2.5 years, with most of this going to AI. The money has funded a 1,700-member research team and four separate research labs. Crucially, Baidu has an AI advantage because of the huge data it gains from its 665 million monthly search engine users.
Given China’s difficulties, BIDU is a moderate buy, but it still has impressive upside potential.
Delphi Automotive (DLPH)
U.K.-based auto tech company Delphi Automotive (NYSE:DLPH) is on the rise after a tumultuous few months.
Delphi dropped its powertrain business to focus on self-driving cars and electric vehicles last year, which appears to finally be paying off. In partnership with BMW, Intel Corporation (NASDAQ:INTC) and Mobileye NV, Delphi plans to launch self-driving cars by 2021.