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The main reason behind Nvidia’s dramatic stock price drop | Business News


Just one week ago, Nvidia became the world’s most valuable company.

The chipmaker – whose shares had risen nine-fold since the end of 2022 – overtook Microsoft as its stock market valuation reached $3.34trn.

Since then, the shares have fallen by 13%, declining in each of the last three trading sessions.

That has been enough to clip more than $500bn from Nvidia’s stock market valuation reached when, last Thursday, the shares hit an all-time intra-day high of $140.76 each (taking into account the 10-for-one share split completed earlier this month).

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To put that into context, Exxon Mobil – the 14th biggest company in the S&P 500 index and itself one of only a dozen companies ever to achieve the status of the world’s most valuable company – has a stock market valuation of $511bn.

So what is going on?

There are a number of factors at play.

The first is profit-taking. Nvidia shares, prior to last Thursday, had enjoyed a fantastic run and had attracted a lot of hot money from so-called “momentum buyers” who see a stock moving higher and jump on board to profit from the ride.

It was natural for such buyers to lock in profits by selling.

Added to that is that speculative money has moved on. A report published over the weekend in the Wall Street Journal that Meta Platforms, the parent of Facebook, has held talks with Apple about integrating Meta’s generative AI model into the recently unveiled Apple Intelligence system sent shares in both higher as profits from Nvidia’s recent strong run were recycled.

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Last week: Nvidia overtakes Microsoft

That money has not left the market – it has simply been redeployed from Nvidia to other stocks, not least Meta and Apple, but also elsewhere.

That can be shown by the fact that the sell-off in Nvidia, while also dragging down peers such as Broadcom, Taiwan Semiconductor, and Super Micro Computer (a server maker which is a heavy buyer of Nvidia’s chips), did not lead to a wider sell-off.

The Dow Jones, admittedly not as good a barometer of the US stock market as the S&P 500, hit its highest level for a month on Monday even as the S&P 500 and Nasdaq, both of which have a heavier weighting in Nvidia, were falling.

Also contributing to the sell-off was the revelation – via a filing to the main US financial regulator, the Securities & Exchange Commission – that Jensen Huang, Nvidia’s founder and chief executive, has taken advantage of the recent rise in the share price to reduce his holding.

Mr Huang, who founded Nvidia in 1993, sold just under $95m worth of shares between Thursday 13 June and Friday 21 June. Nor is Mr Huang – who still owns more than 866 million shares in Nvidia worth $102.3bn at Monday evening’s closing price – the only director to have been selling recently.

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang present NVIDIA Blackwell platform at an event ahead of the COMPUTEX forum, in Taipei, Taiwan June 2, 2024. REUTERS/Ann Wang
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Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang is among directors to have recently sold shares

Mark Stevens, a veteran venture capitalist who has been on the Nvidia board since 2008, has offloaded $28m worth of shares this month while Tench Coxe, another VC who was one of Mr Huang’s earliest backers and who has been on the board since the start, has sold $119.5m worth.

Selling by directors is not always a reliable guide to a company’s prospects. Sometimes it reflects personal factors, such as a divorce or estate planning, rather than indicating what a director thinks of a company’s prospects. Rightly or wrongly, though, it is usually taken as a negative signal.

Perhaps the most significant factor in the sell-off, though, is that some investors have been looking at Nvidia through traditional investment yardsticks.

The main one of these is the price/earnings (P/E) ratio. The higher the P/E ratio is, the more expensively a stock is valued.

Last week, after its latest gains, shares of Nvidia were changing hands at 45 times expected earnings.

To put that in context, the forward P/E of the S&P…

Stressing that Nvidia was not is frothily valued as Cisco had been, the column added: “That doesn’t necessarily make Nvidia’s shares safe at their current level, though.

“The stock has seen a big influx of individual investors since the company’s latest financial results last month. Daily retail inflow has averaged nearly $141m since the earnings compared with a daily average of about $39m during the month prior, according to Vanda Research.

“Sell-side analysts are also getting rather exuberant. Several have pushed up their price targets since the stock’s 10 June split. And at least four of those targets are now at $160 and higher, which would put Nvidia’s market capitalization near $4trn at its current share count.

“Nvidia may be the top gun of AI, but investors should be careful not to write checks the stock can’t cash.”

Quite so.

AI is still a nascent technology and it is impossible to know, from here, who may be the greatest winners from it over time. Just as investors back in 1999, trying to predict who would be the world’s biggest winners from widespread adoption of the internet, could not have known.



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