If there's one thing the stock market has taught me over the years, it's that yesterday's winners don't automatically become tomorrow's champions. Technology changes too quickly. Consumer preferences evolve overnight. Companies that dominate one decade often spend the next explaining to investors why things didn't go according to plan. That's why I always approach high-flying technology stocks with equal parts optimism and skepticism. Broadcom is one of those companies. It isn't flashy. Its CEO isn't constantly making headlines with outrageous predictions. It doesn't rely on trendy consumer gadgets to drive revenue. Instead, Broadcom quietly powers much of the digital infrastructure that most people never think about. Ironically, that's exactly what makes me interested. While everyone argues over which artificial intelligence chatbot is winning the popularity contest, Broadcom is busy selling the picks and shovels. History has shown that the ...
There are companies that quietly make the modern world work, and then there are companies that become the reason Wall Street suddenly remembers an entire industry exists. Arista Networks falls squarely into the second category. For years, networking wasn't exactly the glamorous corner of technology. Everyone wanted to talk about smartphones, cloud software, social media, or whatever new gadget promised to revolutionize life for approximately six months before being replaced by another gadget promising to revolutionize life even harder. Networking equipment? That was the equivalent of talking about plumbing. Nobody brags about plumbing until the pipes burst. Then suddenly everyone becomes an expert. Artificial intelligence has done something remarkable. It has turned networking infrastructure into one of the hottest topics in technology. Everyone is busy talking about graphics processors, gigantic data centers, trillion-parameter language models, and enough electricity consumption t...