By Amy Miller ( September 13, 2025, 00:43 GMT | Comment) — California Gov. Gavin Newsom is facing a balancing act as more than a dozen bills aimed at regulating artificial intelligence tools in a wide range of settings head to his desk for approval. He could approve bills to push back on the Trump administration’s industry-friendly avoidance of AI regulation and make California a model for other states — or he could nix bills to please wealthy Silicon Valley companies and their lobbyists.California Gov. Gavin Newsom is facing a balancing act as more than a dozen bills aimed at regulating artificial intelligence tools in a wide range of settings head to his desk for approval….
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Prediction: These 2 Artificial Intelligence Stocks Will Be the World’s Most Valuable Companies in 5 Years

At this point, it seems highly likely that artificial intelligence (AI) is on track to be the most impactful new technology since the internet. While the progression of the tech trend will certainly bring some twists and turns for investors, there’s a good chance that the AI revolution is still in relatively early innings.
Companies with heavy exposure to AI have been some of the market’s best performers in recent years and helped push major indexes to new highs, and long-term investors still have opportunities to score wins with top players in the space. With that in mind, read on to see why two Motley Fool contributors think that two companies, in particular, with leading positions in AI will stand as the world’s most valuable businesses five years from now.
Image source: Getty Images.
The biggest name in AI today, and probably tomorrow
Jennifer Saibil (Nvidia): Nvidia (NVDA 1.28%) has rocketed to the point where it is now the world’s most valuable company, passing Microsoft and Apple along the way. There’s good reason to expect it will still be at the top of the podium five years from now.
A big reason for expectation is that Nvidia is growing much faster than Microsoft and Apple, as well as the rest of the world’s most valuable companies. Revenue increased 69% year over year in its fiscal 2026 first quarter (ended April 27), and management is guiding for a 50% increase in the second quarter. It has incredibly high gross margins, which came in at 71.3% in the first quarter without a one-time charge, and the net profit margin was 52% in the quarter.
Nvidia has a massive opportunity over the next few years as AI gets incorporated more into what people do. It partners with most of the major AI companies, like Amazon (AMZN 1.62%) and Microsoft, and as they roll out their AI platforms, there’s an even greater demand for Nvidia’s products. The demand for data centers alone, which AI companies use to help power generative AI operations, is exploding. Nvidia’s data center revenue set the pace for the company overall, increasing 73% year over year in the first quarter.
According to Statista, the AI market is expected to increase at a compound annual growth rate of 26% over the next five years, surpassing $1 trillion by 2031. As the leader in the chip industry, with the most powerful products and as much as 95% of the market share, it will be one of the main beneficiaries of that growth.
Nvidia keeps launching new and more powerful chips to handle the increasing demand and power load. It’s still bringing out the Blackwell technology that it launched last year, and it’s seeing a huge need for its products to drive the inference part of generative AI. Nvidia management says its GPUs are being incorporated into 100 of what it calls AI factories (AI-focused data centers) under development in the first quarter, double last year’s number, and the number of graphics processing units powering each factory doubled as well. Management expects this segment of the business to continue growing at a rapid pace. It’s now launching Blackwell Ultra, a more powerful tool for AI reasoning, which is the next step after inference and requires greater capacity.
CEO Jensen Huang envisions a future not too far off where AI is used in everything we do, and Nvidia is going to play a huge role in that shift.
Amazon has a massive AI-driven opportunity ahead
Keith Noonan (Amazon): As the leading provider of cloud infrastructure services, Amazon stands to be a major beneficiary of the AI revolution. The development, launch, and scaling of artificial intelligence applications stands to be a powerful tailwind for the company’s Amazon Web Services (AWS) cloud business, and the Bedrock suite and other generative AI tools should help to encourage clients to continue building within its ecosystem.
With AWS standing as Amazon’s most profitable segment by far, AI-related sales for the segment should help to drive strong earnings growth over the next five years. Artificial intelligence being integrated into the company’s fast-growing digital advertising business should also help to improve targeting and demand and create another positive catalyst for the company’s bottom line. But there’s an even bigger AI-related opportunity on the table — and it could make Amazon the world’s most valuable company within the next half-decade.
Even though AWS generates most of Amazon’s profits, the company’s e-commerce business still accounts for the majority of its revenue. The catch is that e-commerce has historically been a relatively low-margin business. Due to the emphasis that Amazon has placed on expanding its retail sales base and the high operating costs involved with running the business, e-commerce accounts for a surprisingly small share of the company’s profits despite the massive scale of the unit. That will likely change with time.
