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Just noticed something interesting about where capital is flowing right now. Global IT spending just hit $6 trillion for the first time in 2026, and the AI infrastructure boom is basically the entire story here.
What caught my eye is that this isn't theoretical anymore. Companies like TSMC, Amazon, and the major chip makers have already reported earnings that back this up. We're not seeing the bubble that people worried about last year. Instead, we're seeing actual revenue growth and soaring demand across the board.
The way I see it, there are clear beneficiaries emerging from this AI spending cycle. Chip designers like Nvidia and AMD are obvious plays, but here's the thing—if you want exposure without betting everything on one company, TSMC might be smarter. They manufacture chips for basically all the major players, so they win regardless of who comes out on top.
Then there's the infrastructure side. As cloud providers scale out their AI capabilities, they need memory, storage, and connectivity. Micron Technology is positioned well here because AI inference requires massive amounts of memory. Corning's another interesting one—they're building the fiber and connectors that data centers actually need for this buildout.
The semiconductor space is traditionally cyclical, but AI spending patterns might actually change that. The demand seems more structural than we've seen before, which could extend the upside window.
If you're thinking about positioning for this trend, the key is picking quality companies that are actually delivering growth, not just hyped names. And obviously, any AI spending exposure should be part of a broader portfolio, not a bet-the-farm situation. The opportunities are real, but so is the need for discipline.
Anyone else tracking which infrastructure plays are actually executing on this AI spending buildout?