The Best Stocks to Invest $50,000 in Right Now

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It might seem intimidating to buy stocks as the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite hover near their all-time highs. After all, Warren Buffett told investors to be “fearful when others are greedy” — and plenty of high-growth stocks are trading at greedy valuations.

So if you plan to invest at least $50,000 in this frothy market, you should carefully seek out the market leaders that are still expanding, have wide moats, and look undervalued relative to their growth potential. I believe these three resilient stocks check the right boxes: Broadcom (NASDAQ: AVGO), Advanced Micro Devices (NASDAQ: AMD), and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing (NYSE: TSM).

Image source: Getty Images.

Broadcom, which was known as Avago Technologies before it acquired the original Broadcom eight years ago, is one of the world’s top chipmaking and infrastructure software companies. Its chipmaking business provides a wide range of chips for the mobile, wireless, networking, data storage, and industrial markets. Its infrastructure software business, which it expanded via some big acquisitions, provides cloud and security services.

The company’s chipmaking and software businesses are both growing, and it’s benefited from the rapid expansion of the artificial intelligence (AI) market over the past two years. In fiscal 2024 (which ended in October), its sales of AI-oriented networking and optical chips more than tripled to $12.2 billion and accounted for 24% of its total revenue. That growth offset its declining sales of non-AI chips, which face more cyclical and macro challenges.

For fiscal 2025, analysts expect its revenue and adjusted earnings per share (EPS) to grow 18% and 27%, respectively, as it continues to grow its AI-oriented businesses. Its stock is still reasonably valued at 29 times forward earnings, and it could head a lot higher as its other non-AI chip and software businesses flourish in a warmer macro environment.

Advanced Micro Devices, or AMD, is the world’s second-largest producer of x86 CPUs and discrete GPUs. It trails behind Intel and Nvidia in those two markets, respectively, but it’s continued to grow by selling comparable chips at lower prices.

Unlike Intel, which manufactures most of its own chips, AMD is a fabless chipmaker that outsources its production to Taiwan Semiconductor and other foundries. That strategy enabled it to avoid the industry’s supply chain constraints while pulling ahead of Intel in the “process race” to manufacture smaller and denser chips.

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