The AI boom is funneling capital to a handful of semiconductor companies that most investors overlook, with three lesser-known firms posting sales growth that outpaces larger peers in the chip supply chain.
"These companies sit in specialized niches where demand is scaling faster than the broader market," said Rachel Kim, semiconductor supply chain analyst at Edgen. "They benefit from the same hyperscaler spending wave as Nvidia and AMD, but without the same valuation premium."
Hyperscaler capital expenditures from Microsoft, Google, Meta, and Amazon are guiding above $400 billion combined in 2026, up from roughly $230 billion in 2024, according to company filings. That spending flows through chip designers, foundries, memory makers, and lithography vendors — creating revenue opportunities for companies that supply critical components rather than compete for the flagship accelerator contracts.
The three firms, which the source material identifies as overlooked AI revenue accelerators, operate in segments such as power management, specialty memory, and advanced packaging — areas where supply constraints and technical complexity create pricing power. Each has reported year-over-year revenue growth that exceeds the median for the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index, which has returned roughly 93% year-to-date through the Invesco PHLX Semiconductor ETF (SOXQ).
Where the Growth Is Coming From
The concentration of AI spending on Nvidia, AMD, and Broadcom has obscured a broader expansion in the chip ecosystem. Equipment makers, packaging specialists, and analog chip designers are capturing a growing share of the infrastructure buildout as data centers scale from tens of thousands to hundreds of thousands of accelerators per cluster.
Advanced packaging, in particular, has become a bottleneck. TSMC's CoWoS (chip-on-wafer-on-substrate) capacity is sold out through 2027, pushing demand to alternative packaging providers. Companies that supply test equipment, thermal management, and power delivery components for these high-density packages are seeing orders accelerate as hyperscalers race to deploy clusters.
The shift to 800-volt architectures in AI data centers is also creating new demand for power semiconductors. Higher voltage levels improve energy efficiency in large-scale deployments, where electricity costs now represent a significant portion of total ownership expense. This trend benefits companies with expertise in gallium nitride (GaN) and silicon carbide (SiC) technologies, which handle higher voltages more efficiently than traditional silicon.
Investment Implications
For investors seeking exposure beyond the megacap names, these three firms offer a way to participate in the AI infrastructure cycle at lower valuations. The VanEck Semiconductor ETF (SMH), which concentrates roughly 48% of assets in its top five holdings, trades at a trailing P/E of about 52. The broader iShares Semiconductor ETF (SOXX), with 34 holdings and a per-name cap, has returned 103% year-to-date, demonstrating that breadth has outperformed concentration in the current tape.
The risk lies in execution. These smaller firms lack the pricing power and margin structure of a TSMC or Nvidia. A single customer concentration — common among specialized suppliers — means any design loss or capacity delay can disproportionately affect revenue. Investors should monitor quarterly results for customer diversification and gross margin trends as leading indicators of competitive positioning.
With hyperscaler capex still climbing and Taiwan-manufactured leading-edge chips accounting for roughly 90% of global supply, the structural demand for a broader set of semiconductor suppliers remains intact. The question is which of these overlooked names can convert current growth into sustainable market share.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.