12 High Growth Semiconductor Stocks That Are Profitable

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In this article, we discuss the 12 high-growth semiconductor stocks that are profitable. To skip the detailed analysis of the semiconductor industry, go directly to the 5 High Growth Semiconductor Stocks That Are Profitable.

Semiconductors are a global need and their supply is required by every sector of the market. The industry has been facing a global shortage since the COVID-19 pandemic as the whole world moved their lives online, generating demand for electronics. The semiconductor supply was already quite flaky before the pandemic due to reasons including, but not limited to, political tensions and the trade war between the US and China. The pandemic was just a catalyst in realizing the supply chain weaknesses in the industry.

On September 6, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Limited (NYSE:TSM)’s Chairman, Dr. Mark Liu, said that the semiconductor supply chain will take around 18 months to ease. He said:

"Currently, we can't fulfill 100% of our customers' needs, but we try to support about 80%. We think this is a temporary phenomenon. After our expansion of [advanced chip packaging capacity], it should be alleviated in one and a half years." 

The generative AI trend has further increased the demand for semiconductors. NVIDIA Corporation (NASDAQ:NVDA) controls 80% of the supply of the GPUs used for training and developing AI applications. The company was the headliner during the AI surge and has gained over 241% year-to-date (YTD) on December 22. NVIDIA Corporation (NASDAQ:NVDA) became a trillion-dollar market cap company in May this year and generated revenues of $38.82 billion in the first nine months of the year, up from $20.9 billion during the same period in 2022.

To compete with NVIDIA Corporation (NASDAQ:NVDA), Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. (NASDAQ:AMD) launched its latest AI accelerator, Instinct MI300X, on December 6. The company raised its AI accelerator total addressable market from $150 billion to $400 billion.

Another semiconductor company that is expected to take over a significant part of AI-related processing units' market share is Intel Corporation (NASDAQ:INTC). At its third-quarter earnings call, the company’s CEO, Pat Gelsinger, said:

“We see the AI workload as a key driver of the $1 trillion semiconductor TAM by 2030. We are empowering the market to seamlessly integrate and effectively run AI in all their applications. For the developer working with multi-trillion-parameter frontier models in the cloud, Gaudi and our suite of AI accelerators provides a powerful combination of performance, competitive MLPerf benchmarks, and a very cost-efficient TCO. However, as the world moves toward more AI-integrated application, there's a market shift toward local inferencing.  It's a nod to both the necessity of data privacy and an answer to cloud-based inference cost. With AI-accelerated Xeon for enterprise, Core Ultra launching the AI PC generation, and OpenVINO enabling developers seamless and versatile support for a range of client and edge silicon, we are bringing AI to where the data is being generated and used rather than forcing it into the cloud. Our expansive footprint spanning cloud and enterprise servers to volume clients and ubiquitous edge devices positions us well to enable the AI continuum across all our market segments.”