With AI and robotics paving the way for warehouse and factory automation and potentially opening the door for a variety of autonomous delivery options, operating expenses for the e-commerce business are poised to fall substantially. There’s admittedly a significant amount of guesswork involved in charting how quickly this transformation will take shape, but it’s a trend that’s worth betting on.
Given the incredible sales base that Amazon has built for its online retail wing, margin improvements look poised to unlock billions of dollars in fresh net income for the business. If AI-driven robotics and automation initiatives start to accelerate substantially for the company over the next five years, the e-commerce side of the business will quickly command a much higher valuation premium. If so, Amazon has a clear path to being one of the world’s most valuable companies.
John Mackey, former CEO of Whole Foods Market, an Amazon subsidiary, is a member of The Motley Fool’s board of directors. Keith Noonan has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Amazon, Apple, Microsoft, and Nvidia. The Motley Fool recommends the following options: long January 2026 $395 calls on Microsoft and short January 2026 $405 calls on Microsoft. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.
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California governor facing balancing act as AI bills head to his desk | MLex
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Prediction: This Artificial Intelligence (AI) Player Could Be the Next Palantir in the 2030s

Becoming the next Palantir is a tough job.
Palantir (NASDAQ: PLTR) has already shown what it takes to be a successful enterprise artificial intelligence (AI) player: Become the core platform for customers to build their AI applications on, rapidly turn pilot projects into production-level deployments, cross-sell and upsell to existing clients, and focus on new client acquisition across industries and new verticals.
Image source: Getty Images
Innodata (INOD 2.53%) is much smaller, but it seems to be on a similar growth trajectory. The company is moving beyond traditional data services and is now becoming an AI partner focused on the data and evaluation layer in the enterprise AI stack — something that Palantir is not focusing on.
Financial performance
Palantir’s second-quarter fiscal 2025 (ending June 30) earnings performance underscores the success of this business model. Revenues grew 48% year over year to over $1 billion, with U.S. commercial and U.S. government revenues soaring year over year by 93% and 53%, respectively. The company’s Rule of 40 score increased 11 percentage points sequentially to 94. Management raised its fiscal 2025 revenue guidance and ended Q2 with total contract value (TCV) of $2.3 billion.
Innodata’s Q2 of fiscal 2025 (ending June 30) performance was also stellar. Revenues grew 79% year over year to $58.4 million, while adjusted EBITDA increased 375% to $13.2 million. Management raised full-year organic growth guidance to 45% or more, driven by a robust project pipeline, with several projects from large customers.
Data vendor to AI partner
Palantir differs from other AI giants by focusing not on large language models, but on its ability to leverage AI capabilities to resolve real-world problems. The company’s focus on ontology — a framework relating the company’s real assets to digital assets — helps its software properly understand context to deliver effective results.
Innodata also seems to be implementing a similar strategy. Instead of focusing on traditional data and workflows, it is providing “smart data,” or high-quality complex training data, to improve accuracy, safety, coherence, and reasoning in AI models of enterprise clients. It is also working closely with big technology customers to test models, find performance gaps, and deliver the data and evaluation needed to raise model performance. That shift will help Innodata’s offerings become entrenched in their clients’ ecosystems, thereby strengthening pricing power and creating a sticky customer base.
Vendor neutrality
Palantir has not built any proprietary foundational model. Plus, its Foundry and artificial intelligence platform (AIP) can run on any cloud and can be integrated with multiple large language models. By giving its clients the flexibility to choose their preferred cloud infrastructure and AI models, the company prevents vendor lock-in. This vendor neutrality has helped build trust among both government and commercial clients.
Innodata’s vendor-neutral stance is also becoming a competitive advantage. In its Q2 earnings call, an analyst noted that several big technology companies have said they would no longer work with Innodata’s largest competitor, Scale AI, after Meta Platforms’ large investment in the company. This is creating new opportunities for Innodata. Because it isn’t tied to any single platform, there is no conflict of interest involved in working with Innodata. This gives enterprises and hyperscalers confidence that their proprietary data and model development efforts will not be compromised.
Scaling efforts
Palantir’s business is seeing rapid traction, driven primarily by high-value clients. The company closed 157 deals worth $1 million or more, of which 42 deals were worth $10 million or more.
