Which Semiconductor Stocks Are Cheap — and Which Ones Aren't? A May 2026 Snapshot
Understanding semiconductor stock valuations through P/E ratios, earnings growth, and the PEG ratio
Introduction
The global semiconductor industry is worth trillions of dollars — and it sits at the heart of everything from smartphones and cars to artificial intelligence. But not all chip stocks are priced the same way.
A recent ranking of 33 major semiconductor and EDA (Electronic Design Automation) companies — all with market caps above $50 billion — reveals a wide gap between the cheapest and most expensive stocks in the sector. Understanding why that gap exists can tell us a lot about how investors view the future of technology.
What Is a P/E Ratio — and Why Does It Matter?
The Price-to-Earnings (P/E) ratio is one of the most basic tools for measuring how expensive a stock is. It compares a company's stock price to its earnings (profits) per share.
- A low P/E means investors are paying less per dollar of profit — the stock is relatively cheap.
- A high P/E means investors are paying more — either because they expect strong growth, or because the stock is overpriced.
This chart uses FY2 P/E — which means the P/E ratio based on expected earnings two years from now. This is a "forward-looking" measure that reflects what the market thinks profits will be, not just what they are today.
The Cheapest Semiconductor Stocks: Memory Chip Makers
At the very bottom of the P/E ranking — meaning the cheapest valuations — are the world's biggest memory chip companies:
- SK Hynix (South Korea): 4.3x P/E, 23.2% EPS growth
- Samsung (South Korea): 5.1x P/E, 18.1% EPS growth
- Micron Technology (U.S.): 6.4x P/E, 71.5% EPS growth
- SanDisk (U.S.): 9.6x P/E, 163.7% EPS growth
These numbers look almost paradoxical. Companies with 70%+ expected profit growth typically command high valuations — not 6x earnings.
The explanation lies in the cyclical nature of memory chips. Memory prices — for the DRAM and NAND chips used in phones, computers, and data centers — swing dramatically based on supply and demand. Investors have lived through painful downturns before, so they remain cautious even when the current numbers look strong. The market is essentially saying: "Yes, profits look great now — but we don't fully trust it to last."
A Better Measure: The PEG Ratio
The PEG ratio (Price/Earnings-to-Growth) is an even more useful tool. It adjusts the P/E ratio by the company's expected earnings growth rate.
PEG = P/E ÷ EPS Growth Rate
- A PEG below 1.0 generally suggests the stock may be undervalued relative to its growth.
- A PEG above 2.0 suggests the stock may be expensive relative to its growth prospects.
By this measure, the memory chip companies look even more striking:
| Company | FY2 P/E | EPS Growth | PEG |
|---|---|---|---|
| SanDisk | 9.6x | 163.7% | 0.06 |
| Micron | 6.4x | 71.5% | 0.09 |
| SK Hynix | 4.3x | 23.2% | 0.18 |
| Samsung | 5.1x | 18.1% | 0.28 |
A PEG of 0.06 or 0.09 is extraordinarily low — in theory, these companies are growing much faster than their price reflects. Whether that represents opportunity or a warning sign depends on how confident you are in that earnings forecast holding up.
NVIDIA: The AI Giant That Isn't as Expensive as You Might Think
NVIDIA is the most talked-about chip company in the world — the engine behind the AI boom, with a market cap of over $5 trillion. Many assume it must be the most expensive stock in the sector.
It's not.
At 18.7x forward earnings with 34.8% expected EPS growth, NVIDIA's PEG ratio is 0.54 — well below the 1.0 threshold. This suggests that despite its enormous size and market attention, the stock is not drastically overpriced relative to its expected growth.
This could reflect the market's view that NVIDIA's AI leadership is real but that competition will eventually intensify — keeping the valuation from going even higher.
TSMC and Broadcom: Solid but Priced Accordingly
TSMC — the world's most important chip manufacturer, making chips for Apple, NVIDIA, AMD, and others — trades at 20.5x forward earnings with 27.6% expected profit growth. Its PEG of 0.75 is still below 1.0, suggesting reasonable value for a company of its strategic importance.
Broadcom at 22.4x P/E and 58% expected EPS growth (PEG: 0.39) also looks attractive on a growth-adjusted basis. Broadcom has positioned itself as a key AI infrastructure provider alongside NVIDIA.
The Most Expensive Stocks: ARM and Intel
Arm Holdings sits at the far end of the valuation spectrum at 99.9x forward earnings — nearly 100 times expected profits. With a PEG of 4.75, investors are paying almost five times what the growth rate would traditionally justify.
The market is betting that Arm's chip architecture — which powers virtually every smartphone and is increasingly used in AI and data center chips — will generate explosive growth for many years. That may prove correct. But at this price, there is very little room for disappointment.
Intel, trading at 72.8x forward earnings, is a different kind of expensive. Intel's profits collapsed in recent years due to manufacturing setbacks and lost market share. The high P/E reflects a recovery story — earnings are expected to grow 41%, but from a very depressed base. Its PEG of 1.78 suggests it's priced as a turnaround play, not a bargain.
What This Means for the Broader Economy
The semiconductor sector is often called a leading indicator — it tends to move before the broader economy because chips power so much of what we buy and invest in.
A few broader takeaways from this data:
AI is commanding a premium. Companies most associated with AI — NVIDIA, Arm, Broadcom — are priced at meaningful premiums to the rest of the sector. The market is pricing in continued strong AI infrastructure spending.
Memory is still viewed with skepticism. Despite record-level profit growth expectations, memory chip makers trade at historically low valuations. This reflects concerns about the demand cycle — if AI spending slows or inventory builds up, memory chip profits could fall sharply.
Korea's chip industry is globally undervalued. Both SK Hynix and Samsung carry valuations well below their global peers, partly due to geopolitical risk discounts and cycle concerns. For investors with a long-term view, that gap is worth watching.
Conclusion
Semiconductor valuations in May 2026 tell a clear story: the market loves AI-driven growth and is willing to pay a premium for it, while remaining skeptical of memory chip companies — even when their profit forecasts look strong.
For ordinary readers, the key takeaway is this: a lower stock price doesn't always mean a better buy, and a higher price doesn't always mean the company is overvalued. What matters is whether the price makes sense relative to the growth being delivered.
The chip sector will continue to evolve rapidly. Watching how these valuations shift over the next 12 months — especially as AI spending data becomes clearer — will be one of the most important stories in investing.
⚠️ Disclaimer: This analysis is for educational purposes only and is based on data from StockAnalysis and MarketScreener (as of May 7, 2026). It is not financial advice. Please consult a qualified financial professional before making any investment decisions.
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