The post The Magnificent 7 Is Dead. These 10 Stocks Are the New Market Favorites appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
For nearly three years, investors could explain much of the stock market with a single phrase: the Magnificent 7. Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL), Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT), Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA), Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN), Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOG), Meta Platforms (NASDAQ:META), and Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) became shorthand for the companies driving index returns, artificial intelligence spending, and market leadership.
That framework is starting to look outdated. The AI boom has expanded beyond traditional Big Tech. Private companies are attracting capital at unprecedented rates, semiconductor suppliers have become trillion-dollar giants, and entirely new groups of market leaders are emerging.
Investors are no longer talking only about the Magnificent 7. New labels such as “FAB 10,” “Parabolic 7,” and even “MANGOS” have entered the conversation as investors try to capture a market that is evolving much faster than its old acronyms.
A growing number of investors are adopting the term “FAB 10,” short for Frontier AI & Big Tech. The group includes the original Magnificent 7, but adds three companies at the center of the AI revolution:
The shift reflects a simple reality. The most valuable and influential technology companies are no longer all publicly traded.
Retail investors purchased record amounts of SpaceX shares following its June 12 IPO as demand surged for portfolios offering access to private-market leaders. The company’s growing role in satellite communications, launch services, and national security had made it one of the most sought-after private investments.
Meanwhile, OpenAI and Anthropic have become central players in generative AI. Both companies are attracting tens of billions of dollars in investment from strategic partners and institutional investors eager to gain exposure to frontier AI development.
The Magnificent 7 represented the winners of the mobile, cloud, and digital advertising eras. FAB 10 attempts to capture the companies defining the AI era.
One reason the Magnificent 7 framework is fading is that several newer companies have grown large enough to challenge its members.
Consider how the leaderboard has shifted:
| Company | Approximate Market Value |
| Nvidia | $4.95 trillion |
| Alphabet | $4.40 trillion |
| Apple | $4.35 trillion |
| Microsoft | $2.81 trillion |
| Amazon | $2.55 trillion |
| SpaceX | $2.53 trillion |
| Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing (NYSE:TSM) | $2.24 trillion |
| Broadcom (NASDAQ:AVGO) | $1.87 trillion |
| Tesla | $1.49 trillion |
| Meta Platforms | $1.44 trillion |
Just a few years ago, Tesla and Meta were viewed as untouchable members of the market’s elite.
Today, Broadcom has become a critical supplier of AI networking chips, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing produces advanced chips powering nearly every major AI system, and SpaceX has built a business spanning launch services, Starlink, and defense contracts.
Even more surprising, memory manufacturers are becoming AI giants in their own right.
SK hynix, Samsung Electronics, and Micron Technology (NASDAQ:MU) sit at the center of the high-bandwidth memory market. HBM chips have become essential for Nvidia’s AI accelerators, creating demand that continues to outpace supply. Combined, these companies now represent well over $3.6 trillion in market value.
Investors should remember that market acronyms are snapshots, not permanent truths. The FAANG stocks eventually became the Magnificent 7. Now investors are debating FAB 10, Parabolic 7, and several other variations. The names matter less than what they reveal about where capital is flowing.
The biggest winners of one technological cycle rarely remain the only winners of the next.
That doesn’t mean the Magnificent 7 are disappearing. Microsoft, Nvidia, Amazon, Alphabet, and even Meta remain at the center of AI infrastructure spending. But leadership is broadening as new companies capture larger portions of the value being created.
In short, the Magnificent 7 is not dying because its members are failing. It is fading because the opportunity set has expanded.
Private AI leaders such as OpenAI and Anthropic now command attention alongside public-market giants. Semiconductor leaders like Broadcom, Taiwan Semiconductor, Micron, Samsung, and SK hynix have become critical beneficiaries of AI spending. The result is a market where leadership is no longer concentrated in seven stocks.
For investors, that’s good news. The next generation of market winners is becoming larger, more diverse, and harder to capture with a single acronym.
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