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AI Infrastructure Stocks Diverge: Super Micro, Alphabet, and Nebius Show Varied Prospects

AI infrastructure stocks are diverging as Super Micro Computer (SMCI) outperforms Nebius (NBIS) in near-term appeal, while Alphabet (GOOGL) is seen as a safer long-term bet. Teradyne (TER) and Cisco (CSCO) also benefit from AI-driven demand.

Daniel Marsh · · · 4 min read · 3 views
AI Infrastructure Stocks Diverge: Super Micro, Alphabet, and Nebius Show Varied Prospects
Mentioned in this article
CSCO $120.41 +1.87% GOOGL $382.97 -1.21% NBIS $214.77 -2.35% SMCI $35.58 +6.34% TER $358.44 +1.41%

NEW YORK, May 26, 2026 – The landscape for artificial intelligence infrastructure investments is becoming increasingly nuanced, as recent analysis from Zacks Investment Research highlights significant divergence among key players. Super Micro Computer has emerged as a contentious stock in the AI infrastructure trade, with Zacks notes positioning it favorably over Nebius Group for short-term gains while acknowledging Alphabet as the more secure long-term option. A separate note suggests Teradyne could offer greater upside than Cisco due to rising chip-testing demand linked to AI accelerators.

Market Context and Shifting Dynamics

This debate matters now because investors are no longer buying a single, simple AI story. Capital is flowing across the entire AI infrastructure ecosystem, encompassing servers, graphics processing units (GPUs) for training and running AI models, networking equipment, cloud capacity, and test equipment. Hyperscalers—the largest cloud and internet companies—continue to spend heavily, but the stocks tied to that spending now carry very different balance-sheet, margin, and execution risks.

Before the opening bell, Super Micro last traded at $35.58, up $2.12 from its previous close. Alphabet was at $382.97, down $4.66, while Nebius slipped $5.42 to $214.77. Cisco and Teradyne were higher at $120.41 and $358.44, respectively.

Alphabet: The Safer Long-Term Bet

Zacks indicated that Alphabet appears safer over the long term than Super Micro because Google's parent controls more of the AI chain, from chips and data centers to models, cloud software, and consumer distribution. Both Super Micro and Alphabet carry a Zacks Rank #3, or Hold, but Alphabet gets the edge due to its broader AI ecosystem and stronger financial base.

Alphabet's latest results support that view. The company reported first-quarter revenue of $109.9 billion, up 22%, while Google Cloud revenue rose 63% to $20.0 billion on demand for enterprise AI services and infrastructure. CEO Sundar Pichai said Alphabet's “full stack approach” was driving results across the business, and noted that cloud backlog nearly doubled from the prior quarter to more than $460 billion.

Super Micro: Direct Exposure with Higher Risks

Super Micro still offers sharper direct exposure to AI server buildouts. The San Jose, California-based company reported fiscal third-quarter net sales of $10.2 billion, compared with $4.6 billion a year earlier, and net income of $483 million. Founder and CEO Charles Liang said the company's shift into a “total datacenter infrastructure provider is accelerating,” helped by margin recovery and growth in its Data Center Building Block Solutions business.

However, risks are concrete. Super Micro's own release showed $6.6 billion of cash used in operations in the latest quarter and total bank debt and convertible notes of $8.8 billion, while the company also cited customer deployment delays. Separately, Reuters reported last week that Taiwanese prosecutors were investigating alleged illegal exports of high-end AI servers made by Super Micro with Nvidia chips; Super Micro was not named as a defendant in the earlier U.S. indictment and has said it is cooperating with authorities.

Nebius: High Growth, Heavy Capital Demands

Against Nebius, Zacks gave Super Micro the better call, citing its broader infrastructure portfolio, rising enterprise traction, and estimates that have moved higher. Nebius, an Amsterdam-based AI cloud company, posted first-quarter revenue of $399 million, up 684% from a year earlier, but Zacks pointed to the capital intensity of its buildout and possible financing needs as it expands power capacity and cloud infrastructure.

That growth is real, but it is not cheap. Nebius lifted its 2026 capital spending forecast to $20 billion to $25 billion, Reuters reported earlier this month, as it races to meet demand from customers including Meta and Microsoft. CEO Arkady Volozh said demand was running ahead of the company's GPU supply.

Teradyne and Cisco: AI Buildout Spreads

The third linked comparison widened the trade beyond servers and cloud. Teradyne reported record first-quarter revenue of $1.282 billion, up 87%, with $1.111 billion from its Semiconductor Test segment, and said about 70% of revenue was tied to AI-related demand. CEO Greg Smith said the results showed the strength of its “wafer to AI data center strategy.”

Cisco is not being left out. The networking group reported record fiscal third-quarter revenue of $15.8 billion and said it had taken $5.3 billion of hyperscaler AI infrastructure orders so far in fiscal 2026, raising its expected full-year AI infrastructure orders to $9 billion. CEO Chuck Robbins called Cisco “critical infrastructure for the AI era.”

Investment Implications

For investors, the split is the story. Alphabet offers scale and a deeper AI stack. Super Micro offers faster hardware leverage with more operational and regulatory noise. Nebius offers a cloud-capacity land grab, but with heavy spending. Teradyne and Cisco show that the AI buildout is spreading into test gear and networking, not just servers.

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice or a recommendation to buy or sell any security. Market data may be delayed. Always conduct your own research and consult a licensed financial advisor before making investment decisions.

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