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NVIDIA Corporation (NVDA)

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117.87 +4.50 (+3.97%)
At close: 4:00 PM EDT
117.83 -0.04 (-0.03%)
After hours: 5:54 PM EDT
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DELL
  • Previous Close 113.37
  • Open 117.32
  • Bid 117.78 x 100
  • Ask 118.21 x 200
  • Day's Range 117.25 - 119.66
  • 52 Week Range 39.23 - 140.76
  • Volume 292,387,706
  • Avg. Volume 340,714,596
  • Market Cap (intraday) 2.891T
  • Beta (5Y Monthly) 1.67
  • PE Ratio (TTM) 55.34
  • EPS (TTM) 2.13
  • Earnings Date Nov 19, 2024 - Nov 25, 2024
  • Forward Dividend & Yield 0.04 (0.04%)
  • Ex-Dividend Date Sep 12, 2024
  • 1y Target Est 145.22

NVIDIA Corporation provides graphics and compute and networking solutions in the United States, Taiwan, China, Hong Kong, and internationally. The Graphics segment offers GeForce GPUs for gaming and PCs, the GeForce NOW game streaming service and related infrastructure, and solutions for gaming platforms; Quadro/NVIDIA RTX GPUs for enterprise workstation graphics; virtual GPU or vGPU software for cloud-based visual and virtual computing; automotive platforms for infotainment systems; and Omniverse software for building and operating metaverse and 3D internet applications. The Compute & Networking segment comprises Data Center computing platforms and end-to-end networking platforms, including Quantum for InfiniBand and Spectrum for Ethernet; NVIDIA DRIVE automated-driving platform and automotive development agreements; Jetson robotics and other embedded platforms; NVIDIA AI Enterprise and other software; and DGX Cloud software and services. The company's products are used in gaming, professional visualization, data center, and automotive markets. It sells its products to original equipment manufacturers, original device manufacturers, system integrators and distributors, independent software vendors, cloud service providers, consumer internet companies, add-in board manufacturers, distributors, automotive manufacturers and tier-1 automotive suppliers, and other ecosystem participants. NVIDIA Corporation was incorporated in 1993 and is headquartered in Santa Clara, California.

www.nvidia.com

29,600

Full Time Employees

January 28

Fiscal Year Ends

Recent News: NVDA

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Related Videos: NVDA

Take a barbell approach to Mag 7, tech stocks: Citi strategist

Tech stocks rallied after the Federal Reserve cut rates 50 basis points, with some of the Magnificent Seven names like Tesla (TSLA) and Nvidia (NVDA) leading the charge. Citi head of US equity strategy Scott Chronert joins Seana Smith and Madison Mills on Catalysts to discuss how to play the tech sector. “It's a buy the news, sell the news reaction to the Fed,” Chronert says. “The leadership this quarter has really been those areas of the market that are perceived beneficiaries of lower rates. So real estate, utilities, even the homebuilder ETFs have been hitting recent highs. In the meantime, tech is still lagging where it was last time the index was through 5,600." “Essentially what you have here… is that a bit of a profit taking on the news in those areas that have been perceived as rate sensitive. And, at the same time, a catch-up move in that mega-cap growth cohort that ultimately does benefit from lower interest rates, but has been a relative laggard thus far this quarter. All told, what you've got is an index moving higher.” Taking a look at the Magnificent 7, Chronert outlines Citi’s view on the group: “We've been arguing for the better part of this year that they're becoming more idiosyncratic in their behavior.” He explains that Nvidia, Apple (AAPL), and Microsoft (MSFT) — who control over 6% of the index — "those companies are going to be important to index price action and I think you're seeing that today. But, what we're focused on from this barbell angle is we want to be holders of those, but when you look at the rate of increase in this and forward-year earnings expectations, it's been a stair-step function for over a year now. It's beginning to decelerate.” For more expert insight and the latest market action, click here to watch this full episode of Catalysts. This post was written by Naomi Buchanan.

Performance Overview: NVDA

Trailing total returns as of 9/19/2024, which may include dividends or other distributions. Benchmark is

.

