Amid renewed market volatility, analysts suggest that a market decline could be an opportune moment for investors to buy leading tech stocks like TSMC, Roku, and Arm Holdings at more favourable valuations, as companies continue to lead in chip manufacturing, streaming, and chip architecture.
After a sharp rebound in April, investors are again weighing whether the next big move could be another sell-off. With valuations still rich and early earnings reports painting a mixed picture, The Motley Fool argues that any fresh decline would be less a reason to panic than an opening to accumulate quality names at better prices.
One of its top ideas is Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, the world’s dominant contract chipmaker. Statista said TSMC controlled a major share of the global foundry market in the fourth quarter of 2024, while separate market data cited by Taiwan-focused outlets put its pure-play foundry share at 64% in the third quarter of 2024. That scale matters because the AI boom has kept demand for advanced chip production elevated, and TSMC’s lead in leading-edge manufacturing has made it a central supplier to the industry.
Roku is another candidate for dip buyers. The streaming platform company has benefited from the shift towards ad-supported television, and Investing.com reported that it is guiding for 2026 annual revenue above Wall Street forecasts, helped by stronger platform sales. A separate earnings summary said first-quarter 2026 platform revenue rose 28% year on year, with management lifting full-year guidance for platform revenue and EBITDA.
Arm Holdings rounds out the list. The company has built its business around chip architecture and licensing rather than manufacturing, and The Motley Fool says recent agreements with companies including Meta Platforms and OpenAI have not yet fully shown up in revenue. That leaves the stock expensive by conventional measures, but the paper argues that patient investors may want to wait for a broader market pullback before buying.
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Noah Fact Check Pro
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emerged. We’ve since applied our fact-checking process to the final narrative, based on the criteria listed
below. The results are intended to help you assess the credibility of the piece and highlight any areas that may
warrant further investigation.
Freshness check
Score:
7
Notes:
The article was published on May 2, 2026, making it current. However, similar articles have been published in the past, such as one on February 23, 2026, discussing stocks to buy if the market crashes. ([fool.com](https://www.fool.com/investing/2026/02/23/the-first-3-stocks-im-buying-if-the-market-crashes/?utm_source=openai)) This suggests that the content may be recycled or based on recurring themes. Additionally, the article includes data from December 2025, which may not reflect the most recent developments. The inclusion of older data alongside current analysis raises concerns about the freshness and originality of the content. Given these factors, the freshness score is reduced.
Quotes check
Score:
6
Notes:
The article includes direct quotes from The Motley Fool’s previous publications, such as the February 23, 2026, article. ([fool.com](https://www.fool.com/investing/2026/02/23/the-first-3-stocks-im-buying-if-the-market-crashes/?utm_source=openai)) This indicates that the content may be repurposed or based on earlier material. The use of identical quotes across multiple articles raises concerns about the originality and independence of the content. Given these factors, the quotes score is reduced.
Source reliability
Score:
8
Notes:
The article originates from The Motley Fool, a reputable financial news organisation. However, the content appears to be based on previous articles from the same source, which may indicate a lack of new, independent reporting. The reliance on internal sources for verification raises questions about the independence of the information presented. Given these factors, the source reliability score is reduced.
Plausibility check
Score:
7
Notes:
The article discusses the potential impact of a market crash on specific stocks, referencing data from December 2025. While the analysis is plausible, the reliance on outdated data and the recycling of content from earlier articles may affect the accuracy and relevance of the information. Given these factors, the plausibility score is reduced.
Overall assessment
Verdict (FAIL, OPEN, PASS): FAIL
Confidence (LOW, MEDIUM, HIGH): MEDIUM
Summary:
The article presents recycled content from previous publications, includes outdated data, and relies on internal sources for verification, raising concerns about its freshness, originality, and independence. Given these issues, the overall assessment is a FAIL.

