Five established technology companies are being flagged by equity researchers as undervalued heading into 2026, as AI spending, falling interest rates, and rising enterprise technology budgets reshape the market.
The report identifies Meta Platforms [META], Alphabet [GOOGL], Microsoft [MSFT], Oracle [ORCL], and Arista Networks [ANET] as stocks trading cheaply relative to their earnings power.
Three overlapping trends support the case for each stock. The five largest US tech companies have committed over $300 billion in combined annual capital expenditure for 2025 and 2026, most of it directed at AI infrastructure.
The Federal Reserve began cutting interest rates in late 2024. Lower rates tend to lift valuations for growth stocks by increasing the present value of future earnings.
AI is also prompting businesses across industries to upgrade their technology stacks. That is driving a multi-year enterprise spending cycle expected to benefit companies with existing customer relationships and embedded AI tools.
Meta generates over $40 billion in annual free cash flow. Despite that, it trades at a price-to-earnings ratio in line with the broader market, even though EPS growth is running above 25%.
Meta Platforms, Inc., META
Its advertising tool Advantage+ is taking a growing share of digital ad budgets. Meta AI is on track to become one of the most widely used AI assistants in the world. The company carries zero net debt. At a PEG ratio below 1.0, analysts describe it as the most attractively valued mega-cap AI name in the market.
Alphabet trades at roughly 19 times forward earnings. The report calls this one of the most unusual valuations in large-cap tech, given the company holds approximately $100 billion in net cash and generates over $60 billion in free cash flow annually.
Alphabet Inc., GOOGL
Google Cloud revenue is growing at more than 28%, supported by the Gemini AI platform. Waymo is also reaching commercial scale. Analysts in the report see 30 to 40 percent upside to fair value from current levels.
Microsoft is positioned as the lower-risk AI infrastructure option. Its Copilot AI tools are embedded across Office 365 and Azure, creating high switching costs that lock in enterprise customers.
At 28 times earnings with 20 percent EPS growth and a near-zero-debt balance sheet, the report describes it as offering institutional-quality AI exposure. Copilot adoption is expected to accelerate as more enterprise renewals include AI upsells.
Oracle is described as the most undervalued stock on the screen relative to its earnings transition. Oracle Cloud Infrastructure is now used as an AI training platform, with capacity reportedly booked more than a year ahead by major customers.
The company’s remaining performance obligations backlog stands at over $130 billion, providing multi-year revenue visibility. Its core Oracle Database business generates more than $25 billion annually in high-margin recurring revenue, funding the cloud buildout.
Arista is presented as a way to invest in the AI data center buildout without direct exposure to semiconductor or hyperscaler risks. The company’s EOS networking software is described as the standard in high-performance data centers, with high switching costs across enterprise customers.
Arista operates with net cash and strong free cash flow conversion. As AI clusters grow larger, the amount spent on networking per dollar of compute also increases, making Arista a direct beneficiary of rising AI infrastructure investment.
The report notes that all five stocks are cash-flow-positive businesses with competitive advantages being strengthened, not weakened, by the current AI investment cycle. Oracle’s $130 billion-plus backlog remains one of the most cited data points supporting the investment case.
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