3 Bold Predictions to Start 2026

By Motley Fool Staff | January 20, 2026, 5:30 PM

In this podcast, Motley Fool contributors Tyler Crowe, Matt Frankel, and Jon Quast discuss:

  • Which AI company will reign supreme in 2026.
  • The case for the solar industry's outperformance.
  • The long overdue revival of the housing market.
  • Stocks on their radar.

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A full transcript is below.

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This podcast was recorded on Jan. 08, 2026.

Tyler Crowe: Three investing predictions to get 2026 started. This is Motley Fool Money. Welcome to Motley Fool Money. I'm Tyler Crowe, and today I'm joined by longtime Fool contributors, Matt Frankel and Jon Quast. Now, between the holidays and some ill time seasonal illnesses, the three of us haven't really been together for some time to record this podcast. We've all had some time to reflect as we've been thinking about investing in 2026 and maybe some of the themes and predictions we expect in the coming years. We're eight days into 2026, but that's not too late to get some investing predictions in here on time. We're going to go around the horn here and give some of the investing predictions and themes, investings that we're thinking about in the coming year. Now, Jon's going to go first, but after you give, like, your hot take controversial way of giving it, Matt and I are going to mention, like, how much we believe in prediction and then try to convince us afterwards. What is, like, your big headline prediction for the year?

Jon Quast: 2026 will be the year that Alphabet's Gemini erases ChatGPT's market share advantage. Let me put it another way. Gemini will reach market share parity with OpenAI's ChatGPT this year.

Tyler Crowe: We got these just before we started today, and when I first saw it, I was like, at a six out of ten because it's directionally I like it, but I think it's pretty bold for one year. Matt, what did you think?

Matt Frankel: Yeah, I'm about two out of ten on this, but for the same reason, I think we're closer than the numbers make it sound. I just think ChatGPT is going to lose market share overall over time, but I think it's going to take much longer than a year for anyone to truly catch up.

Tyler Crowe: All right, so Jon, perfect market parody, but between the two convince us.

Jon Quast: Yeah, and I totally get the hesitancy here, but just understand how fast ChatGPT is losing market share. It dropped 19 points during the last year and now it's at 68% market share, according to similar web. By contrast, Geminis gained 13 points. It's now at 18% market share. But the thing is, it's really about momentum here. A big chunk of the market share gains came late in the year after Alphabet released Gemini 3. This isn't just the chatbot. This is also the technology that it's popular Nano Banana, video creation software is built on. It just seems like when it comes to generative AI, Alphabet really has some advantages here. It has distribution, integration with popular products such as Gmail. It's also vertically integrated. It makes its own TPUs. It has the cloud infrastructure, not to mention that the overall business from Alphabet can subsidize generative AI losses seemingly indefinitely. Now I'm not necessarily saying that Gemini is going to have the whole shebang here. If it got to 40% market share in the coming year, I think that would probably be enough to pull even because ChatGPT is losing ground to other players as well, smaller players to a lesser extent, but losing ground nonetheless. Listen, I have no idea necessarily what this means for the entire AI ecosystem. I know that OpenAI needs like 100 billion over the next few years to do what it wants to do at the rate it's burning cash. The bag is going to be harder to secure if it's losing market share, but that's my prediction Gemini is going to reach market share parity.

Matt Frankel: Yeah, so, you mentioned that ChatGPT, and Gemini are the industry leaders, and correctly so, but of the other major AI players, let's say, Claude, Grok, etc, do you see one in particular as like a sleeper that could eventually become a threat?

Jon Quast: Absolutely. I think that one to watch here is X AI Grok because it does have some advantages as well. Its owner Elon Musk is similar to Alphabet, if you will, in a manner of speaking, hear me out. Alphabet has all these different businesses, and they do complement each other. In the same way, Elon Musk has all of these different businesses that he's running. Really, he does make them complement each other and he does pull technology from one to the other. Musk has incredible incentive to build AI for autonomous vehicles, for robotics, for even his human computer interface company Neuro, so he needs AI. He will pursue it. He's the world's richest person. I wouldn't discount X AI's ability to take some market share here.

