After Nvidia’s Stock Split, Can It Reach $1,200 Again?

The market can’t get enough of artificial intelligence (AI) darling Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA). The semiconductor giant sits just shy of a $3 trillion valuation, making it the third-largest company in the world.

Nvidia is the premier provider of AI chips. Its hardware powers the technology so many believe is the next big thing. Since ChatGPT-3 was first released to the public, Nvidia’s stock is up almost 700%, and it tipped above $1,200 a share last week.

Shares are now trading at around $130. What happened? No, the company’s stock did not crater and lose 90% of its value. Instead, the massive rise in price led the company to initiate a 10-1 stock split. Shareholders now own 10 times as many shares as they did before the split, with each share worth a tenth of the price.

A split like this is more or less cosmetic; in and of itself, it doesn’t change the values of people’s investments. However, it’s not without consequence. The stock is now more accessible to smaller investors; $130 is much easier to stomach than $1,200, a number that might have kept investors from grabbing a few shares.

Reaching $1,200 again would mean a 10x from today’s price. Nvidia already pulled off a 10x in the last three years, but doing so again would mean reaching a $30 trillion market cap — a mind-boggling figure. It’s a different ball game when you are already the third-largest company in the world, but it’s not without precedent.

In 2010, Apple was the second-largest company in the world. The company made headlines that year as it neared a $300 billion market cap. Fast-forward to 2022, and Apple was again in the headlines, this time as the largest company in the world and the first to pass the $3 trillion mark. I bet $3 trillion seemed mind-boggling to a lot of investors in 2010, but here we are.

Let’s start by assuming Nvidia’s growth will slow from the past three years. What’s a more reasonable rate? The market as a whole is a good place to start. Statista.com predicts a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of about 28.5% through 2030 for the entire AI market. If that growth rate holds, it would take roughly nine years for Nvidia’s stock to reach $1,200 again.

But before you get too excited, there are a few pretty huge assumptions there. We’re assuming that projected CAGR holds beyond 2030 and that it isn’t overinflated to begin with. Secondly, we’re assuming that the market will value Nvidia relative to its earnings the same over time. This isn’t necessarily true. Just because a company grows its earnings doesn’t mean its stock price will respond in kind, but it’s a useful simplification for now.