Investing.com -- KeyBanc analysts singled out Nvidia and Broadcom as the strongest names in their latest semiconductor supply chain checks, citing both companies’ rising capacity and major AI wins as reasons they remain best positioned in the sector.
For Nvidia, the broker pointed to stronger-than-expected demand and capacity expansion. The AI chipmaker has revised its advanced packaging (CoWoS) supply for 2025 to 530,000 interposers, representing more than 40% growth from this year.
Nvidia had asked for 600,000 units for 2026 but was allocated 530,000, as TSMC seeks to avoid overbooking.
With manufacturing yields improving, Nvidia is on track to ship about 30,000 AI racks in 2025 and at least 50,000 in 2026.
KeyBanc also cited higher performance specifications for its next-generation Rubin GPU, designed to maintain a clear lead over AMD’s upcoming MI400 platform. The new requirements include boosting memory transfer speeds to 10 Gbps, up from 8 Gbps, and lifting power needs to 2.5kW versus 1.8kW previously.
“We’re hearing that this is being motivated by NVDA’s desire to maintain a significant performance gap and product leadership vs. AMD even once Helios is released,” KeyBanc said in a Monday report.
Broadcom’s position looks equally strong. The company raised its 2026 CoWoS supply target to 190,000 units, over a 160% jump from the prior year.
KeyBanc said the company’s outlook is supported by several drivers, including delays to TPU7e chips that allow the company to retain full control of Google’s TPU franchise through 2026. TPU volumes are expected to more than double in 2026 as Google broadens the use of its TPU technology with external customers.
The firm also pointed to major new AI ASIC wins, including OpenAI with an estimated 400,000–500,000 units and Apple at about 100,000 units.
Reflecting this backdrop, KeyBanc boosted its price targets on both names, raising Nvidia to $250 from $230 and Broadcom to $420 from $400, while reiterating Overweight ratings.
Beyond the two supply chain leaders, the analysts flagged positive implications for Monolithic Power Systems, which has gained share in Nvidia’s Blackwell Ultra platforms, and Lattice Semiconductor, which should benefit from rising AI server rack shipments.
Supply checks for memory supplier Micron were also positive, with hyperscaler demand pointing to 50% DRAM growth in 2026.
Conversely, Intel faced continued manufacturing yield challenges, and ON Semiconductor was weighed down by weak auto demand.
