Chip stocks have been setting the tone in 2026. The VanEck Semiconductor ETF (NASDAQ:SMH) is up 66.69% year to date, and the iShares Semiconductor ETF (NASDAQ:SOXX) has done even better, rising 88.78%. Bank of America’s Global Fund Manager Survey now shows 82% of managers calling “long global semiconductors” the most crowded trade in the survey’s history, well ahead of “Long Magnificent 7” at 7%.
If you watched this move from the sidelines, the question is simple: did you miss it, or is there still runway in the four AI-chip names at the center of the trade: NVIDIA (NASDAQ:NVDA | NVDA Price Prediction), Advanced Micro Devices (NASDAQ:AMD), Broadcom (NASDAQ:AVGO), and Qualcomm (NASDAQ:QCOM)?
Valuation: Wide Dispersion Within a Crowded Sector
The four stocks carry sharply different multiples. NVIDIA trades at a trailing P/E of 32x with a forward P/E of 24x, defensible against 85.2% YoY revenue growth last quarter. Broadcom sits at a trailing 64x but a forward 21x, reflecting the AI ramp still to come. Qualcomm is the outlier at a trailing 19x, forward 16x, and a 2.07% dividend yield. AMD is the stretched one: trailing P/E of 185x, forward 79x, after a 148.2% YTD run and a 232.1% one-year gain.
Forward Catalyst: The Numbers Still Grow
Based on corporate America’s growth projections, the crowded trade still has room to run. NVIDIA guided Q2 revenue to roughly $91.0B, excluding China Data Center compute, and authorized an $80B share buyback on top of $38.5B remaining as of March. Broadcom guided Q3 AI semiconductor revenue to $16.0B, up over 200% year-over-year, alongside its eighth straight EPS beat.
AMD’s Q1 showed Data Center revenue of $5.78B, up 57% YoY, with the Meta 6-gigawatt Instinct GPU commitment anchoring the MI450 ramp. Qualcomm’s setup is the softest near term: Q3 adjusted EPS guidance of $2.10 to $2.30 steps down sequentially, but its hyperscaler custom-silicon shipments begin later in 2026, giving the stock a compelling new growth leg.
Risk and Entry: Where the Downside Actually Lives
Prediction markets are telling, particularly on NVIDIA. Polymarket assigns only a 5.5% probability of the stock closing above $240 by month-end, versus 75.0% above $200. That signals asymmetric consolidation ahead. Reddit sentiment on NVDA has cooled to neutral, with retail flagging DeepSeek’s in-house AI chip and SK Hynix’s U.S. market entry as fresh competitive worries.
AMD carries the true valuation risk: at 185x trailing earnings and a beta of 2.47, a growth wobble hits the multiple twice. For an income-oriented retirement portfolio, Qualcomm’s 15.88% one-month drawdown already provides an entry the others have not offered.
If you want a curated view of the operators best positioned for this cycle, our research team’s 7 Stocks Powering the AI Boom report frames the winners without chasing the froth.
Verdict
The chip trade has evolved, but opportunity remains. NVIDIA and Broadcom still have the earnings power to grow into their multiples, and Qualcomm’s recent sell-off offers a value entry with a real 2026 catalyst. AMD is the one where the price has outrun the fundamentals for now. For a retirement-focused investor, NVDA, AVGO, and QCOM screen as the more defensible setups on any weakness, while AMD’s stretched multiple warrants closer monitoring before the risk/reward rebalances.
Contact [email protected] for any questions or corrections.