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Featured Article from MarketBeat
3 Under-the-Radar Tech Names Investors Might Have MissedSubmitted by Nathan Reiff. Published: 4/11/2026.
Key Points
- Qnity, Everpure, and TTM Technologies are among a group of high-demand but underappreciated tech stocks helping to power the growth of the AI space.
- Shares of these companies have climbed by as much as 70% in 2026, but the earnings trajectory suggests that they could continue to grow top- and bottom-line figures.
- TTM in particular may stand out for investors concerned about an AI bubble thanks to the company's blossoming defense sector business.
- Special Report: Elon Musk: This Could Turn $100 into $100,000
When it comes to tech stocks, many investors think of the same Magnificent Seven names. That's easy to do when companies such as NVIDIA (NASDAQ: NVDA) and Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL) are among the world's largest, increasing both their market dominance and visibility. Overlooking high-performing, underappreciated names that have contributed to the artificial intelligence (AI) boom can leave investors underdiversified within the tech sector and cause them to miss growth opportunities. Specifically, three lesser-known tech names—Qnity Electronics (NYSE: Q), Everpure (NYSE: PSTG), and TTM Technologies (NASDAQ: TTMI)—have strong structural tailwinds and improving analyst sentiment while not being oversaturated with interest from tech-focused investors. Each plays an increasingly important, distinctive role in the AI infrastructure supply chain as the industry grows. Despite Lack of Name Recognition, DuPont's Electronics Arm Is Making Big Moves
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Qnity Electronics operates across the semiconductor manufacturing value chain, including chip fabrication, packaging, assembly and display work. If the company is unfamiliar to some investors, it's likely because it was spun off from DuPont de Nemours (NYSE: DD) in late 2025 and is still gaining recognition as an independent firm despite a valuation of roughly $27 billion. Qnity also has earnings momentum. In the latest quarter, the company reported 10% organic sales growth and provided strong forward guidance, forecasting $4.97 billion to $5.17 billion in net sales for 2026. Management says an ongoing transformation could produce an EBITDA run rate near $100 million within two years. In the near term, however, that transformation is expected to generate about $140 million in one-time costs and elevated capital expenditures. For buy-and-hold investors, those near-term costs may create longer-term opportunity. Qnity shares have already posted roughly a 60% year-to-date (YTD) gain and have topped analysts' consensus price targets, so waiting for a pullback could be prudent before initiating a position. Major Player in AI Data Storage Is Poised for Continued GrowthEverpure, formerly Pure Storage, is a roughly $20 billion enterprise data storage company offering hardware and cloud-based solutions to hyperscalers, data centers and other customers. Data storage is a critical but often overlooked part of the AI stack, and Everpure has been gaining ground. In its Q4 fiscal 2026 (ended Feb. 1), the company delivered its first billion-dollar quarter with revenue of $1.1 billion—up about 20% year over year—while full-year revenue rose 16%. Everpure is showing healthy profitability alongside revenue growth. A record operating profit of $226 million for the quarter was driven by an operating margin above 21%. Annual recurring revenue, a significant component of the top line, climbed 16% year over year, and management guided to roughly 28% year-over-year revenue growth for the current quarter at the midpoint. Supply constraints remain a risk for data storage firms, but Everpure is seeing rapid adoption of Fusion, its data cloud architecture, which could sustain growth even amid external pressures. Down nearly 10% YTD, PSTG may offer a near-term growth opportunity with upside potential of more than 50% according to current forecasts. TTM Is Vital to AI — and Its Defense Business Is Also ThrivingTTM Technologies is a leading maker of printed circuit boards (PCBs), essential components for complex circuitry across a wide range of electronics. That makes TTM important not only to AI and data-center infrastructure but also to the high-demand aerospace and defense sectors. In its latest quarter, TTM reported $774.3 million in sales, up 19% year over year, and non-GAAP earnings per share that beat analyst estimates of $0.70. The company has seen meaningful momentum in its data-center computing and networking segment, and management expects net sales growth of 15% to 20% for the full year. Importantly, TTM's fabrication operations diversify its exposure across markets, reducing reliance solely on AI and data-center demand. A recent $200 million multi-year agreement with RTX (NYSE: RTX) highlights TTM's expanding role in supplying radar and other defense-related systems. That breadth helps explain a strong run in TTMI shares, which have climbed more than 70% YTD. |
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