Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

Choosing right chips could help avoid frying your investment

- Tim Boreham Criterion

The US artificial intelligen­ce (AI) tearaway Nvidia is now worth $US2.1 trillion – just behind Apple’s worldleadi­ng $US2.6 trillion worth.

Meanwhile, the hunt for the most local AI fast follower continues, with investors flocking to a $1.3bn capital raising from data centre operator Next DC ( NXT), which is expanding its facilities to cope with the AI capacity demands.

With a $9.3bn market cap, Next DC is well discovered so what else is out there?

Many investors are convinced the $140m market cap Archer Materials ( AXE) has the right stuff – but the story may go over the heads of investors who think the world’s biggest chip maker is Mcdonald’s.

Archer recently announced it had built “an integrated pulsed electron spin resonance microsyste­m on a chip to detect and analyse materials for important signs of quantum electron spin manipulati­on at a very small scale”.

If that one comes up at a party, nod your head and change the topic.

In plain English, it’s about faster and more capacious chips to cope with the AI demands and tapping quantum mechanics to do so.

Archer is developing two semiconduc­tors, the 12CQ and Biochip.

A teeny “lab on chip? Biochip promises the early detection of multiple diseases. 12CQ is not a Star Wars android, but the pulsed electron spin resonance microsyste­m that paves the way for computing capacity that could solve many of the world’s knottiest problems (or possibly create some more).

“Our goal ultimately is to make quantum technology more accessible, but technical challenges must be overcome,” Archer CEO Mohammad Choucair says.

Weebit Nano ( WBT) is closer to commercial­isation with its next breed of nanochips with faster processing capacity.

The Israel-based, Asx-listed outfit is perfecting memory devices that will replace so-called embedded flash. Weebit claims its resistive random access memory (Reram) chip is up to 100 times faster, more energy efficient and lower cost than flash, with better endurance.

Most devices and appliances run on non-volatile memory such as flash, which means memory is retained when they are turned off. “Because flash has been around for so long it has been hitting a lot of walls and is too slow and power hungry,” says Weebit CEO Coby Hanoch.

Valued at $580m – albeit 38 per cent less than a year ago – Weebit has raised eyebrows because of governance issues, including the circumstan­ces of a director resignatio­n that left the company without the requisite two local board members. While the company has cash of $72m, it burnt through $12m in the December quarter.

Hanoch says Weebit is negotiatin­g agreements with some of the top 10 foundries (chip factories), opening the way for royalties.

If hypersonic-speed nano chips are all too much to fathom, broker JP Morgan mounts the case for oldfashion­ed providers of power grids and associated equipment.

After all, AI and hypercompu­ting require enormous amounts of electricit­y and someone needs to move these electrons.

Shares in Tawain’s Fortune Electric and South Korea’s Hyundai Electric Co have surged 177 per cent and 166 per cent respective­ly, year to date.

Both make electrical gee-gaws such as transforme­rs.

This story does not constitute financial product advice. You should consider obtaining independen­t advice before making any financial decision

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