Will Nvidia Stock Crash? 2 Reasons to Sell (and 1 to Buy)
With shares up by almost 28,000% in just 10 years, Nvidia‘s (NASDAQ: NVDA) rally will go down in history. A $2,000 investment made in 2014 would be worth $560,000 today — more than enough to buy a medium-priced home in cash. But returns like that probably won’t continue forever.
New investors must decide whether the risks of holding Nvidia stock today justify the potential rewards. Let’s discuss two reasons why it might be time to sell the stock, and one reason to consider buying more.
After almost two years of artificial intelligence (AI)-driven growth, Nvidia’s future is now intimately linked to the future of this one industry. Most retail investors are not fluent in this highly technical field, so we must rely on experts to crunch the numbers. Some of their perspectives are alarming.
According to MIT Professor Daron Acemoglu, only around a quarter of AI tasks may be cost-effective in the next 10 years. He believes large language models (LLMs) like OpenAI’s ChatGPT or Alphabet‘s Bard will need higher-quality data to improve — more so than better hardware. And it is unclear where this data will come from, considering that many quality sources have already been tapped.
Acemoglu’s concerns echo remarks from analysts at investment bank Goldman Sachs, who claim tech companies may struggle to monetize the $1 trillion they will pour into AI investment over the coming years.
As a picks-and-shovels AI company, Nvidia can make money even when its customers lose. But this situation can’t last forever. Eventually, consumer-facing AI algorithms will need to become profitable, or clients will stop buying the expensive Nvidia chips to run and train them. This risky situation could lead to a decline in the company’s growth rate and, by extension, it’s valuation. So now might be the best time for investors to take profits.
With a market cap of roughly $3 trillion, Nvidia is the third-biggest company in the world — trading for 47 times forward earnings.
At first glance, this looks reasonable, if not downright cheap, because of the company’s explosive growth rate. Second-quarter revenue doubled to $13.51 billion, while net income surged 843% to $6.2 billion. But the situation is a little more complicated than it appears on the surface.
Nvidia’s valuation prices in future growth, which means the market expects the company to continue expanding past its already massive size. The cracks forming on the consumer-facing side of the AI industry will make this harder to pull off. Nvidia will also face challenging comps as it seeks to exceed this year’s spectacular performance.