Tyler Crowe: We got a good start here in terms of bold predictions, and coming up after the break, I'll give one that maybe not as controversial.

We're back and giving predictions for 2026 and how we're thinking about investing for the coming year. I'm going to go next, and I've been hinting at this one for several months now with our stocks on the radar and our ending segment here. I don't think it's going to be surprises to YouTube or to our listeners. I think the solar industry is going to double the performance of the market of 2026. I've already shown my hand on this, but do I have either of you actually convinced of this idea?

Matt Frankel: Yeah, so I'm at about seven out of ten on this one. I do think this is the year investors finally realize solar is going to be the short term solution to AI power consumption, but a double, maybe.

Jon Quast: Yeah, I'm like, eight out of ten here, Tyler. You've talked about this before? I think you've made a good case.

Tyler Crowe: Yeah, look, like I said, I've probably actually given the Spel like four or five times now, so apologies for the regular listeners who check in all the time. But my whole argument on this is I think a lot of people are looking at things like subsidies going away for solar as, like, this death knell for the industry, when in reality, there are so many other factors that go into play when you're actually making those capital allocation decisions at a utility or if you're a hyperscaler that needs power today, that you know, just what type of source and whether it's carbon free or the pricing and things like that, it's not all of the scope. I think one of the most important factors that people are discounting these days is the speed to deploy new electrons to the grid. When it comes to that, solar right now is the fastest to do it. With natural gas turbines. But between those two, there is more than enough market share in terms of increased demand to go around. Just to give an example of, like, what I'm talking about here, let me go to the example of natural gas.

GE Vernova is probably America's largest we'll say, a natural gas turbine manufacturer. They actually said in their most recent conference call back in November that all of their new gas turbine equipment is sold out through 2028, and they have less than 10 gigawatt of production capacity left to sale in 2029. We're talking about you know, three to four years if anyone hasn't already ordered their gas turbines to deploy for their hypercenters. Now, and to increase up production at natural gas, it's going to take that much longer. GE Vernova saying that it will take until 2028 for them to increase their total production output from 20 gigawatts to 24 gigawatts per year. It's relatively slow ramp up time, and all this points to solar, which on a deployment scale can deploy faster.

he ramp up of production tends to be a little bit faster. First Solar has been building new facilities, and their average turnaround time for a new facility has been something like 18 months to 24 months, so much faster than what GE Vernova talking about here. I think this is going to be a major capital decision for people who are desperate to add new electrons. Furthermore, the places where it's going to be more I guess you could say favorable like, if we're looking a lot of these data center deployments, it's in places like Texas. The Texas grid, which is called ERKOT actually added the most solar in 2024 and compared to any other state in America, and the project development costs there are some of the lowest in the nation compared to anywhere else because of relatively cheap land and a favorable regulatory environment. With the increasing deployment of AI hyperscalars still, I think solar is going to be an increasing part of the power supply just to make this happen, despite all the talk of things like nuclear and all the other things that I think we all admit are like ten years down the road. As far as the pricing and the subsidies thing, my brief response to all of that is, if everyone's desperate for electrons like they say they are and the subsidies go away, I think that solar panel pricing is just going to re price up to a profitable level such that it won't matter if subsidies are there or not.It's going to be very cost competitive for anybody trying to make those things. Not a perfect solution, but there are no perfect solutions, and I think this is going to be the solution for 2026 and possibly 2027.

Jon Quast: In my understanding, solar needs batteries in order to do well. I see that Tesla is deploying battery storage like crazy. Tyler, I'm just curious, what do you think if solar really does take off here in the coming year, what do you think that means for the battery storage business?

