Best semiconductor stocks 2026, scored against 7 investor frameworks
Ten semiconductor names ranked by how they hold up against Buffett, Graham, Fisher, Lynch, Greenblatt, Munger, and Smith. Honest reads, key risks, and a link to the full per-ticker verdict.
Last reviewed: · Educational only. Not investment advice.
Semiconductors are the substrate of everything else in 2026. AI training, AI inference, cars, factories, defense, and consumer electronics all sit on the same handful of foundries and the same handful of process-equipment suppliers. That concentration is what makes the sector simultaneously the best and the most dangerous part of the modern equity market. The best franchises earn extraordinary returns on capital because the capex barriers are now too high for new entrants, and the worst names spend decades trying to climb out of an earnings hole created by one missed node.
The right way to rank semiconductor stocks is not to pick the one you think will go up the most. It is to ask which names hold up when you put them through several disciplined value investing frameworks at once. That is exactly what invest-like is built to do. Every stock on the platform gets a verdict from seven investor frameworks (Buffett, Graham, Fisher, Lynch, Greenblatt, Munger, Smith), and the consensus signal counts how many pass. The list below applies the same seven-framework lens to the ten most-watched semiconductor names heading into 2026, with the honest reads on where each one holds up and where it does not.
01
TSMTaiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing
The world's dominant pure-play foundry, fabricating the leading-edge nodes that Apple, NVIDIA, AMD, and Broadcom depend on.
Buffett ranks TSM as one of the cleanest moats in semis (process leadership at 3nm and below is effectively unduplicable for under USD 100 billion). Greenblatt likes it on Magic Formula terms: very high ROIC against an EV/EBIT that the geopolitical discount keeps cheap. Smith reads the high ROCE and growing FCF favorably. Graham flags the cyclical earnings and the geopolitical concentration in Taiwan as off the defensive list.
Frameworks that pass
Buffett
Greenblatt
Smith
Munger
Frameworks that fail
Graham (geopolitics, cyclicality)
Key risk to know
Taiwan Strait political risk is binary. Any cross-strait incident reprices the entire stock, regardless of fundamentals.
The dominant GPU and AI accelerator company, with CUDA software lock-in that no rival has cracked.
Fisher and Munger lean positive: extraordinary R&D efficiency, founder-led, durable software moat in CUDA. Lynch struggles with the story because the multiple no longer fits PEG at any reasonable growth rate. Graham fails it on every defensive screen (high P/E, no margin of safety on book value).
Frameworks that pass
Fisher
Munger
Buffett (qualitative moat)
Frameworks that fail
Graham
Lynch (PEG)
Key risk to know
Hyperscaler capex digestion. If Microsoft, Meta, Google, and Amazon coordinate even a single quarter of slower data-center capex, NVDA's growth narrative compresses fast.
A diversified semiconductor and infrastructure software conglomerate, with strong custom ASIC exposure to AI workloads and a recent VMware integration.
Buffett's circle: clear moats in custom silicon and switching costs in enterprise software. Greenblatt likes the ROIC profile even after the VMware acquisition. Munger flags the leverage from the VMware deal, but management's track record (Hock Tan) earns the qualitative pass. Lynch is fine with the story but the multiple is no longer cheap.
Frameworks that pass
Buffett
Greenblatt
Munger
Smith
Frameworks that fail
Graham (leverage post-VMware)
Key risk to know
Acquisition execution. AVGO's value depends on Hock Tan continuing to extract operating leverage from large software acquisitions. A misstep on VMware would be expensive.
NVIDIA's primary GPU competitor, with strong server CPU share against Intel and a credible MI300 family of AI accelerators.
Fisher and Lynch like the growth-at-reasonable-price profile, with PEG closer to fair than NVDA's. Buffett is cautious: the moat is thinner than NVDA's CUDA, and AMD's history shows the cycle can turn hard. Graham fails on the same cyclicality and lack of margin of safety. Smith is neutral on ROCE pending sustained data-center share gains.
