Several of the tech megacaps look promising, but there can only be one top buy.
The “Magnificent Seven” is a popular grouping of the largest and most important tech stocks in the market. Its constituents are:
- Nvidia (NVDA 3.30%)
- Apple (AAPL +0.04%)
- Alphabet (GOOG 1.01%) (GOOGL 1.00%)
- Microsoft (MSFT 1.04%)
- Amazon (AMZN 1.80%)
- Meta Platforms (META 1.34%)
- Tesla (TSLA +2.57%)
These companies are listed in descending order of market cap, and the top five are the five largest companies in the world. Meta Platforms and Tesla are in the top 10, making this a definitive list of some of the most important tech companies in the world — though the importance of Broadcom and Taiwan Semiconductor, which aren’t on it, should not be overlooked.
All have been winners for investors over the long term. But which one looks likely to be the best performer in 2026?
Image source: Getty Images.
Many of the Magnificent Seven stocks look like strong buys
First, let’s look at the stocks I’m avoiding in 2026: Apple and Tesla. Of all the stocks on this list, they have consistently had the lowest growth rates over the past few years. (Note: I left Nvidia off of this chart because its growth rates were so high that they made the rest of the graph tough to read.)
AAPL Revenue (Quarterly YoY Growth) data by YCharts.
Tesla appears to be trending up, so I’d rank it in front of Apple, but neither of these stocks excites me for 2026.
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The remaining five Magnificent Seven stocks have serious potential in 2026. Microsoft, Amazon, and Alphabet all have strong base businesses alongside thriving cloud computing segments that are providing the infrastructure to power artificial intelligence (AI) systems. Most companies don’t have the ability to put up their own data centers, so they rent the computing power they need, often from one of these giants. That trend will continue into 2026. Meanwhile, each of these companies’ other core businesses are looking solid.
Today’s Change
(-1.00%) $-3.14
Current Price
$309.29
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$3.7T
Day’s Range
$305.56 – $314.87
52wk Range
$140.53 – $328.83
Volume
36M
Avg Vol
37M
Gross Margin
59.18%
Dividend Yield
0.27%
I like Microsoft, Amazon, and Alphabet for 2026, but none of them qualify as my top pick.
That leaves Meta Platforms and Nvidia — the two fastest-growing companies in the bunch.
Better buy: Meta Platforms or Nvidia?
Meta Platforms’ stock declined sharply after it delivered its third-quarter earnings report in late October because the market is growing worried about its massive AI spending. While the stock recently rebounded a bit on news that Meta intends to cut spending in its metaverse-focused Reality Labs division, the stock is still down by around 18% from its 2025 high.
Nvidia is in a similar boat: It’s down by around 13% from its peak. However, considering how much money companies like Meta, Alphabet, Amazon, and Microsoft are planning on spending on AI computing power in 2026, its growth rate should continue to be incredible. During its most recent quarter, Nvidia’s revenue rose 62% year over year. Management also reaffirmed its long-term forecast that global data center capital expenditures will rise from $600 billion in 2025 to $3 trillion to $4 trillion by 2030.
Today’s Change
(-3.30%) $-5.97
Current Price
$174.96
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$4.3T
Day’s Range
$174.62 – $182.81
52wk Range
$86.62 – $212.19
Volume
6.2M
Avg Vol
191M
Gross Margin
70.05%
Dividend Yield
0.02%
If that occurs, Nvidia will keep benefiting from the massive AI-related capital expenditures of companies such as Tesla, Meta, Alphabet, Amazon, and Microsoft. (Apple isn’t really spending a lot on AI, and it shows.)
I think Nvidia’s impressive growth outlook makes it the top Magnificent Seven stock pick for 2026. Wall Street analysts project that its revenue will rise by 48% in its fiscal 2027 (which ends in January 2027) after a 63% growth rate in the fiscal year that will close next month. That’s a promising outlook, and it actually makes Nvidia stock look like a relative bargain.
Trading at 25 times next year’s expected earnings, Nvidia is the second-cheapest stock in the cohort by that valuation metric.
NVDA PE Ratio (Forward 1y) data by YCharts.
(Note: Tesla was not included in the chart above because its extremely high 195 ratio compresses the rest of the data lines, making them too hard to read.)
With Nvidia growing the fastest and priced nearly the cheapest, it’s a no-brainer stock to buy right now. While there are other great options to invest within the Magnificent Seven group, Nvidia is still the best.
Keithen Drury has positions in Alphabet, Amazon, Broadcom, Meta Platforms, Nvidia, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, and Tesla. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Alphabet, Amazon, Apple, Meta Platforms, Microsoft, Nvidia, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, and Tesla. The Motley Fool recommends Broadcom and recommends the following options: long January 2026 $395 calls on Microsoft and short January 2026 $405 calls on Microsoft. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.