Tyler Crowe: I think it's a given, and I think they're going to walk hand in hand here. Just for example, I was looking up some work from the Berkeley It's a Department of Energy lab that's run out of Berkeley, California. They do all their data studies. In 2024, battery systems, so grid storage systems were the fourth largest source of added grid capacity. The only ones ahead of it were utility scale solar, distributed or what we call residential solar and wind power. Gas was a fraction of it, coal was non existent. Smoothing out intermittency of when the sun doesn't shine and reducing grid strain that the fluctuation of solar presents will be the key weaknesses for solar power as a long term energy option. Battery storage will go hand in hand here to solve those key weaknesses in the solar power solution. Instead of going to break here, Matt, what do you have for us as the last prediction for 2026?

Matt Frankel: Yeah, so it's no secret that you and I are both Home Builder investors. They've underperformed the market recently with a slow real estate market lasting far longer than experts thought it would. It's not a surprise, but I'm going to go out on a limb here, and I'm going to say that the average Home Builder stock will rise by 30% in 2026.

Tyler Crowe: As much as I do like Home Builder companies, I was actually at a four out of ten for this specific one. What about you, Jon?

Jon Quast: I'm at a six out of ten. I think I can get there. Tell me more, Matt.

Matt Frankel: Yeah, so to be clear, it could be a lot more than 30% if things work out well for the industry. Just look at what happened in 2022 when interest rates spiked and Home Builders plummeted, only to rise rapidly in 2023, when the industry really did a great job of adapting to the slow market. Tyler's favorite Green Brick Partners rose by 115% in 2023. That wasn't even close to being the industry's best performer. I have a few reasons behind my bullish call here. For one thing, homebuilders have been beaten down to the point where they're priced essentially for negative growth, with many of them trading for single digit PE multiples. But looking ahead, the median expectation is for two or three more rate cuts this year. I believe this should help push mortgage rates down well below 6%. I'd like 6.2, 6.3 right now. That would likely bring more homebuyers off the sidelines. Homebuilders don't have as much of a financing advantage as they did a couple of years ago being able to offer rate buy downs when mortgages were 8%. But in many markets, including mine, it's cheaper to buy a new home than a comparable existing one. It will be attractive to buyers. Home Builder margins, they remain historically high, and any market rebound could really result in massive bottom line growth.

Tyler Crowe: This was my contention for this call and specifically for 2026. Now, I think we're fighting the last battle when we look at interest rates as the big predictor for the housing market, at least at this point in our cycle. I think the more important metric for home sales will be unemployment and the vibes of the job market. If we're all terrified that AI is going to chak our job, who's willing to go out on limb and buy a house in 2026? For that reason, I'm just I'm skeptical that the rate cuts are going to have the impact on the housing market, like they have in the past five years.

Matt Frankel: Yeah, and that's a fair concern. I will say if my prediction is wrong, it's more likely to be because of economic concerns than because of interest rate headwinds, but I still think there's enough pent up demand from people who would love to be homeowners who have been on the sidelines or people who would love to be able to sell their house but are stuck into low mortgage rates. At least initially, this will produce a spike in buying activity that'll surprise the market.

Tyler Crowe: We got three predictions for the market. We got Home Builders outpacing the market, solar outpacing the market, and Alphabet basically taking ChatGPT's crown. After the break, we're going to get specifically into three stocks that are on our radar for the beginning here in 2026.

Matt, Jon, this was the first time that you and I get to do our stocks on the Radar here in 2026. Up. Matt, we're going to let you start off the year with our inacular radar pick. What are you looking at?

Matt Frankel: Yeah, I'm looking at Prologis. Ticker symbol PLD. It's close to a 52 week high, but it's still way off its all time peak. Industrial real estate has just been kind of slow. Management has said that we're close to an inflection point forming, and the recent results support that. CEO Hamid Mogadim even said that market conditions for rent and occupancy growth are among the most compelling he's seen in 40 years. He's actually a co-founder of the company, by the way. The company that's been quietly expanding into data centers. Is scale and financial flexibility give it a big advantage over rivals when it comes to being able to meet the demand of AI infrastructure. Prologis is one that I'm really watching closely as we head into 2026.

