NVDA hit $4T market cap as demand for its AI chips surges and the company is outpacing rivals.
If it wasn't already clear to investors, the demand for data centers will be a catalyst for semiconductor stocks for years, if not decades. It's why investors continue to buy into the growth of chip makers like NVIDIA Corp. NASDAQ: NVDA.
Goldman Sachs has started coverage on NVIDIA (NASDAQ: NVDA), with a price target of $185 and a Buy rating.
Federal Reserve officials split over when to cut rates, Brazil vows response to 50% tariff, and more news to start your day.
The chip maker's shares are up more than 50% over the past three months, leading the broader market rebound after the tariff selloff.
Nvidia became the first company in history to achieve a $4 trillion market valuation. Co-founder Jensen Huang will meet with senior Chinese officials in Beijing next week, signaling the company's commitment to a vast market Washington is increasingly seeking to isolate.
Over the last four years, Nvidia's valuation has skyrocketed from $500 billion in 2021 to just under $4 trillion—a nearly eightfold increase that reflects its central role in the AI hardware ecosystem.
'Mad Money' host Jim Cramer talks the Nasdaq's record day and Nvidia hitting a historic $4 trillion market cap.
As the tariff deadline comes and goes, a new possible 50% tariff on Brazil emerges.
Hitting a 52-week and all-time high of $164 a share (post-split basis), Nvidia NVDA became the first company in history to reach a $4 trillion market cap on Wednesday, beating Microsoft MSFT and Apple AAPL to the punch.
Nvidia (NVDA) closed the most recent trading day at $162.83, moving +1.77% from the previous trading session.
Nvidia Corporation's valuation is justified by its dominant AI infrastructure, explosive earnings growth, and unmatched margins, not by speculative hype or bubble dynamics. The company delivers record-breaking revenue, profit, and free cash flow, with expanding software-like margins and a defensible ecosystem powered by CUDA and proprietary networking. Risks exist—mainly geopolitical and competitive—but Nvidia's business quality, growth, and profitability far outpace industry peers, supporting a premium valuation.