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5 big analyst AI moves: Apple downgraded, Nvidia gets a Sell rating, TSMC top pick

Here are the biggest analyst moves in the area of artificial intelligence (AI) for this week.

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Rosenblatt downgrades Apple due to a lack of AI-driven iPhone sales acceleration

Rosenblatt Securities downgraded Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) to Neutral from Buy and lowered its price target to $217 from $263 due to a lack of an AI-driven jump in iPhone sales.

“The F2Q25 quarter just reported highlights a company with amazing supply chain skill, and better demand for iPhones than many had feared. Still, for this stock to really work there needs to be an AI driven sharp acceleration in iPhone sales,” analyst Barton Crockett wrote.

“And as time has gone on the argument for that seems to be fading,” he added.

Apple reported fiscal second-quarter revenue of $95.4 billion, up 5.1% year-over-year and 7.6% in constant currency, in line with pre-trade war estimates and at the top end of company guidance. iPhone sales rose 2%, exceeding Rosenblatt’s forecast by 200 basis points, while services revenue climbed 12%—14% in constant currency.

For the June quarter, Apple guided for low to mid-single-digit revenue growth and a gross margin range of 45.5% to 46.5%.

Rosenblatt noted Apple’s ongoing production shift, with most iPhone assembly for the U.S. market moving to India and nearly all iPad, Mac, Watch, and AirPods manufacturing transitioning to Vietnam. China remains the base for production targeting other regions.

The downgrade reflects Rosenblatt’s decision to remove the previously assumed AI-driven replacement super cycle from its forecasts. The new $217 target is based on a 27x multiple of projected 2026 earnings, with a roughly 10% compound annual growth rate.

Nvidia stock receives a rare Sell rating on Wall Street

Earlier this week, Seaport Research Partners initiated coverage on Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA) with a rare Sell rating and a $100 price target, citing stretched valuation and growing risks tied to AI momentum and customer behavior.

“Nvidia is one of the leading beneficiaries of the current AI spending boom, but its prospects are well understood and largely priced into the stock,” the brokerage wrote, suggesting limited upside from current levels.

Despite strong demand for its next-gen Blackwell chips—already sold out for the year—Seaport sees downside risks mounting. The firm pointed to deployment challenges around Nvidia’s systems, including issues with “cooling, configuration, and orchestration,” and warned of a “murky” return on AI investments.

“Our research indicates significant complexity required for deployments of Nvidia systems,” analysts said. They added that enterprise customers are still “searching for use cases and ways to generate returns from significant AI investments to date.”

Seaport also flagged increasing competition from Nvidia’s own customer base. “Strong momentum behind hyperscalers’ internal Nvidia alternatives – Nvidia’s largest customers are all looking to design their own chips,” the note stated.

While the brokerage doesn’t call AI a bubble, it expects headwinds to emerge. “Likely to see slowing of AI budgets in 2026,” Seaport said, noting that even if “AI may do well this year, NVDA is likely to underperform relative to peers.”

Morgan Stanley (NYSE:MS) reinstates TSMC as top pick

Morgan Stanley has reinstated Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing (NYSE:TSM) as a top pick, pointing to a rebound in confidence driven by accelerating AI capital expenditures and reduced concerns around key overhangs.

“With the robust AI capex guidance from Meta (NASDAQ:META) and Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT), we move TSMC back to our Top Pick,” analysts wrote.

The bank had previously held off due to three main risks: AI demand uncertainty, a potential joint venture with Intel (NASDAQ:INTC), and looming tariff decisions. Those concerns now appear to be easing.

“Our latest supply chain checks suggest that CoWoS-L demand at TSMC is unchanged,” the analysts said, pushing back on investor fears about softening demand for the chipmaker’s advanced packaging technology.

Meta’s decision to lift its 2025 capex outlook by $7 billion and Microsoft’s move toward “shorter duration server kit” spending were also viewed as positive signals.

Meanwhile, Intel’s impact looks more limited. “TSMC’s N2 should be used to produce both CPU and GPU tiles, but it will be shared with Intel 18A,” the note said, adding that “TSMC management ruled out the JV possibility.”

On tariffs, uncertainty remains ahead of the May 7 decision, though no new risks have emerged, according to Morgan Stanley.

“TSMC is the more attractive OW [overweight]” stock, Morgan Stanley’s team wrote, highlighting its 2025 price-to-earnings (P/E) estimate of 15.5x. “We have expected a quick rebound in the stock once these overhangs are removed,” the analysts added.

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