The Best Artificial Intelligence (AI) Growth Stocks After the Helium Shock Are the Ones That Don't Need the Strait of Hormuz

Source The Motley Fool

Key Points

  • The AI supply chain crisis showed that software companies are insulated from the physical bottlenecks hurting chipmakers.

  • More AI adoption means more demand for observability and cybersecurity platforms like Datadog and AI platforms like CrowdStrike.

  • 10 stocks we like better than Datadog ›

The crisis that exposed the artificial intelligence (AI) supply chain also revealed which companies sit above it.

Since Iran closed the Strait of Hormuz on Feb. 28, the global helium market has lost access to roughly 30% of total output. Qatar's Ras Laffan facility, the world's largest helium production site, has been idle since early March. Moody's confirmed in April what semiconductor engineers had already calculated: There is no viable substitute for ultra-high-purity helium at scale, and the gas is indispensable at multiple stages of chip manufacturing. The companies that build the physical chips are working against a six-month stockpile clock.

Will AI create the world's first trillionaire? Our team just released a report on the one little-known company, called an "Indispensable Monopoly" providing the critical technology Nvidia and Intel both need. Continue »

For investors trying to buy into AI right now, the supply chain question has a clear answer. The companies that matter most are the ones whose products are pure software. Two reported earnings this week make the case for them.

Lines of code spill out of a vault.

Image source: Getty Images.

1. Datadog

Datadog (NASDAQ: DDOG) reported Q1 2026 results on May 7, and the stock surged roughly 30% in trading, the largest single-session move in the company's history. Revenue hit $1 billion, up 32% year over year, crossing the billion-dollar quarterly threshold for the first time. Non-GAAP earnings per share (EPS) grew roughly 30% to $0.60. Free cash flow came in at $289 million. The company raised its full-year 2026 outlook.

But the number beneath the headline matters more than the headline itself. Datadog now has approximately 4,550 customers with annual recurring revenue of more than $100,000. That's a cohort that represents the company's most durable revenue base and one that grew meaningfully year over year. These are enterprises with AI and cloud infrastructure that generate logs, traces, and metrics at a scale that demands a dedicated observability platform.

Datadog doesn't need the Strait of Hormuz. Its product is pure software. The product is a cloud-hosted observability platform that monitors AI workloads, infrastructure, and applications through a browser and an API. There is no physical manufacturing process, no semiconductor fabrication, and no industrial gas in its cost structure; when a customer deploys Datadog, the only thing that ships is code.

What changed in Q1 is that AI workloads, GPU clusters, LLM inference pipelines, and agentic workflows started showing up in Datadog's billing in a material way. The company's GPU monitoring product, launched this quarter, gives AI teams visibility into their fleets' cost and performance, a capability that did not exist two years ago and that every serious AI deployment now needs. The more AI deployments that go into production, the larger Datadog's addressable market becomes -- regardless of whether the Strait of Hormuz reopens tomorrow.

2. CrowdStrike

Like Datadog, CrowdStrike (NASDAQ: CRWD) manufactures nothing. Its product is the Falcon platform, an AI-native cybersecurity engine that monitors endpoint behavior, threat intelligence, and identity in real time, and runs on software subscriptions that renew at a 98% gross retention rate. The Strait of Hormuz is not included as a line item in CrowdStrike's cost of goods sold.

The most recent results for Q4 of fiscal year 2026, ending Jan. 31, showed annual recurring revenue of $5.25 billion, up 24% year over year, and total revenue of $1.31 billion, up 23%.

The under-discussed angle with this ticker is that AI makes CrowdStrike more relevant, not less. Every AI agent deployed inside an enterprise is a new attack surface. Every API call between an LLM and a corporate database is a new vector. The Falcon platform was built to monitor exactly the kind of distributed, high-velocity environment that AI creates at scale. CrowdStrike guided for fiscal year 2027 revenue of $5.86 to $5.92 billion, representing roughly 13% growth. This is a deliberately conservative number from a management team that has beaten guidance in each of the past eight quarters.

