In this article, we take a look at 10 High-Growth Wide-Moat Stocks to Buy.
Growth in AI, cloud computing, semiconductors, and enterprise software has widened the gap between companies that can deploy complex infrastructure at scale and those that merely participate in the theme. Gartner expects worldwide IT spending to reach $6.15 trillion in 2026, with data-center systems spending rising 31.7% and software spending increasing 14.7%. The firm expects AI infrastructure to remain a major driver of that spending. The Semiconductor Industry Association reported that global chip sales reached $110.5 billion in April, up 93.9% from a year earlier, and said the World Semiconductor Trade Statistics organization projects 2026 industry sales of $1.5 trillion.
Those figures support a favorable backdrop, but they do not make every technology company a durable compounder. Building data centers, developing advanced chips, or adding AI features can require enormous capital and is increasingly competitive. The stronger businesses tend to own indispensable technology, control difficult-to-replace distribution channels, benefit from network effects, or sit deeply within customer workflows. These advantages or moats can sustain pricing power and make growth more resilient when spending cycles become less forgiving.

Methodology
We screened for U.S.-listed companies, including ADRs, with projected three-year revenue growth of at least 15%, or, for companies valued above $200 billion, at least 10% revenue growth alongside 15% projected EPS growth. Each company also needed a moat score of at least 7 out of 10, based on network effects, switching costs, proprietary technology or data, scale, and ecosystem strength. The ranking weighted projected revenue and EPS growth at 50%, moat strength at 30%, and financial quality, including returns on capital, free cash flow, and leverage, at 20%.
10. Amazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ:AMZN)
Amazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ:AMZN) is one of the high-growth wide-moat stocks to buy. On July 7, Reuters reported that Amazon planned to raise $25 billion through a U.S. bond sale, with proceeds intended for general corporate purposes, including capital expenditures. The financing underscores the scale of investment required to expand cloud and AI infrastructure, while also showing that even cash-rich technology companies are turning more often to debt markets to fund the buildout.
Amazon’s moat is broader than any single business line. Its retail marketplace combines fulfillment infrastructure, Prime membership, seller services, advertising, and consumer traffic. Amazon Web Services adds another layer through its global cloud infrastructure, enterprise relationships, and ecosystem of software partners. The bond sale does introduce a counterpoint: AI infrastructure spending is becoming capital-intensive, and returns will need to justify the rising outlays. Still, Amazon’s ability to fund investment across several profitable businesses gives it more flexibility than narrowly focused cloud competitors. The company can also translate infrastructure spending into capabilities across AWS, logistics, advertising, and customer experience.
Amazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ:AMZN) operates e-commerce marketplaces, cloud-computing services, digital advertising, logistics, and subscription businesses.
9. Synopsys, Inc. (NASDAQ:SNPS)
Synopsys, Inc. (NASDAQ:SNPS) is one of the high-growth wide-moat stocks to buy. On July 7, Reuters reported that Synopsys plans to discontinue selected semiconductor manufacturing analytics products, including tools used to monitor production anomalies, while reallocating resources toward higher-margin chip-design and AI-design offerings. The company said the products being retired were legacy diagnostic tools outside customers’ critical production paths and that it would continue honoring contractual support obligations.
The decision carries some execution risk because customers use process-control software in complex fabrication environments. However, it also clarifies where Synopsys sees greater long-term value: software used to design increasingly complex chips and engineering systems before fabrication begins. That market benefits from high switching costs, deeply integrated workflows, years of accumulated design data, and the severe cost of errors in advanced semiconductor development. Reuters noted that Synopsys has been one of the main suppliers of software used to arrange the billions of transistors inside modern chips for decades. Its shift toward AI-enabled design tools follows the company’s $35 billion acquisition of Ansys in 2025, which broadened its engineering-software capabilities.
Synopsys, Inc. (NASDAQ:SNPS) provides electronic design automation software, semiconductor intellectual property, and engineering analysis tools.






