Nvidia Stock Falls To 2-Month Low—Down 25% From Peak Amid $800 Billion Swoon

Forbes Business Breaking Nvidia Stock Falls To 2-Month Low—Down 25% From Peak Amid $800 Billion Swoon Derek Saul Forbes Staff Derek Saul has covered markets for the Forbes news team since 2021. Following Jul 30, 2024, 11:59am EDT Updated Jul 30, 2024, 01:01pm EDT Share to Facebook Share to Twitter Share to Linkedin Topline Nvidia
Nvidia Stock Falls To 2-Month Low—Down 25% From Peak Amid $800 Billion Swoon

Nvidia Stock Falls To 2-Month Low—Down 25% From Peak Amid $800 Billion Swoon

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Updated Jul 30, 2024, 01:01pm EDT

Topline

Nvidia stock faltered again Tuesday, continuing the artificial intelligence king’s summertime blues as the stock delves further into correction territory.

Key Facts

Nvidia stock fell 8% to $103 by early afternoon, outpacing the Nasdaq Composite index’s 2% decline as the tech stock slump extended.

Barreling toward its lowest closing share price since May 23, Nvidia stock is now down 27% from its June intraday peak of over $140 per share, well beyond a 10% correction for the semiconductor chip designer which dominates the market for the advanced technology powering generative artificial intelligence programs.

The 15% July decline would be Nvidia’s worst monthly performance since September 2022, when its stock traded at a split-adjusted price of below $15.

At about $2.5 trillion, Nvidia’s market capitalization is down about $795 billion from its record $3.3 trillion valuation as of June 18’s market close, erasing more than the equivalent of Tesla in a span of six weeks.


Why Is Nvidia Stock Down?

There isn’t a singular event that caused Nvidia’s Wall Street woes this month, but rather several smaller trends that added up. It’s routine for a stock to decline after a period of extended gains as investors and fund managers cash in on their profits and adjust their portfolios—Nvidia stock is still up 110% year-to-date and 610% dating back to the end of 2022, delivering truly eye-popping returns for a company of its size. And stock prices of course go down if more people are selling than buying. Nvidia also was hurt by a slump across semiconductor stocks as investors digested former President Donald Trump’s hawkish commentary on trade and defense policies in East Asia, a region crucial for American chip makers for manufacturing and sales. And Nvidia is perhaps the clearest victim of the broader market’s rotation out of big technology companies and into lagging smaller firms as investors prepare for the first interest rate cuts since 2020. Shares of Apple, Microsoft and Google parent Alphabet, the three other companies valued at over $2 trillion, are each down more than 7% apiece from their respective all-time highs set earlier this month.

Contra

Nvidia’s slump is not due to any sort of expectations for a lull in its financial performance, as it is expected to be by far the largest contributor to second-quarter earnings growth across the S&P 500, according to FactSet data. Analysts project Nvidia to grow its net income by 140% year-over-year to $15 billion, and their average target price of $134 per share indicates strong belief in a bounceback for Nvidia stock, which was the best performer of any S&P component in 2023 and the first half of 2024. Nvidia will report earnings at the end of next month.

Further Reading

ForbesNvidia And These Surprise AI Darlings Are 2024’s Best Stocks

ForbesApple, Nvidia Lead Big Tech’s $500 Billion Slump As Nasdaq Limps To Worst Day Since 2022

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