3 Under-the-Radar AI Stocks With Market-Beating Potential


The Trump administration’s “Liberation Day” tariffs on most of America’s trading partners recently deflated many of the market’s hottest artificial intelligence (AI) stocks. While the AI market should keep growing, higher tariffs could force many companies to rein in their spending on those expensive projects until the macro environment stabilizes.

But if we dig deeper, we’ll find some under-the-radar AI stocks that could still be worth accumulating in this volatile market. Let’s look at three of those AI plays — Innodata (NASDAQ: INOD), Ambarella (NASDAQ: AMBA), and Symbotic (NASDAQ: SYM) — and see why they might beat the market over the long term.

An illustration of an AI chip.
Image source: Getty Images.

Innodata, which went public in 1993, was considered a slow-growth analytics software company for most of that past three decades. But in 2018, it launched a suite of task-specific microservices for preparing data for AI applications.

When big tech companies such as Microsoft and Amazon develop a new AI project, they often spend 80% of their time preparing the data and just 20% of that time training the algorithm.

To shorten that time-consuming process, five of the “Magnificent Seven” companies started to use Innodata’s microservices to clean up their data for their AI services. Those contracts caused Innodata’s revenue and adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization (EBITDA) to surge 96% and 249%, respectively, in 2024.

Innodata’s growth could slow down if the macro headwinds drive its top customers to rein in their AI spending. But over the long term, it should weather those challenges and keep dominating its high-growth niche of the AI market.

From 2024 to 2026, analysts expect its revenue and adjusted EBITDA to grow at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 31% and 29%, respectively. But with an enterprise value of $938 million, it still isn’t expensive at 23 times this year’s adjusted EBITDA. Therefore, this could be a great growth stock to accumulate if the market slump continues.

Ambarella is leading producer of image processing system on chips (SoCs) and computer vision chips for security cameras, drones, connected vehicles, and other products. Its SoCs enable cameras to process high quality photos and videos at higher speeds, while its computer vision chips use AI to understand the images they see.

Over the past few years, Ambarella’s growth was throttled by U.S. export curbs against some of China’s top security camera makers, macro headwinds for the automotive and Internet of Things (IoT) markets, and competition from other chipmakers.

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