Innodata is scaling up revenues while also focusing on profitability. Management highlighted that it has won several new projects from its largest customer. The company has also expanded revenues from another big technology client, from $200,000 over the past year to an expected $10 million in the second half of 2025. Innodata’s adjusted EBITDA margins were 23% in the second quarter, up from 9% the same quarter of the prior year.
Agentic AI
Palantir has been focusing on the agentic AI opportunity by investing in AI Function-Driven Engineering (FDE) capability within its AIP platform. AI FDE is expected to solve bigger and more complex problems for clients by autonomously executing a wide array of tasks, including building and changing ontology, building data flows, writing functions, fixing errors, and building applications. It also works in collaboration with humans and can help clients get results faster. Palantir is thus progressing toward developing AI systems that can plan, act, and improve inside enterprise setups.
Innodata is also advancing its agentic AI capabilities by helping enterprises build and manage AI that can act autonomously. The company aims to provide simulation training data to show how humans solve complex problems, and advanced trust and safety monitoring to guide these systems. Agentic AI is also expected to help the robotics field progress rapidly, and AI systems will run on edge devices used in daily life. Hence, Innodata plans to invest more in building data and evaluation services for these agentic AI and robotics projects, which it expects could become a market even larger than today’s post-training data work.
Valuation
Despite its many strengths, Innodata is still very much in the early stages of its AI journey. Shares have gained by over 315% in the last year. Yet, with a market cap of about $1.9 billion and trading at nearly 8.2 times sales, Innodata is priced like a data services company making inroads in the AI market, and not like an AI platform company with a significant competitive moat. On the other hand, Palantir stock is expensive and trades closer to 114 times sales. This shows how Wall Street rewards a category leader like Palantir, whose offerings act as an operating layer for enterprise AI companies.
Innodata also needs to dominate the AI performance market to reach such sky-high valuations. The company will need to expand its customer base, cross-sell and upsell to existing clients, and make it difficult to switch to the competition.
While this involves significant execution risk, there is definitely a chance — albeit a small one — that Innodata can become the next Palantir in the 2030s.
AI Insights
This Artificial Intelligence (AI) Player Could Be the Next Palantir in the 2030s

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Innodata is transitioning from a traditional data services business to providing smart data.
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The company is also expanding into high-margin evaluation and agentic AI services.
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If Innodata can scale like Palantir, it could be an unexpected multibagger by the 2030s.
Palantir (NASDAQ: PLTR) has already shown what it takes to be a successful enterprise artificial intelligence (AI) player: Become the core platform for customers to build their AI applications on, rapidly turn pilot projects into production-level deployments, cross-sell and upsell to existing clients, and focus on new client acquisition across industries and new verticals.
Innodata (NASDAQ: INOD) is much smaller, but it seems to be on a similar growth trajectory. The company is moving beyond traditional data services and is now becoming an AI partner focused on the data and evaluation layer in the enterprise AI stack — something that Palantir is not focusing on.
Palantir’s second-quarter fiscal 2025 (ending June 30) earnings performance underscores the success of this business model. Revenues grew 48% year over year to over $1 billion, with U.S. commercial and U.S. government revenues soaring year over year by 93% and 53%, respectively. The company’s Rule of 40 score increased 11 percentage points sequentially to 94. Management raised its fiscal 2025 revenue guidance and ended Q2 with total contract value (TCV) of $2.3 billion.
Innodata’s Q2 of fiscal 2025 (ending June 30) performance was also stellar. Revenues grew 79% year over year to $58.4 million, while adjusted EBITDA increased 375% to $13.2 million. Management raised full-year organic growth guidance to 45% or more, driven by a robust project pipeline, with several projects from large customers.
Palantir differs from other AI giants by focusing not on large language models, but on its ability to leverage AI capabilities to resolve real-world problems. The company’s focus on ontology — a framework relating the company’s real assets to digital assets — helps its software properly understand context to deliver effective results.
Innodata also seems to be implementing a similar strategy. Instead of focusing on traditional data and workflows, it is providing “smart data,” or high-quality complex training data, to improve accuracy, safety, coherence, and reasoning in AI models of enterprise clients. It is also working closely with big technology customers to test models, find performance gaps, and deliver the data and evaluation needed to raise model performance. That shift will help Innodata’s offerings become entrenched in their clients’ ecosystems, thereby strengthening pricing power and creating a sticky customer base.
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