YTD Return

NVDA
138.07%
S&P 500
19.79%

1-Year Return

NVDA
168.17%
S&P 500
28.29%

3-Year Return

NVDA
439.14%
S&P 500
28.89%

5-Year Return

NVDA
2,532.37%
S&P 500
90.03%

Compare To: NVDA

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Statistics: NVDA

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Valuation Measures

Annual
As of 9/18/2024
  • Market Cap

    2.78T

  • Enterprise Value

    2.76T

  • Trailing P/E

    53.15

  • Forward P/E

    40.32

  • PEG Ratio (5yr expected)

    1.22

  • Price/Sales (ttm)

    29.31

  • Price/Book (mrq)

    47.82

  • Enterprise Value/Revenue

    28.62

  • Enterprise Value/EBITDA

    43.77

Financial Highlights

Profitability and Income Statement

  • Profit Margin

    55.04%

  • Return on Assets (ttm)

    55.26%

  • Return on Equity (ttm)

    123.77%

  • Revenue (ttm)

    96.31B

  • Net Income Avi to Common (ttm)

    53.01B

  • Diluted EPS (ttm)

    2.13

Balance Sheet and Cash Flow

  • Total Cash (mrq)

    34.8B

  • Total Debt/Equity (mrq)

    17.22%

  • Levered Free Cash Flow (ttm)

    33.73B

Research Analysis: NVDA

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Earnings Per Share

Consensus EPS
 

Analyst Recommendations

  • Strong Buy
  • Buy
  • Hold
  • Underperform
  • Sell
 

Analyst Price Targets

56.01 Low
145.22 Average
117.87 Current
200.00 High
 

Company Insights: NVDA

Research Reports: NVDA

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  • Argus’s Favored Classes, Segments

    So far, equity investors have enjoyed 2024, with a year-to-date gain in the S&P 500 of approximately 15%. By comparison, the fixed-income benchmark ETF AGG has risen about 1.9%. Looking ahead, our Stock-Bond Barometer model modestly favors stocks over bonds for long-term portfolio positioning. In other words, these asset classes should be near their target weights in diversified portfolios, with a slight tilt toward equities, given the recent decline in interest rates. We are over-weight on large-caps. We favor large-caps for growth exposure and financial strength, while small-caps offer value. Our recommended exposure to small- and mid-caps is 12%-13% of equity allocation, below the benchmark weighting. U.S. stocks have outperformed global stocks over the trailing one- and five-year periods. We expect this long-term trend favoring U.S. stocks to continue, given volatile global economic, political, geopolitical, and currency conditions. That said, international stocks offer favorable near-term valuations, and we target 5%-10% of equity exposure to the group. In terms of growth and value, growth has rebounded in 2024, outperforming value as interest rates have stabilized. Over the longer term, we anticipate that growth, led by the Tech and Healthcare sectors, will top returns from value, led by the Energy and Materials sectors, due to favorable secular, demographic and regulatory trends.

     
  • Argus?s Favored Classes, Segments

    So far, equity investors have enjoyed 2024, with a year-to-date gain in the S&P 500 of approximately 15%. By comparison, the fixed-income benchmark ETF AGG has risen about 1.9%. Looking ahead, our Stock-Bond Barometer model modestly favors stocks over bonds for long-term portfolio positioning. In other words, these asset classes should be near their target weights in diversified portfolios, with a slight tilt toward equities, given the recent decline in interest rates. We are over-weight on large-caps. We favor large-caps for growth exposure and financial strength, while small-caps offer value. Our recommended exposure to small- and mid-caps is 12%-13% of equity allocation, below the benchmark weighting. U.S. stocks have outperformed global stocks over the trailing one- and five-year periods. We expect this long-term trend favoring U.S. stocks to continue, given volatile global economic, political, geopolitical, and currency conditions. That said, international stocks offer favorable near-term valuations, and we target 5%-10% of equity exposure to the group. In terms of growth and value, growth has rebounded in 2024, outperforming value as interest rates have stabilized. Over the longer term, we anticipate that growth, led by the Tech and Healthcare sectors, will top returns from value, led by the Energy and Materials sectors, due to favorable secular, demographic and regulatory trends.

     
  • Solid quarter, availability concerns

    Nvidia Corp., based in Santa Clara, California, is a visual computing company with worldwide operations and markets. The company operates through two segments, Graphics and Compute & Networking. The company's four main markets are gaming, professional visualization, data center, and automotive. In calendar 2020, Nvidia completed the acquisition of data-center connectivity leader Mellanox.