Frameworks that pass
Lynch
Fisher
Frameworks that fail
Graham
Buffett (moat depth)
Key risk to know
Closing the CUDA gap. AMD's hardware is competitive on raw FLOPS, but ROCm software ecosystem maturity still trails. Without a CUDA-class platform, share gains stay slow.
The legacy x86 incumbent in a multi-year turnaround under Pat Gelsinger, betting the company on becoming a credible foundry alternative to TSMC.
Graham is the only framework that gets close, on book value and asset-rich screens. Buffett, Munger, and Smith all fail it on ROIC, since fab capex is running well ahead of returns. Lynch struggles with the story (foundry turnarounds take a decade and the dividend cut signaled stress). Greenblatt's screen catches it as cheap but low quality.
Frameworks that pass
Graham (book value)
Frameworks that fail
Buffett
Smith
Munger
Lynch
Key risk to know
Foundry execution. If Intel cannot deliver process leadership by 2027 to 2028 against TSMC and Samsung, the strategy unwinds and the capex is largely sunk.
The sole supplier of EUV lithography machines, the equipment without which no leading-edge logic node is possible.
Buffett, Munger, and Smith all read this as one of the best moats in industrial history. Greenblatt likes the ROIC, though the EV/EBIT has compressed only mildly off recent highs. Fisher likes the R&D intensity. Graham fails it on multiple grounds: cyclical bookings, China export controls, and no margin of safety. Lynch is neutral.
Frameworks that pass
Buffett
Munger
Smith
Fisher
Frameworks that fail
Graham (cyclical bookings, export controls)
Key risk to know
China export restrictions. The U.S. and Dutch governments continue to tighten the export ring around advanced lithography. Each tightening is a direct revenue hit.
Broad-line semi equipment supplier covering deposition, etch, and inspection, levered to total wafer-fab equipment spending.
Greenblatt's Magic Formula consistently surfaces AMAT on cheap ROIC. Smith likes the ROCE history. Munger and Buffett are positive on the moat in process-control IP. Graham is the recurring failure: too cyclical, no margin of safety on a trough estimate. Lynch likes the story but worries about the WFE cycle.
Frameworks that pass
Greenblatt
Smith
Munger
Frameworks that fail
Graham (cyclicality)
Key risk to know
WFE cycle timing. Equipment names move with capex digestion. A delayed memory recovery or trailing-edge slowdown puts pressure on the next two quarters of bookings.
The dominant supplier of etch and deposition tools, with particularly strong exposure to memory equipment spending.
Greenblatt and Smith both pass it: high ROIC, clean balance sheet, consistent capital returns. Buffett and Munger see the moat as legitimate in etch. Graham fails it on the same memory cyclicality that has historically been brutal on LRCX. Fisher is positive on R&D but the multiple compresses the case.
Frameworks that pass
Greenblatt
Smith
Buffett (moat)
Frameworks that fail
Graham (memory cyclicality)
Key risk to know
Memory cycle exposure. Roughly half of LRCX revenue is memory-equipment-driven. Memory cycles are violent, and 2022 to 2023 was a reminder.
The dominant process-control and metrology supplier in semis, with the cleanest financial profile in the WFE complex.
Smith, Munger, and Greenblatt all pass it: high ROCE, low capital intensity, real moat in process control where it is effectively a monopoly at advanced nodes. Buffett's framework is positive on the moat and capital allocation. Graham fails on cyclicality and a perennially full multiple. Fisher likes the R&D efficiency.
Frameworks that pass
Smith
Munger
Greenblatt
Buffett
Frameworks that fail
Graham (full multiple)
Key risk to know
Concentration. KLA is over-indexed to leading-edge, so a slowdown in advanced-node capex hits harder than at AMAT or LRCX.
