Key Takeaways
- UBS identified 12 technology, media, and telecom stocks with exceptional investment potential driven by AI growth
- Amazon leads selections with AWS expected to achieve 38% revenue expansion in 2026
- Palantir emerges as the preferred large-cap software investment, protected from AI-related disruption
- Arista Networks, JFrog, and Twilio selected for strategic positioning in AI infrastructure ecosystem
- Traditional software and media companies confronting profitability challenges from intensifying market dynamics
Investment bank UBS has unveiled its curated selection of 12 premier stocks across the technology, media, and telecommunications sectors. According to the firm’s analysis, artificial intelligence serves as the fundamental catalyst driving these investment recommendations, particularly within semiconductor manufacturing, cloud infrastructure, and data center operations.
The selections represent investments where UBS research teams maintain what they describe as a “differentiated perspective” supported by proprietary market intelligence. This comprehensive report was issued in late March 2026.
[[LINK_START_1]]Amazon[[LINK_END_1]] commands the top position on UBS’s list. Research analyst Stephen Ju characterizes the e-commerce and cloud giant as a “coiled spring,” suggesting the corporation has yet to fully realize returns from its substantial AI infrastructure investments. The company has committed to $200 billion in capital deployment throughout 2026, with approximately $150 billion allocated specifically to Amazon Web Services expansion.
UBS forecasts indicate AWS could achieve 38% revenue growth during the current year. This projection significantly exceeds both the 20% expansion recorded in the previous year and the roughly 25% consensus estimate from Wall Street analysts. Despite Amazon shares declining approximately 10% during 2025, UBS interprets this pullback as an attractive entry point for investors.
[[LINK_START_3]]Palantir[[LINK_END_3]] represents UBS’s preferred choice within the large-capitalization software category. Analyst Karl Keirstead positions the data analytics company “at the nexus” of artificial intelligence and enterprise data investment trends. His analysis suggests Palantir maintains superior insulation from AI-driven disruption compared to conventional software-as-a-service providers, primarily due to its positioning as a foundational infrastructure vendor.
Infrastructure Beneficiaries in the AI Revolution
Arista Networks secured inclusion on UBS’s elite list. The investment bank believes current revenue projections inadequately capture AI-fueled demand patterns and anticipates performance will surpass the company’s own conservative guidance.
Entegris completes the semiconductor-focused recommendations. UBS analysts predict the specialty materials provider will outpace broader semiconductor industry growth as next-generation wafer fabrication processes demand increasingly sophisticated materials.
JFrog earned recognition as the premier small and mid-cap infrastructure software selection. While shares have contracted 25% across the previous quarter, UBS analyst Radi Sultan contends AI-related risks are already incorporated into current valuations. He further observed that enterprise customers demonstrate “virtually no appetite” for platform migration.
Twilio received selection based on its pivotal role delivering AI-enhanced communication solutions. The company’s consumption-based revenue model was emphasized as a competitive differentiator against traditional per-seat licensing competitors.
Diversification Beyond Core AI Themes
Not every selection represents pure-play artificial intelligence exposure. Mastercard gained inclusion due to its pricing authority and beneficial exposure to travel industry recovery alongside favorable foreign exchange dynamics.
Netflix earned its position based on projections that it will exceed peer performance through subscriber base expansion, advertising-supported membership tiers, and operational efficiency.
American Tower is currently trading near multi-year valuation lows according to UBS analysis, yet analysts anticipate the telecommunications infrastructure provider will capitalize on expanding mobile data consumption associated with 5G network deployment.
Global Business Travel Group is projected to maintain low double-digit percentage growth extending through 2027, outpacing broader corporate travel industry trajectories.
Accenture was identified as undervalued by market participants due to macroeconomic apprehension, despite demonstrating robust contract bookings and strengthening free cash flow generation.
Global-e Online completes the twelve-stock portfolio. UBS views the cross-border e-commerce platform as minimally vulnerable to AI disruption relative to sector peers, reinforcing its extended-term growth narrative.
UBS’s latest proprietary forecasting models project AWS revenue acceleration of 38% throughout 2026, substantially exceeding the prevailing Wall Street consensus estimate of 25%.
