Nvidia's stock is off to a positive start after a wild Monday.
Retail investors put more than $562 million into Nvidia shares on a net basis on Monday amid the chipmaker's historic sell-off, according to Vanda Research. That marked a record for net inflows into Nvidia, showing everyday investors bought the dip while institutions dumped shares.
Jim Cramer, host of Mad Money and former hedge fund manager, is one of the most recognizable voices in finance.
President Donald Trump is threatening to impose tariffs on Taiwanese-made chips of up to 100%. That could be bad news for Nvidia, which relies on Taiwan's TSMC for its chip supply.
Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) set a record on January 27 — by losing roughly $600 billion in market capitalization. Nvidia stock dropped from $142.02 on Friday, January 24, to $117.21 by press time on January 28.
CNBC's Seema Mody reports on how the semiconductor stocks are trading.
For two years, all we have heard is that NVIDIA Corporation (NASDAQ: NVDA) is destined to rule the world.
Amidst the stock market turmoil that gripped the U.S. equity on Monday, January 27, bears appear to have lost their confidence that various shares – including those of technology giants – are ready to fall.
The release by the Chinese artificial intelligence lab DeepSeek of an AI model that is faster and more efficient than anything currently on the market, and is also free, just sent shockwaves through the AI sector.
After Nvidia (NVDA) shed nearly $600 billion in market cap Monday, a potential rebound reversed immediately after the opening bell. Kevin Green says it's one signs behind his "concern for a turnaround story.
Gunjan Banerji, Lead Writer for Markets Live at The Wall Street Journal, discusses how retail investors bought $562 million of Nvidia stock during a significant market downturn. Despite the 17% drop in Nvidia's stock, retail investors used a "buy the dip" strategy.
Other technology stocks trading at relatively low valuations to historical levels include Micron, Super Micro and Workday.