Tyler Crowe: E-commerce, and that has been something I've been interested in a long time as well. For mine, I'm going to go with Array Technologies. The ticker is ARRY. I think three of us were joking before we recorded our show, and I was mentioned here. Basically, I think for our listeners, we're going to keep beating them over the head with solar and home building stocks until morale improves here. But so what I'm thinking with array technologies, and I just laid out the case for solar. I'm doubling down on this here is that they are a company that builds what are basically called trackers. This is a device that allows a utility scale solar panel to track the trajectory of the sun throughout the day. The idea here being, is that a panel that follows a trajectory of sun is a much more efficient panel than one, and it is on a fixed bracket, if you will, drastically reduces the amount of solar panels you need in a given space. To produce similar amounts of power. One of the things that is going to start to become one of the I guess you could say most expensive components of a solar installation itself is actually going to be land acquisition. If we can stuff more electron producing capacity out of any given, acre of land, that's going to come in a premium. A

ctually we see it in the numbers, too, when it comes to utility scale solar tracking based systems versus fixed bracket systems, they've been taking market share over and over and over again, and it's really hard to see us going back in any significant way because the costs have come down so much on a per watt basis. This is a company similarly had some struggles during 2023, 2024 because of various reasons of interest rates or what have you. But to double down on my idea of solar stocks outperforming, I think this is a company that's been growing revenue incredibly fast. Is margins are improving. They are pulling in book to bill ratios that are incredibly strong right now. Overall, I think this is just a time for solar. I know it's not the most conventional thought in power today, but it's where I want to be, and I think there's a lot of value opportunities there. Jon, what have you got?

Jon Quast: I'm going to stick with homes, and we're going to go with Floor and Decor holding stock ticker symbol FND. This is a home improvement retailer, very large warehouse style stores. Think of a Home Depot except really specializing in flooring primarily. This business it's loved by pros and homeowners. It's still small, a small chain with only around 260 stores, but it's looking to get to 500 within the next several years. Now, I want to point out that Floor and Decor stock has performed terribly in recent years, because this business thrives when sales of existing homes are doing well. According to the National Association of Realtors, existing home sales have been in the tank now for about 2.5 years. I'm actually hoping going back to what Matt was talking about earlier, he thinks that new home sales are going to boom. I'm actually hoping that existing home sales do, but I think that they will eventually recover. I don't expect that these sales of existing homes will always be in the toilet. Hopefully, in 2026, it'll get better. When they do improve, that will get people remodeling their floors again.

Matt Frankel: The thing about Floor and Decor is even though the headwind has been blowing now for a few years, the business is still growing. It is still profitable. Right now it trades at its cheapest valuation ever at only 1.5 times sales. I think this is a low risk buy and hold today.

Tyler Crowe: More solar or more housing. I think we're almost at a point where we have to actually call this the Housing and solar Show for 2026. We have Floor Decor, Array Technologies, and Prologis for this week. That is all the time we have for today. Matt, Jon, thanks for sharing your thoughts. As always, people on the program may have interests in the stocks they talk about, and the Motley Fool may have formal recommendations for or against, so don't buy or sell stocks based solely on what you hear. All personal finance content follows Motley Fool editorial standards and it is not approved by advertisers. Advertisers are sponsored content and provide for informational purposes only. See our full advertising disclosures, please check out our show notes. Thanks, our producer Dan Boyd and the rest of the Motley Fool Team, for Matt, Jon and myself. Thanks for listening, and we'll chat again soon.

Jon Quast has positions in Floor & Decor. Matt Frankel, CFP has positions in Prologis. Tyler Crowe has positions in First Solar, Green Brick Partners, and Prologis. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Alphabet, First Solar, Green Brick Partners, Prologis, and Tesla. The Motley Fool recommends Ge Vernova. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

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