This month has presented a significant opportunity for investors in AI infrastructure stocks, as key players have experienced notable pullbacks from their spring highs. NVIDIA, Broadcom, and Microsoft, recognized as the pillars of the AI spending cycle, have all seen their stocks trading below their 52-week peaks despite strong underlying revenue growth.
NVIDIA (NASDAQ: NVDA)
As of June 10, NVIDIA shares closed at $200.42, reflecting a decrease of 7% over the past week and 9% over the past month. This positions the stock 26% lower than its 52-week high of $236.26, although it has still managed an 8% gain year-to-date. The bullish narrative is fueled by solid revenue growth, with Q1 FY2027 revenue hitting $81.61 billion, an impressive 85% year-over-year increase. Data Center revenue specifically showcased remarkable growth, climbing 92% year-over-year to reach $75.25 billion. The management has guided for Q2 revenue projections of $91 billion with a 75% non-GAAP gross margin. CEO Jensen Huang emphasized this phase as “the largest infrastructure expansion in human history” and paired growth announcements with capital return initiatives, such as increasing the quarterly dividend from $0.01 to $0.25 and initiating an $80 billion buyback plan. The forward P/E ratio stands at 23, with a consensus target price of $298.42, supported by a bullish sentiment from 95% of analysts. However, there are risks to consider, especially regarding export restrictions affecting H20 Data Center compute revenue from China and the stock’s heightened volatility in response to macroeconomic shifts.
Broadcom (NASDAQ: AVGO)
Broadcom’s shares presented the most significant decline within these three stocks, concluding at $372.10, which marks a staggering 22% drop in a single week and 5% on June 10 alone. The stock is sharply down from a 52-week high of $495. This dramatic fall followed a strong earnings report, which Seeking Alpha described as a “sell-the-news” reaction. Despite the stock’s plummet, Broadcom reported record Q2 results, including a notable 143% year-over-year growth in AI semiconductor revenue, which reached $10.80 billion. Total revenue increased by 48% year-over-year to $22.19 billion, with free cash flow expanding by 60% to $10.26 billion. CEO Hock Tan projected Q3 AI semiconductor revenue to reach $16 billion, indicating over 200% year-over-year growth. With the recent launch of a $35 billion AI infrastructure platform in partnership with Apollo and Blackstone, aimed at achieving 20+ gigawatts of compute by 2028, the long-term visibility remains strong. The consensus price target among analysts is $522.06, with 92% maintaining bullish sentiments. Nonetheless, risks include a forward P/E ratio of 34 and potential issues from customer concentration among a few hyperscalers.
Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT)
Microsoft has emerged as the deepest discount in this sector, closing at $397.36—down 17% year-to-date and 15% over the past year. This stock is trading significantly lower than a 52-week high of $551.05 and below its 50-day and 200-day moving averages. However, the fundamentals highlight a positive trend, with Q3 FY2026 revenue climbing 18% to $82.89 billion, including a 30% increase in Intelligent Cloud revenue. Particularly noteworthy is the 123% year-over-year growth in its AI business, surpassing an annual revenue run rate of $37 billion. With a robust $627 billion commercial RPO indicating a strong backlog, Microsoft is characterized by a solid forward P/E of 21 amid compounding earnings growth of 23% year-over-year and a 46% operating margin. The consensus target price among analysts stands at $560.95. Key risks involve heightened capital expenditures of $30.88 billion, up 84% year-over-year, which may compress free cash flow conversion if AI returns do not align with infrastructure investments.
The Bottom Line
With all three companies trading below their 52-week highs while their AI revenue continues to grow, the current market landscape appears favorable for investors ready to navigate potential volatility in the spending cycle. NVIDIA presents the most compelling growth narrative, Broadcom offers the sharpest stock dip, and Microsoft boasts the most defensible valuation multiple, suggesting a variety of investment angles within this dynamic sector heading into the latter half of the year.


