5 tech stocks that could bring profits to your portfolio in the new year

It is in our nature to want more: More money. More friends. More muscles. More food. A more luxurious car. And, of course, more earnings through the stock market.

How can I tell after a year in which the total return of the S&P 500 (^GSPC) was 17.88%, bringing the index’s three-year total return to 86.11%? Because I’m always being asked by people for stock ideas, especially after years of the market basically moving up and to the right.

As a rule, I don’t give stock ideas, as that is no longer my career (I was an analyst for ten years). So I come to you in early 2026 with a tidy list of stock ideas provided by my contacts.

I warn that I am not endorsing the choices of these money management pros. This is not me saying to put your life savings into these stocks or even buy a single share.

Do your homework on each one. When you do this, you may find that you like other stocks in the industry better.

A trader works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) after the opening bell in New York on January 2, 2026. (Angela Weiss/AFP via Getty Images) · ANGELA WEISS via Getty Images

“One chip company in the world is riding the AI ​​revolution, and that’s Nvidia. And I think how it plays out, the [earnings] the numbers are significantly underestimated. I think 15% to 20% as a minimum [earnings growth] we enter 2026. Put that together, and I think we’re looking at a $250 stock in a base case to end 2026.”

“We love Palantir. From a defense standpoint, they’re the leaders in AI and data, with Department of Defense approval and use. And then beyond that, corporate adoption and sovereign adoption. So we think the name continues [to go higher]. It’s one of those names, you can’t justify it from a valuation standpoint. But the narrative is quite compelling. And that can drive stocks for a very long time, just like Amazon did for the first 20 years of Amazon’s life after the IPO.”

“I think Broadcom is a little bit wrong. We were big buyers of it during COVID actually when it was giving you over 3% dividend yield. So you know we like dividends. So what I like about it is the VMware side of the business and the programmable side. These are very specialized chips. So they’re not competing as much with Nvidia, and I think they’re their own market and I think their own market is creating tremendous growth.

“We were reducing this position because it grew so much in our accounts. I mean, we had up to 7% of our portfolio in Broadcom. We didn’t want that much. We still love it, but we’re not expecting the 5,060% return. We’d be very happy with Broadcom. [returning] about 10%.”

StockStory aims to help individual investors beat the market.
StockStory aims to help individual investors beat the market.

“I definitely wouldn’t bet just on Nvidia. I think you need to do your homework if you want to buy specific names. I think probably the general investor is probably better off finding some kind of basket to play the aggregate. [AI] space. But we’re very early innings in this, and obviously Nvidia is the winner right now. But to say, you know, in five years looking back that they will be the dominant player is still very, very unlikely.

“We kind of like to barbell this with something like the big hyperscaler in Alphabet, because that’s really the kind of name that you probably can have a little more comfort, because the AI ​​story is just benefiting an already existing business model that was going well.”

“Nextdoor is kind of like a local news provider. And local is a concept that has failed many, many times. There have been many people who have tried local and yet, with AI, there are 100 million verified users on Nextdoor. And so it’s not just Yelp, you know, more of a banner ad type business. powered by AI, built on the local neighborhood ontology. That makes possible services that just weren’t possible anymore and makes Nextdoor a much stronger service.

Editor’s Note: Nextdoor co-founder and returning CEO Nirav Tolia recently sat down with Yahoo Finance on the Opening Bid Unfiltered podcast. Listen below for more context behind his turnaround plan.

Brian Sozzi is Executive Editor of Yahoo Finance and a member of the Yahoo Finance editorial leadership team. Follow Sozzi on X @BrianSozzi, Instagramand LinkedIn. Story suggestions? Email brian.sozzi@yahoofinance.com.

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