Nvidia leads, AMD gains, Intel waits: analysts pick best chip stocks for 2025 amid Artificial Intelligence boom

Wall Street favors Nvidia for Artificial Intelligence GPUs as the company extends its lead, while AMD has emerged as a credible challenger and Intel remains a government-backed turnaround with mixed analyst views.

The semiconductor sector is center stage in 2025 as demand tied to Artificial Intelligence datacenter chips, U.S.-China trade tensions and domestic industrial policy reshape investor expectations. The U.S. government is promoting onshore semiconductor production and that support, alongside tariff dynamics, is creating both headwinds and tailwinds for chipmakers. Nvidia, AMD and Intel are the most watched names, but analysts offer distinct investment cases for each.

Nvidia remains the clear leader on the Artificial Intelligence training side after second-quarter results that beat expectations in revenue and earnings. Its datacenter revenue grew 56% year over year, and Wall Street sentiment skews strongly positive with 35 buys, three holds and one sell. The article notes an average price target that implies roughly a 23.8% upside and a year-to-date gain of about 27%. Several company guidance items and analyst price targets were referenced in the original reporting but the specific numeric targets were not stated.

AMD is presented as the rising challenger, up about 34% since the start of 2025 on optimism around its inference-focused MI355 chip, MI400 GPUs and EPYC server processors. Wall Street shows a moderate buy consensus of 25 buys and 10 holds, and the average price target cited in the piece implies roughly a 14% upside. Analysts such as William Stein of Truist moved AMD from neutral to buy, though exact target prices mentioned in the coverage were not stated.

Intel’s narrative is that of a government-backed underdog. The stock has risen roughly 20% year to date, helped by large public and private investments referenced in the report, but the article lists those investment amounts as not stated. Analysts remain cautious: the tally reported was 26 holds, three sells and one buy, and some average target metrics cited were not stated or implied a price below current levels. The coverage concludes that investors must choose between Nvidia for leadership, AMD for diversification and Intel as a high-risk, patient turnaround play.

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