    Rating
    Price Target
     
  • Rate-Cut Rotation August has a reputation as a sleepy time in global stock

    Rate-Cut Rotation August has a reputation as a sleepy time in global stock markets, and the U.S. is no exception. Particularly in the second half of the month, investors head off to the mountains or the beach; trading desks are lightly staffed; and phone calls tend to dwindle. Little surprise that August on balance is an inconclusive month: since 1980, the S&P 500 has averaged a flat performance for the eighth month. There are outliers in both directions, of course, with big gains in 1982, 2002, and 2020; and big losses in 1990, 1998, and 2011. A Frantic August 2024 With one trading week remaining as we prepared this article, the S&P 500 was up about 2% for August 2024. While that number or something like it will be put in the ledger sheet, this August was uncommonly tumultuous. On the final trading day of July, the S&P 500 closed at 5,522. A deeply below-consensus July nonfarm payrolls number sent stocks tumbling, and by 8/5/24, the index was 6% below that level at 5,196. The suddenly popular perception was that the Fed, after badly missing the onset of inflation two-plus years earlier, had held rates too high for too long and was now allowing the economy to slip into recession. The panicky selling in the market belied other evidence that the economy was okay, if not exactly roaring. Second-quarter 2024 GDP grew 2.8%, double the growth rate reported for the first quarter. In addition, second-quarter S&P 500 earnings from continuing operations increased year-over-year in low double-digits, for the strongest growth in nine quarters. Simultaneously, there are rifts in the consumer and business economies, because goods and services have been too expensive for too long. As of the beginning of August's final trading week, the S&P 500 had climbed back to within a percentage point of its all-time high. Fed Chair Jay Powell used the forum of this year's Jackson Hole Economic Symposium to allay recession fears. In his calm and reassuring speech, the Fed Chair stated that the 'time has come' to cut interest rates in response to cooler inflation and slowing economic growth. Inflation has 'declined significantly,' he added, and the labor market 'is no longer overheated.' Perhaps most notably, Fed Chair Powell acknowledged, 'the balance of risks to our two mandates has changed.' Inflation is receding, and the mandate to return inflation to 2% has nearly been met. At the same time, the economy has softened from recent peaks, and the mandate to maintain maximum sustainable employment is now at risk. Reversals in Fed policy, and particularly the move from raising rates to cutting rates, inevitably come at a fraught time for the economy. In those periods, the economy is seen as vulnerable to too little stimulus, while inflation is at risk of returning from too much stimulus. The Fed Chair's calm tone in addressing the dual mandate, in our view, was a necessary lubricant in the shift from restrictive to accommodative monetary policy. The market response - an 8.4% rally in the S&P 500 off the 8/5/24 lows, to 5,635 at the 8/23/24 close - suggests that investors broadly feel that the Fed in this cycle has successfully navigated the transition from fighting inflation to sustaining employment and economic growth. New Favored Sectors Emerge The August gain in the S&P 500 will go in the books as a single number: the markets recovered, good job, and on we go. Beneath the surface, the market in August - and in an equally tumultuous July - has been undergoing a meaningful transition at the sector level. Investors' nearly two-year fascination with AI stocks has not gone away, but it has moderated somewhat. And AI stock winnings may now be a vital source of funds for investing in other areas perceived as timely in the currently unfolding interest-rate environment. During the third quarter to date, the two best-performing sectors have been Utilities and Real Estate. With one trading week left in August, the iShares Real Estate ETF IYR is up 14% for 3Q24; and iShares Dow Jones US Utility ETF is up 10%. Both sectors are perceived as sensitive to interest rates, and both have historically moved into favor when market rates of interest are declining. When Treasury and fixed-income yields begin to decline, some portion of bond investors rotate into stocks in pursuit of income provided by high-yield equity sectors. The rotation into Utilities and Real Estate stocks sends prices higher, causing yields to come down (assuming no change in dividend policy) as stock prices come up. Yields on Utilities and REIT, whether rising or falling, thus maintain a floating but relatively consistent differential with bond yields. We looked at Utilities sector performance across an approximately 20-year span dating back to the turn of the millennium. In an 11-sector index, we differentiate between a top-five finish (top-five performing sectors in any year) and a bottom-five finish (worst