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2 AI Stocks Wall Street Says Could Soar 70% or More From Here, and 1 It Says to Sell Immediately


When multiple analysts line up behind a stock with meaningful upside targets, it usually means something real is happening at the business level. This is true even if the broader market hasn’t caught up yet.

Here are two AI stocks where professional analysts see 70% or more upside, and one where the consensus has flipped decisively to sell.

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Four people working on a hologram of an astronaut.
Image source: Getty Images.

Nebius Group (NASDAQ: NBIS) is not a well-known name among retail investors. The company builds vertically integrated AI cloud infrastructure, meaning it designs its own server racks, runs its own data centers, and operates its own graphics processing unit (GPU) clusters, all optimized specifically for AI workloads.  Based in the the Netherlands, it emerged from the breakup of Russian internet giant Yandex, bringing with it hundreds of experienced infrastructure engineers and roughly $2.5 billion in initial capital. CEO Arkady Volozh, who founded Yandex in 1997, has been running massive data centers for decades.

The recent catalysts are hard to ignore. In March 2026, Nvidia invested $2 billion directly into Nebius as part of a strategic partnership to develop next-generation hyperscale AI cloud infrastructure. That same week, Meta Platforms announced a five-year contract with Nebius for up to $27 billion in AI cloud capacity. Combined with an earlier $19.4 billion deal with Microsoft, the company’s total contracted revenue backlog is approaching $50 billion, against 2025 revenue of just $530 million. That gap between current revenue and contracted future revenue is the story here.

Analysts who cover Nebius Group have a consensus buy rating and price targets ranging from $143 to $211. At recent trading levels, that implies meaningful upside for patient investors.

U.K.-based Linde (NASDAQ: LIN) is the world’s largest industrial gas company, and it just became one of the most unexpected AI-adjacent beneficiaries of geopolitical disruption. In March 2026, Iranian attacks on Qatar’s liquefied natural gas (LNG) facilities disrupted approximately one-third of the global helium supply. Helium is non-substitutable in semiconductor manufacturing. Helium cools wafers, enables EUV lithography, and maintains the ultra-clean environments that chip fabs require. There is no replacement.

Linde happens to hold enough helium storage to cover approximately six months of global demand, a massive strategic inventory advantage that most competitors cannot match.



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