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There are several mega-trends brewing in the stock market right now, including cybersecurity, AI-powered drug discovery, self-driving cars, and even quantum computing. Any of of these has the potential to be a goldmine for patient, long-term investors who pick the right shares.
One area that I’m bullish on is AI agents, and the broader concept of agentic AI. The former is software that can carry out tasks for an organisation with minimal or no human intervention. The latter is a more advanced form that can reason and coordinate multiple agents to get complex jobs done.
Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) CEO Jensen Huang says that the rise of agentic AI will spawn a multi-trillion-dollar industry. He says it will redefine how millions of people work, becoming the next tech revolution after generative AI.
What sets true AI agents apart is their ability to learn over time. Unlike traditional AI, which typically requires human prompts or manual programming for each task, these agents are capable of self-improvement through real-world use.

Still the key enabler
The most obvious enabler of this trend is Nvidia, whose GPUs and hardware remain central to the whole AI revolution. I rebought this stock when the market tanked in early April, managing to buy in at a cut-price $95.
After surging 52% since, Nvidia stock isn’t as cheap as it was. It could easily sell off again, especially if Chinese competition rises globally and AI adoption slows down during a global recession.
Nevertheless, I think Nvidia could go much higher over the next 10 years as agentic AI and physical AI (self-driving cars, humanoid robots, etc) advance. I reckon it’s still worth considering, especially on any double-digit dip.
Digital labour
On the application side, I’m optimistic that Salesforce (NYSE: CRM) could be a big winner in AI agents, and recently added the stock to my ISA portfolio.
What makes Salesforce well-placed? Well, it launched a task-specific AI agent solution called Agentforce in February, and it had already inked 8,000 deals by March (half paid, the rest pilot programmes).
This tells us that companies are very keen to automate tasks and streamline operations to improve efficiency.
Salesforce, which specialises in customer relationship management, already serves over 150,000 customers worldwide. So it has a massive base to which it can sell AI agents.
Moreover, to build the best AI agents, a company needs lots of high-quality data. In this case, customer data is the fuel, and Salesforce has access to mountains of it.
That’s why I think most start-ups will struggle to compete head-on with incumbents like Salesforce in the AI agent space. They simply don’t have the same access to real-world customer data — or trust — needed to operate them at scale.
The stock is trading at 23 times forward earnings, which isn’t ridiculous, given the long-term potential here. I think it’s worth a look.
AI agents are the new digital workforce.
Jensen Huang
ServiceNow
That said, Salesforce does face stiff competition from Microsoft and ServiceNow. If its agents aren’t quite up to scratch, these rivals could quickly capture market share with their Copilot Studio and Now Assist tools.
ServiceNow is another stock I’m watching. It’s very pricey right now, but this enterprise automation specialist also looks well-positioned to become a future leader in AI agents.