Wall Street is shifting gears after Fed hold: these 5 stocks lead way

Wall Street is shifting gears after Fed hold: these 5 stocks lead way
Devesh Kumar
May 02, 2026, 08:35 A.M.

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Micron (MU)

Buy MU. In a higher-for-longer, rate-insensitive setup, the market is rewarding companies with real earnings power. Micron is cheap on forward earnings (~7.8x) while AI memory demand is still accelerating, and it’s already raising spending to meet that demand—signals of durable growth, not just a one-off cycle. Key risk: AI memory demand breaks (hyperscalers cut capex or inventory overhang forces price drops), crushing earnings and making the low multiple look “cheap for a reason.”

Key Risk: AI memory demand falls and prices/inventory pressure wipe out earnings growth.

Amazon (AMZN)

Buy AMZN. The news highlights AWS + advertising as the earnings engine that can keep compounding even if rate cuts get pushed out. AWS growth (28% to $37.6B) plus $70B+ TTM ads means more high-margin revenue streams, so the stock is less dependent on cheap money than typical growth names. Key risk: AWS growth decelerates sharply (cloud spending slows or competition bites), and ad growth also weakens, removing the “multiple support” from durable margins.

Key Risk: AWS growth and ad momentum both slow enough to break the earnings-power story.

  • Fed’s most divided vote since 1992 signals policy uncertainty ahead.
  • Markets largely price out 2026 cuts, reinforcing “higher for longer.”
  • Investors rotating into earnings-driven, AI-linked growth names.

The Federal Reserve kept borrowing costs unchanged on Wednesday, holding the federal funds rate in the 3.50% to 3.75% range for a third straight meeting.

But this was no routine pause.

The vote was the most divided since 1992, with four officials dissenting, and that split sent a clear message to investors: the Fed is entering a more uncertain phase just as markets are starting to price out rate cuts for the rest of 2026.

Wall Street ended the day mixed, but the bigger move is happening underneath the surface, as money shifts toward companies with real earnings power and durable demand.

Wall Street is repositioning fast

The market takeaway from the meeting was not simply that rates stayed put.

It was that the central bank is divided on what comes next.

The traders were betting on Wednesday that there would be no rate cuts in 2026, which is a big change from the more hopeful setup that dominated earlier in the year.

That puts a premium on businesses that can grow even without easier money.

In a “higher for longer” world, investors tend to favor companies that can lift earnings on their own, rather than stocks that depend on lower rates to justify their valuations.

There is also a leadership layer to the story.

Jerome Powell’s term as Fed chair expires on May 15, 2026, adding another source of uncertainty just as investors are already wrestling with inflation and the policy path ahead.

The next key test comes quickly: the April employment report is scheduled for Friday, May 8, at 8:30 a.m. ET.

A strong number could reinforce the view that the Fed has room to stay patient, which would keep pressure on rate-sensitive stocks and support names with sturdier fundamentals.

5 stocks Wall Street is quietly loading up

1. Micron is one of the cleaner ways to play the AI buildout without paying a premium for it.

The stock is at about 7.83 times forward earnings, a low multiple for a company tied directly to AI memory demand.

Micron’s revenue and earnings were surging on booming demand for memory chips used in AI systems, even as it raised fiscal 2026 spending to keep up with that demand.

2. Amazon is another favorite because it is no longer just a cloud story.

AWS revenue jumped 28% to $37.6 billion in the first quarter, while Amazon said advertising revenue reached more than $70 billion on a trailing 12-month basis.

That matters because AWS and ads are both high-margin engines, which gives Amazon more ways to grow even if consumer spending slows.

3. Palantir remains one of the clearest pure-play AI momentum names.

The company’s quarterly revenue rose to $1.41 billion, up 70%, with US government revenue jumping 66% in the fourth quarter.

That kind of growth is rare at any market cap, especially one tied to both government contracts and commercial AI deals.

4. Broadcom is gaining attention for a slightly different reason.

The company's forecast more than $100 billion in AI chip sales next year and signed a long-term deal with Google to develop future generations of custom AI chips through 2031.

That makes Broadcom a major beneficiary of the shift toward custom silicon, where hyperscalers want alternatives to Nvidia-heavy systems.

5. GE Vernova rounds out the group as a power-and-grid play on the same AI cycle.

The company lifted its 2026 outlook because data-center electricity demand is driving more orders for gas turbines and grid equipment.

It now expects 2026 revenue of $44.5 billion to $45.5 billion, and its backlog climbed to $163 billion.

That makes GE Vernova one of the most direct ways to own the infrastructure side of the AI boom.