A Self-Invested Personal Pension (SIPP) is one of the most powerful long-term investment vehicles available in the UK. It’s tax-efficient, flexible, and designed for the kind of patient, multi-decade investing that genuinely builds wealth.
And right now, there may be no more powerful long-term investment theme than artificial intelligence (AI).
Please note that tax treatment depends on the individual circumstances of each client and may be subject to change in future. The content in this article is provided for information purposes only. It is not intended to be, neither does it constitute, any form of tax advice. Readers are responsible for carrying out their own due diligence and for obtaining professional advice before making any investment decisions.
The three phases of the AI trade
Not all AI investments are equal. To find the best opportunities, it helps to understand where we are in the cycle.
Phase one was the infrastructure buildout. That includes the data centres, the chips, and the electricity infrastructure needed to train and run AI models.
But we’re now approaching phase two: software monetisation. This is where software companies begin leveraging all the new infrastructure from phase one to create new powerful AI tools for companies and individuals alike across every sector, generating real revenues and profits.
Then eventually, phase three will come along: productivity adoption. This will likely be the longest and broadest part of the cycle, where businesses take the AI tools from phase two and integrate them into the fabric of almost every operation, driving multi-decade efficiency gains across businesses of all sizes.
Today, for a SIPP portfolio aimed at generating wealth over the next 10-20 years, phases two and three represent an enormous growth opportunity to supercharge retirement wealth. And I’ve already spotted several stocks that could be perfectly positioned to capitalise on this opportunity. For example…
A standout pick in cybersecurity
CrowdStrike‘s (NASDAQ:CRWD) a cloud-native cybersecurity company that protects businesses from hackers, data breaches, and AI-accelerated attacks through its unified Falcon platform.
In short, it’s one of the world’s most advanced AI-powered digital security systems. And it’s why customers are seemingly happy to keep paying more.
In the first quarter of fiscal year 2027, CrowdStrike delivered total revenue of $1.39bn, up 26% year-on-year. Annual recurring revenue (ARR) grew 24% to $5.51bn. And a record net new ARR of $255.8m was added during the period – a 32% boost compared to a year ago, helping pave the way for a near-doubling of free cash flow at $468.5m.