The risk is the same one it always has been with CrowdStrike: The 2024 software update incident scarred a segment of enterprise buyers, and competitors have used that window to compete. The recovery in net new annual recurring revenue has been steady, but the scar tissue remains. Investors buying at this valuation are pricing in a return to 20%-plus growth that has not yet been confirmed for fiscal 2027.

The supply chain crisis clarified something the market was slow to price: Software platforms that sell the intelligence layer of AI (the monitoring, the security, and the observability) do not need a single atom of helium to grow. They need customers whose AI deployments are becoming increasingly complex.

Should you buy stock in Datadog right now?

Before you buy stock in Datadog, consider this:

The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the 10 best stocks for investors to buy now… and Datadog wasn’t one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years.

Consider when Netflix made this list on December 17, 2004... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you’d have $471,827!* Or when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you’d have $1,319,291!*

Now, it’s worth noting Stock Advisor’s total average return is 986% — a market-crushing outperformance compared to 207% for the S&P 500. Don't miss the latest top 10 list, available with Stock Advisor, and join an investing community built by individual investors for individual investors.

See the 10 stocks »

*Stock Advisor returns as of May 10, 2026.

Micah Zimmerman has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends CrowdStrike, Datadog, and Moody's. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Disclaimer: For information purposes only. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
placeholder
Silver Price Analysis: Climbs above $80, as bulls eye weekly highSilver price advances more than 2.50% on Friday, set to end the week with gains of over 7% sponsored by US Dollar weakness and falling oil prices. At the time of writing, the XAG/USD trades at $80.72, after bouncing off daily lows of $78.16.
Author  FXStreet
Yesterday 01: 41
Silver price advances more than 2.50% on Friday, set to end the week with gains of over 7% sponsored by US Dollar weakness and falling oil prices. At the time of writing, the XAG/USD trades at $80.72, after bouncing off daily lows of $78.16.
placeholder
April NFP Lands at 8:30 AM Today — 65K Forecast, a New Fed Chair, and the Dollar at Triple-Bottom SupportApril 2026 NFP forecast 62K–70K vs March 178K. Unemployment expected 4.3%. Fed on hold at 3.50–3.75% with Kevin Warsh as new chair. DXY triple-bottom at $97.69. Trade setup inside.The Apr
Author  TradingKey
May 08, Fri
April 2026 NFP forecast 62K–70K vs March 178K. Unemployment expected 4.3%. Fed on hold at 3.50–3.75% with Kevin Warsh as new chair. DXY triple-bottom at $97.69. Trade setup inside.The Apr
placeholder
WTI falls to near $93.50 after Israel, Iran signal an end to hostilitiesWest Texas Intermediate (WTI) oil price loses ground after registering modest gains in the previous day, trading around $93.70 per barrel during the Asian hours on Friday.
Author  FXStreet
May 08, Fri
West Texas Intermediate (WTI) oil price loses ground after registering modest gains in the previous day, trading around $93.70 per barrel during the Asian hours on Friday.
placeholder
WTI and Brent Futures Both Fall Below $100 Mark, Have Oil Prices and Energy Sector Peaked?WTI crude oil futures settled at $96.21 per barrel on May 6, plunging 6.3% to close below $100 for the first time in six days, marking the largest single-day decline since March 17. Brent
Author  TradingKey
May 07, Thu
WTI crude oil futures settled at $96.21 per barrel on May 6, plunging 6.3% to close below $100 for the first time in six days, marking the largest single-day decline since March 17. Brent
placeholder
Bitcoin jumps to three-month high as US–Iran talks unwind oil risk premiumGlobal markets moved sharply on Wednesday as signs of progress in US–Iran negotiations triggered a rapid unwind of war-driven positions, dragging oil prices lower while lifting equities and cryptocurrencies. Bitcoin climbed above $81,000, its highest level in three months, while Brent crude fell roughly 11% to around $98 per barrel. The S&P 500 rose 0.85%...
Author  Cryptopolitan
May 07, Thu
Global markets moved sharply on Wednesday as signs of progress in US–Iran negotiations triggered a rapid unwind of war-driven positions, dragging oil prices lower while lifting equities and cryptocurrencies. Bitcoin climbed above $81,000, its highest level in three months, while Brent crude fell roughly 11% to around $98 per barrel. The S&P 500 rose 0.85%...
goTop
quote