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Just been looking at the Magnificent Seven crew again, and honestly, there's some solid reasoning why people keep circling back to these names. They've basically become synonymous with tech leadership at this point.
Here's what caught my attention: even with the recent pause in tech stocks, three of these stand out as genuinely interesting if you're looking at the fundamentals. And the best part? You can actually grab full shares of all three for under $1,000 combined.
Let me break down why I keep watching these three.
Alphabet's got this dual-engine thing going that's pretty hard to ignore. The search dominance is obvious - around 90% global market share will do that - but what people sleep on is Google Cloud. Revenue jumped 48% last quarter to $17.7 billion. We're talking a $70 billion annual run rate now. Every company moving to cloud infrastructure, every AI application being built, every data center being scaled up - Alphabet's sitting in the middle of all that. The advertising side brought in $82.3 billion in Q4, up 14% year-over-year. That's the kind of consistent cash engine that matters.
Apple's doing something different though. While the rest of the Magnificent Seven are burning through hundreds of billions on AI infrastructure - we're talking $655 billion collectively committed - Apple spent $12.7 billion on AI in 2025 and is focused more on domestic manufacturing. Their Services segment is quietly printing money: $30 billion in Q1 FY2026, up 14%. Hardware keeps selling, subscriptions keep growing. It's not the flashy AI play, but it's working.
Nvidia? They're basically the pick-and-shovel play for this entire AI boom. All that spending everyone else is doing flows right into their data centers. Q4 revenue hit $68.1 billion, up 73% year-over-year. The data center segment alone brought in $62.3 billion. Their Blackwell chips are the standard, and they're already working on the next generation with Rubin. When your CEO is talking about enterprise adoption of AI agents "skyrocketing," that's not hype - that's the market moving.
When you're looking at top 10 tech stocks to actually consider, these three have fundamentals that matter. Not every tech name has that combination of scale, growth, and cash generation right now. Worth keeping on the radar if you're thinking about core long-term positions.