performing five sectors in any year). Utilities had top-five sector performances in 2007, 2008, 2011, 2014, and 2018, when interest rates were declining. Utilities had bottom-five performances in 2020, 2021, and 2023, when interest rates were rising. Digging into the details from some of those years, Utilities were the third-best sector in the S&P 500 in both 2007 and 2008. The 10-year Treasury yield went from 4.8% on January 1, 2007, to 2.4% by December 31, 2008. Arguably, investors had other things on their minds in 2008, such as the Great Recession. Nevertheless, rotation into defensive sectors in troubled times is also a persistent theme. In 2011, which was not a particularly volatile time in the economy, Utilities were the best sector in the S&P 500. In that year, the 10-year year Treasury yield went from 3.4% on January 1, 2011, to 2.0% on December 31. Utilities were the second-best sector in 2014, as the 10-year year Treasury yield went from 2.8% on January 1, 2014, to 2.1% on December 31. Finally, Utilities were the second-best sector in 2018. Over a two-year span, the 10-year Treasury yield went from 2.5% on January 1, 2018, to 1.7% on December 31, 2019. We do not have the same clear signal from Real Estate, given that the stocks were not broken out from the S&P Financial Sector until 2016. Additionally, whereas Utilities are monopolistic and regulated, Real Estate stocks operate in multiple industries spanning retail shopping, commercial real estate, doctors' offices, rental apartments, and more. Still, the performance of the two leading sectors in 3Q24 signals that the financial markets have fully embraced the reality and immanence of Fed rate cuts. Other sectors that are top-5 in 3Q24 include Financials Healthcare, and Industrial; all are up in the 7%-8% range for the quarter to date. Financial stocks such as banks would seem vulnerable to compression in net interest margins as rates come down. But the bigger outcomes from lower rates are the expected revival in commercial & consumer loans, including mortgages, and strengthening in fee-based businesses such as credit financing, IPOs, and M&A. Healthcare stocks are expected to benefit as lower interest rates take some of the strain off consumer finances, enabling more discretionary and high-return medical procedures (i.e., new hips and knees). Industrial stocks are dependent on business-to-business (B2B) transactions and thus benefit from lower financing rates on major deals. The bottom-five sector stocks in 3Q24 include two of this year's big winners: Information Technology and Communication Services. Both are up in the 1%-2% range for 3Q24, despite being up 22% and 20%, respectively, for all of 2024 to date. Two of the other laggards, Energy and Materials, are close to flat in the year-to-date, as the malaise from China (which is partly demographic in nature) overhangs all parts of the commodities complex. Consumer Discretionary was among the bottom two sectors (along with Real Estate) in the first half. Given prospects for lower rates helping the housing and automotive segments, Consumer Discretionary is doing a bit better - but is still in fourth place among 11 sectors in 2024. Conclusion After being down by 2% at mid-year, Real Estate stocks have made all their progress in the two months to date of the third quarter. Utilities are the more clearly perceived winner from rate cuts, and they have been rising for most of 2024. On a full-year basis, and using the iShares Dow Jones sector REITs, Utilities are the second-best sector for 2024; they lag only Information Technology and are currently a few ticks ahead of Communication Services. Four sectors are beating the market in 2024: Information Technology, Utilities, Communication Services, and Financial. While that may not sound like much in an 11-sector market, it is better than in 2023, when three sectors (Information Technology, Communication Services, and Consumer Discretionary) bested the S&P 500 total return of 25%. Moreover, in 2023 the three winning sectors were so dominant - up 66%, 44%, and 35%, respectively - that the other eight sectors averaged 3.4% capital appreciation for the year. In 2024, three other sectors - Healthcare, Industrial, and Staples - are all within a few percentage points of the index's 18% year-to-date gain. For the long term, portfolios and markets are healthiest when they are diversified. For a while in the current bull cycle, AI appeared to have a full-nelson lock on the market. While we do not expect the AI trade to unwind anytime soon, improved sector breadth across multiple equity sectors is a positive for preserving market momentum into year-end as well as for the years to come.

     

Top Analysts: NVDA

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Overall Score

Wolfe Research 90/100
Latest Rating
Outperform
 

Direction Score

Wolfe Research 85/100
Latest Rating
Outperform
 

Price Score

DA Davidson 97/100
Latest Rating
Neutral
 

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