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Two AI giants that could rival Apple’s market cap by 2028

two ai giants to rival apple's market cap by 2028

The hierarchy of the tech world is undergoing a seismic shift.

For years, Apple Inc (NASDAQ: AAPL) has reigned supreme as the ultimate titan of the consumer era, currently sitting on a staggering market capitalization of about $4 trillion.

However, as the global economy pivots from mobile-first to AI-first, the spotlight is moving from the companies that sell devices to the ones that forge the silicon brains inside them.

While Apple’s growth has matured into a steady, reliable climb, two semiconductor powerhouses – Broadcom (NASDAQ: AVGO) and Taiwan Semiconductor (NYSE: TSM) – are sprinting.

Currently valued at roughly $1.8 trillion each, both companies are riding a tidal wave of artificial intelligence demand that could see them double their valuations by 2028, potentially unseating the iPhone maker as the world’s 3rd largest company by market cap.

Broadcom stock: the architect of custom intelligence

Broadcom is no longer just a “chip company”; it has evolved into a diversified infrastructure giant.

While Apple’s revenue growth hovered around 16% in its latest reported quarter, AVGO stunned the market with a 28% increase, fueled by a sophisticated mix of high-speed networking gear and custom AI accelerators.

As titans, including Meta and Google, look to reduce their reliance on expensive, “general-purpose” GPUs, they are turning to Broadcom to design bespoke “XPU” solutions tailored specifically for their internal AI workloads.

The financial math behind Broadcom stock’s ascent is compelling. Analysts project an annualized earnings growth rate of 41% – nearly four times Apple’s forecasted 11%.

With a forward price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio that remains reasonable compared to its hyper-growth peers, AVGO shares’ path to $4 trillion is paved by its visibility into over $100 billion in AI revenue through 2027.

Despite risks associated with a concentrated customer base, its VMware acquisition offers a high-margin software cushion, making the company a dual threat in both hardware and infrastructure code.

TSMC stock: the indispensable foundry of the future

If the AI revolution is a gold rush, TSMC is the only company selling the shovels – and it owns a monopoly on the best ones.

Controlling roughly 72% of the foundry market, Taiwan Semiconductor is the silent engine behind every major AI player, including Nvidia, Broadcom, and even Apple itself.

And as the world transitions to 2-nanometer and 3-nanometer nodes, TSMC’s dominance will only deepen, as no other firm possesses the capital or technical expertise to manufacture at such extreme precision.

TSMC’s recent performance is a testament to this AI megatrend. Sales growth accelerated to 40% in the recently concluded quarter, with management expecting AI-related demand to surge by 50% annually through the end of the decade.

Currently trading at a modest 25x earnings, TSMC stock doesn’t yet reflect its status as the world’s most critical bottleneck. While geopolitical tensions in the Taiwan Strait remain a persistent shadow, TSMC’s aggressive global expansion into Arizona and Japan is beginning to mitigate those fears.

If Taiwan Semiconductor maintains its current trajectory, it won’t just be a supplier to the world’s most valuable companies – it will be one of them.

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