AI Research
3 Millionaire-Maker Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stocks

Key Points
There is no shortage of artificial intelligence (AI) stocks these days. But if you’re looking for AI stocks that have millionaire-making potential, you sometimes need to make swing-for-the-fences bets.
Here are three AI stocks that have huge potential upside that also carry some risks.
Where to invest $1,000 right now? Our analyst team just revealed what they believe are the 10 best stocks to buy right now. Continue »
1. Palantir
Palantir Technologies(NASDAQ: PLTR) isn’t just another company applying AI to improve a current product. Instead, it’s created a solution that lets customers use AI to help solve real-world problems. That’s a big difference, and it’s what makes the stock a potential millionaire maker.
Its Artificial Intelligence Platform (AIP) can take data from pretty much anywhere, map it to real-world processes, and then apply AI to help come up with real solutions. AIP isn’t something just being piloted; it’s already being actively used in a variety of industries. And the strength of AIP can be seen in Palantir’s results.
The company’s revenue has now accelerated for seven straight quarters, and its U.S. commercial growth is exploding. In Q1, its commercial revenue in the U.S. jumped 71%, and the total future deal value more than doubled. Its government sector is still strong — up 45% in Q1 — and Palantir just signed a big deal with NATO, which opens the door to more international defense contracts.
What really stands out, though, is the scope of what AIP can do. From hospitals tracking sepsis, to defense systems managing battlefield intelligence, to food companies optimizing supply chains, Palantir’s technology is being used by a broad range of industries to help solve very different issues. Its platform has an enormous range of use cases, and it’s still early in penetrating many of them. At the same time, Europe is largely untapped, and the company just rolled out AI agents, which take it from recommending actions to actually doing them. That could be a game-changer.
The stock has run and its valuation is high, but the opportunity here is massive. If Palantir becomes the operating system for AI across industries, today’s price won’t look expensive in hindsight.
Image source: Getty Images.
2. Advanced Micro Devices
Nvidia has become the face of AI infrastructure, but Advanced Micro Devices(NASDAQ: AMD) might be the stock with huge potential upside at this point. It’s smaller, cheaper, and positioned well for where AI is going as the market starts shifting from training to inference.
Inference is the phase where AI makes deductions based on the information it’s already been trained on. It’s expected to become a much bigger market over time, and cost per inference and latency matter more than just brute force compute. Nvidia still owns training thanks to its superior CUDA software platform, but AMD has made strides on the inference side. Its ROCm software has improved, and its chips are starting to show up in some high-profile places.
On its Q1 earnings call, AMD said one of the largest AI model developers is now using its graphics processing units (GPUs) to handle a big chunk of its daily inference traffic. Cloud providers, meanwhile, have started using AMD’s GPUs for search, recommendation, and generative AI tasks. It doesn’t need to dethrone Nvidia. Just grabbing a modest share could lead to huge growth given how small AMD’s data center GPU business still is comparatively.
A big part of this story that is underestimated is UALink, an open interconnect standard being developed by a consortium of major tech companies to compete with Nvidia’s proprietary NVLink. If UALink were to become the standard, companies would now be able to mix and match AI chips when building out their AI clusters. This should open the door for AMD to take more share in the GPU space.
If that happens, AMD has a huge potential opportunity ahead and a lot of room to run. However, Nvidia isn’t going down without a fight, and more companies have been turning toward custom AI chips, which is a risk.
3. SoundHound AI
SoundHound AI(NASDAQ: SOUN) is a small company with big ambitions. It started out as an AI voice company and is now trying to become a leader in autonomous voice agents. This is a high-risk, high-reward stock, but if it pulls off what it’s building, the payoff could be huge.
SoundHound’s AI voice platform uses advanced speech recognition technology, combining “speech-to-meaning” and “deep meaning understanding” to interpret someone’s intent in real time. Its technology already powers voice assistants in cars from the likes of Hyundai and Stellantis. It’s also being used in restaurants, with drive-thru, phone, and kiosk ordering all using its voice tech. But the big shift in its strategy came with its acquisition of Amelia.
Amelia brought with it conversational intelligence technology and customers within the healthcare, insurance, and finance verticals. Now, SoundHound has combined Amelia with its voice platform to create Amelia 7.0 — a voice-first platform with AI agents that can understand intent, reason through conversations, and complete complex tasks on its own.
This isn’t a glorified AI chatbot. It integrates with back-end systems like ERPs, CRMs, and insurance platforms. As organizations look toward AI to save costs and potentially create a digital workforce, SoundHound is in a strong position in an evolving market.
Its combination of voice technology with AI agents could be a real game-changer. The AI agent space is a bit crowded, but if SoundHound becomes a leader in agentic AI, its stock could become a huge winner.
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Geoffrey Seiler has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Advanced Micro Devices, Nvidia, and Palantir Technologies. The Motley Fool recommends Stellantis. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.
AI Research
AI to reshape India’s roads? Artificial intelligence can take the wheel to fix highways before they break, ETInfra