The dominant supplier of mobile modem and applications-processor SoCs, with a licensing business that captures a royalty on most smartphones globally.
Graham can pass on cheapness when the stock dislocates on Apple-modem fears. Greenblatt picks it up on Magic Formula. Lynch likes the story when handset cycles are favorable. Buffett and Munger are mixed: the licensing moat is real, but the Apple concentration and the auto/IoT pivot are still proving out. Smith is neutral on ROCE volatility.
Frameworks that pass
Graham
Greenblatt
Lynch
Frameworks that fail
Smith (ROCE volatility)
Munger (concentration)
Key risk to know
Apple modem in-sourcing. Apple's multi-year effort to ship its own 5G modem is the single largest hanging question. Any update on Apple's timeline moves QCOM materially.
The ten names above were chosen from the largest US-listed and US-ADR semiconductor companies by market capitalization, weighted toward names with the deepest coverage on invest-like and the most defensible long-term franchises. The framework reads beside each entry come from the same seven investor frameworks invest-like uses on every ticker. The full definitions are documented at the methodology page.
The consensus signal across all seven frameworks is published at the benchmarks page with a 5-year backtest of the all-pass cohort against the S&P 500. The point of the consensus is not to find the cheapest stock or the highest-growth stock. The point is to find names that pass several different investor frameworks at once, on the theory that cross-framework agreement is rarer and more durable than any single signal. Educational only, never investment advice.
Frequently asked questions
How were these 10 semiconductor stocks selected?
We started from the largest US-listed and US-ADR semiconductor names by market capitalization and revenue, then narrowed to the ten with the most defensible long-term franchises and the deepest coverage on invest-like. The selection is opinionated, not statistical. The framework reads beside each entry are written from the same seven investor frameworks that invest-like uses on every ticker.
What are the seven investor frameworks?
Buffett (moat + capital allocation + durability), Graham (cheapness + balance-sheet safety + earnings stability), Fisher (growth quality + R&D efficiency + management), Lynch (PEG + story comprehension + growth-at-reasonable-price), Greenblatt (the Magic Formula: ROIC plus EV/EBIT), Munger (high quality + willingness to pay up), and Smith (ROCE + organic growth + low capital intensity). Full definitions are at the methodology page.
Why isn't a name like MU on this list?
Micron is a high-quality cyclical, but it fails most of the seven frameworks during the wrong part of the memory cycle. It surfaces on Graham in trough quarters and on Greenblatt episodically, but it is not consistently across-the-board attractive in the way the names above can be in the right environment. The framework consensus signal is exactly the kind of cross-cycle filter that excludes pure cyclicals.
Are these buy recommendations?
No. This is educational analysis only. invest-like grades stocks against documented frameworks so investors can make their own informed decisions. Nothing on this page is investment advice, an offer, or a solicitation. Past performance does not guarantee future results.
How often is this list updated?
The underlying per-ticker scoring on invest-like updates daily as financials refresh. This listicle is reviewed quarterly, with the next review scheduled August 2026.
Where can I see the full Buffett verdict on each name?
Each entry links to /buffett/[ticker]/ where the full five-pillar verdict (moat, durability, management, financial health, valuation) is written out with reasoning. The Boardroom feature additionally has Buffett, Graham, Lynch, and Greenblatt debate the same ticker live.
What does 'framework consensus' mean on invest-like?
Every stock receives a verdict from all seven frameworks. The consensus signal counts how many of the seven pass. The 5-year backtest published at the benchmarks page tracks the all-pass (7-of-7) cohort against the S&P 500 with locked entry timestamps.
Educational only. Nothing on this page constitutes investment advice, an offer, or a solicitation to buy or sell any security. Framework reads are written from documented investor frameworks and represent the opinion of invest-like. Verify financials independently before any investment decision. Investment outcomes depend on many factors, and past performance does not guarantee future results.
Best semiconductor stocks 2026, scored against 7 investor frameworks · invest-like