Nvidia at $5 Trillion: Buy, Sell, or Hold?

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Semiconductor stocks have skyrocketed in April as tensions in Iran have cooled, AI spending continues to surge, sector earnings reports have impressed, and chip shortages are proliferating across the industry.

That boom has driven the iShares Semiconductor ETF (NASDAQ: SOXX) up 40.4% for the month through April 24, and Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA), the sector leader and most valuable company in the world, has ridden those tailwinds.

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The AI chip superstar has actually underperformed its peer group, gaining 19% for the month, but its gains have been sufficient to put it over the $5 trillion market cap milestone again, after it briefly hit that level in late October.

Now trading just 2% below its all-time high, is Nvidia a buy, sell, or hold? Let’s take a look at the best option.

The exterior of Nvidia HQ
Image source: Nviida.

Several months ago, fears of an AI bubble were weighing on AI stocks. Those fears seem to have disappeared as valuations for AI start-ups like OpenAI and Anthropic are soaring, and SpaceX, which is a major Nvidia customer, is targeting a valuation of $2 trillion.

The four largest hyperscalers are set to spend around $700 billion on capital expenditures this year, much of it on chips, and in recent weeks, the signs of a shortage in the industry have mounted.

Meanwhile, Nvidia’s dominance of the data-center GPU market remains intact, and its revenue growth rate has even accelerated in recent quarters, clocking in at 73% in the fourth quarter as the company continues to deliver sky-high margins. There are no signs of weakness in the business, and the supply/demand dynamics in the industry continue to favor chipmakers like Nvidia.

There are two main bearish arguments against Nvidia. The first is that the boom from AI will eventually fade. It’s unclear if AI is a bubble, but Nvidia has historically been a cyclical stock, as has chip demand broadly.

Demand for AI chips will almost certainly slow eventually, but the question is, how big can Nvidia get before that happens? As long as demand outstrips supply, a slowdown won’t be a problem for the company.

The other threat potentially facing the company is that its competitive advantage in GPUs, accelerators, and related components gradually gets eroded as other chips, including those from tech giants like Amazon and Alphabet, or direct competitors like AMD, catch up to it.


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