In India, a pothole is rarely just a pothole. It is a metaphor, a mood and sometimes, a meme. It is the reason your cab driver mutters about karma and your startup founder misses a pitch meeting because the expressway has turned into a swimming pool. But what if roads could detect their own distress, predict failures before they happen, and even suggest how to fix them?
That is not science-fiction but the emerging reality of AI-powered infrastructure.
According to KPMG’s 2025 report AI-powered road infrastructure transformation- Roads 2047, artificial intelligence is slowly reshaping how India builds, maintains, and governs its roads. From digital twins that simulate entire highways to predictive algorithms that flag out structural fatigue, the country’s infrastructure is beginning to show signs of cognition.
From concrete to cognition
India’s road network spans over 6.3 million kilometers – second only to the United States. As per KPMG, AI is now being positioned not just as a tool but as a transformational layer. Technologies like Geographic Information System (GIS), Building Informational Modelling (BIM) and sensor fusion are enabling digital twins – virtual replicas of physical assets that allow engineers to simulate stress, traffic and weather impact in real time. The National Highway Authority of India (NHAI) has already integrated AI into its Project Management Information System (PMIS), using machine learning to audit construction quality and flag anomalies.
Autonomous infrastructure in action
Across urban India, infrastructure is beginning to self-monitor. Pune’s Intelligent Traffic Management System (ITMS) and Bengaluru’s adaptive traffic control systems are early examples of AI-driven urban mobility.
Meanwhile, AI-MC, launched by the Ministry of Road Transport and Highways (MoRTH), uses GPS-enabled compactors and drone-based pavement surveys to optimise road construction.
Beyond cities, state-level initiatives are also embracing AI for infrastructure monitoring. As reported by ETInfra earlier, Bihar’s State Bridge Management & Maintenance Policy, 2025 employs AI and machine learning for digital audits of bridges and culverts. Using sensors, drones, and 3D digital twins, the state has surveyed over 12,000 culverts and 743 bridges, identifying damaged structures for repair or reconstruction. IIT Patna and Delhi have been engaged for third-party audits, showing how AI can extend beyond roads to critical bridge infrastructure in both urban and rural contexts.
While these examples demonstrate the potential of AI-powered maintenance, challenges remain. Predictive maintenance, KPMG notes, could reduce lifecycle costs by up to 30 per cent and improve asset longevity, but much of rural India—nearly 70 per cent of the network—still relies on manual inspections and paper-based reporting.
Governance and the algorithm
India’s road safety crisis is staggering: over 1.5 lakh deaths annually. AI could be a game-changer. KPMG estimates that intelligent systems can reduce emergency response times by 60 per cent, and improve traffic efficiency by 30 per cent. AI also supports ESG goals— enabling carbon modeling, EV corridor planning, and sustainable design.
But technology alone won’t fix systemic gaps. The promise of AI hinges on institutional readiness – spanning urban planning, enforcement, and civic engagement.
While NITI Aayog has outlined a national AI strategy, and MoRTH has initiated digital reforms, state-level adoption remains fragmented. Some states have set up AI cells within their PWDs; others lack the technical capacity or policy mandate.
KPMG calls for a unified governance framework — one that enables interoperability, safeguards data, and fosters public-private partnerships. Without it, India risks building smart systems on shaky foundations.
As India looks towards 2047, the road ahead is both digital and political. And if AI can help us listen to our roads, perhaps we’ll finally learn to fix them before they speak in potholes.
AI Research
Mistral AI Nears Close of Funding Round Lifting Valuation to $14B

Artificial intelligence (AI) startup Mistral AI is reportedly nearing the close of a funding round in which it would raise €2 billion (about $2.3 billion) and be valued at €12 billion (about $14 billion).
AI Research
PPS Weighs Artificial Intelligence Policy

Portland Public Schools folded some guidance on artificial intelligence into its district technology policy for students and staff over the summer, though some district officials say the work is far from complete.
The guidelines permit certain district-approved AI tools “to help with administrative tasks, lesson planning, and personalized learning” but require staff to review AI-generated content, check accuracy, and take personal responsibility for any content generated.
The new policy also warns against inputting personal student information into tools, and encourages users to think about inherent bias within such systems. But it’s still a far cry from a specific AI policy, which would have to go through the Portland School Board.
Part of the reason is because AI is such an “active landscape,” says Liz Large, a contracted legal adviser for the district. “The policymaking process as it should is deliberative and takes time,” Large says. “This was the first shot at it…there’s a lot of work [to do].”
PPS, like many school districts nationwide, is continuing to explore how to fold artificial intelligence into learning, but not without controversy. AsThe Oregonian reported in August, the district is entering a partnership with Lumi Story AI, a chatbot that helps older students craft their own stories with a focus on comics and graphic novels (the pilot is offered at some middle and high schools).
There’s also concern from the Portland Association of Teachers. “PAT believes students learn best from humans, instead of AI,” PAT president Angela Bonilla said in an Aug. 26 video. “PAT believes that students deserve to learn the truth from humans and adults they trust and care about.”
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