I understand Nvidia is in a very dominant position. But $4T market cap still seems absolutely insane to me. I've only read about the Cisco boom and bust during the Internet era, and this feels eerily similar (people who actually experienced it might feel differently though).
What could actually drag Nvidia down and make them spend decades in the dark like Cisco still does? So far the two things I've come up with are: (a) general disillusionment in AI and companies not being able to monetize enough to justify spending on GPUs. (b) Big companies designing their own chips in-house lowering demand for Nvidia GPUs.
I don't think Nvidia can counter (a), but can they overcome (b) by also offering custom chip design services instead of insisting on selling a proprietary AI stack?
Not so long ago, the most valuable company in the world was $200B. It feels like only a few years ago that the $1T barrier was broken. Where will this stop?
Are these companies already more valuable than the VOC at its height, when it owned entire countries? Is that where we're headed?
I agree with you, but I think you have cause/effect reversed. It's not that a high concentration of wealth results in high assets prices. It's that the money has nowhere else to go except into tech/AI, so those are the only assets that appreciate/inflate, and that leads to a concentration of wealth.
Their cash isn’t actually tied up in the asset though, per se. Whomever they buy the asset from gets the cash. A good chunk of it likely does eventually filter out into consumer goods, since people selling assets are sometimes selling to fund living expenses and not just to shift into another asset.
For anyone else wondering, I believe VOC stands for the Dutch East India Company, which Google & Reddit tell me was worth a maximum of about $1 billion modern dollars.
Cisco stock (which I thought about buying in 1992 and didn't, unfortunately) doubled in 1990, tripled in 1991, doubled in 1992, and kept going up every year - in 1995 it doubled, in 1998 it doubled, in 1999 it doubled. So it had a long run (and is also still worth over $250 billion).
The monetary push is very LLM based. One thing being pushed that I am familiar with is LLM assisted programming. LLMs are being pushed to do other things as well. If LLMs don't improve more, or if companies don't see the monetary benefits of using them in the short/medium term, that would drag Nvidia down.
Nvidia has a lot of network effects. Probably only Google has some immunity to that (with its TPUs). I doubt Nvidia will have competition in training LLMs for a while. It is possible a competitor could start taking market share on the low end for inference, but even that would take a while. People have been talking about AMD competition for over two years, and I haven't seen anything that even seems like it might have potential yet, especially on the high end.
There's a lot of push for inference hardware now (e.g. Ironwood TPUs). How does Nvidia maintain an edge there?
Also, I think the market has to expand beyond LLMs to areas like robotics and self driving cars (and they need to have real success) for Nvidia to maintain this valuation. I don't think only LLMs are enough because I don't see code assist/image generation/chatbots as a massive market.
That's because Nvidia is offering a full ecosystem stack with HW, SW and networking clusters.
And that gives customers the most flexibility. Nvidia dominates training and is highly competitive in inferencing. At the same time, SW improvements speed up single node and networking performance. H100 released 3 years ago is today several times faster than it was on release with constant SW updates.
Customers who buy Nvidia for training today can use the older GPUs from Nvidia for inferencing later. And Nvidia supports even V100 still in SW updates and speed improvements. And since all is based on the same SW ecosystem, it allows for more seamless operations for customers. You can mix different Nvidia GPU clusters but you can't easily mix Nvidia solutions with other solutions.
That is also why Nvidia has always been dominant and that's flexibility. NVFP4 is a good example of what they do to stay ahead. And it is even supported by Hopper so any old customer can use Nvidia's new format to further improve model training performance. Suddenly old Hopper clusters become more valuable with some SW releases by Nvidia.
Nvidia has a track record which no competitor can match. Going with Nvidia is no mistake today while going with any competitor is a risky bet. If you spend billions, you think twice about making bets.
I do broadly agree, but want to note that the ASML machines are not necessarily the bottleneck, or at least not the final bottleneck, and their valuation reflects that.
There’s a reason why only TSMC and to a lesser extent now Samsung and Intel are the only serious players in top-end semiconductors. You can’t just buy the machine and print chips, the amount of iterative tuning and know-how required to get good yields is immense. Weirdly, the actual bottleneck seems to be the availability of what can almost be described as “master craftsmanship”. But it’s not enough either to hire a couple of masters, it’s the collective institutional knowledge built up over >50 years.
And, of course, TSMC is not worth nearly as much as NVidia either even if they manufacture all their hardware.
Bottleneck for PRC likely equipment now. Shortly after US export controls, SMIC poached Jian Shanyi TSMC R&D Chief, he got SMIC to 7nm in like 2 years from mediocre 14nm - full node leap, i.e. 2 ~generations, before Intel and when Samsung 7nm was barely competent. This was before heavier equipment controls. In terms of producing "master craftsmanship" PRC seems fully capable, a lot of their fab technicians trained by TSMC/Samsung have taken over by now, and doing reasonable job of clawing their way to 5nm with DUV, i.e. they have the technical chops and east asian work ethic. Ultimately since raising semi to first-level dicipline, PRC currently the only major semi power without projected 100,000s talent shortfall in coming years. They have all the capable people... lots of state capacity to buy talent and espionage processes. They just need the machines.
Exactly this, as otherwise there would be nothing stopping ASML opening up its own competing fabs next door with their cutting edge machines 12 months before they sell them to their customers for maximum profits, the same way Bitcoin ASMIC mining companies did with their chips.
Or at least some Dutch/EU company in the area doing it, but nobody else can do what TSMC does at the cutting edge. For context, EU's most cutting edge fabs will be the Dresden TSMC one at 12nm.
We have a class of shawmans who knows how to speak the right incantations over the magic crystals during their formation which causes our machines to think and create value in the world.
My favorite sci-fi fever dream is of biological computation. With the rapid advances in computational biology, I think we might have full biological ALUs in my lifetime, which would offer incredible power efficiency.
I've been thinking about this a lot lately too. There are biological systems that exist in vast quantity, like, say, ants or blades of grass (or, simply cells). I think there is a way to make them computing machines (there was a paper from Adleman, of RSA crypto fame, years ago about it, for example). The challenge is getting the problem broken down across billions of individual compute elements, and of getting the data in and out quickly.
In what way would the successful implementation of chip design services overcome (b)?
They would need to make more offering design services, giving away their design secrets in the process, than selling a product protected by a massive moat. This would be slaughtering the goose.
If you can present an example of someone executing this strategy as a pivot from an extremely high margin proprietary product and increasing their market cap as a result I would be very interested to read about it.
It isn’t a pivot. Rather it’s gaining business that would otherwise go to Broadcom/Marvell. They continue to keep their high margin proprietary product. They don’t have to give away all their design secrets, just enough to make them a valuable chip design partner.
Admittedly, I haven’t thought this out, but I can’t find compelling reasons why they shouldn’t do this.
I don't really buy it. If you can get GPT-3 performance out of a 4B parameter model, then people are going to use the GPUs for even higher-quality remote inference.
(b) isn't likely because CUDA. Nvidia spent a LOT of time developing CUDA into the de-facto standard for working with GPUs. No one has anything close to comparable. They poured a ton of time and effort into it and pushed it like crazy in the education space as well.
(a) can happen, but Nvidia has some buffer. All these companies promised their shareholders huge massive gains if only they embrace the AI revolution. They will be extremely resistant to admit they can't make any money out of it and will keep the charade going for as long as they can. It won't be like a cliff, so Nvidia has time to adjust and handle it.
The market cap is nonsense though, it's just hype. I never put any real weight on them.
The worlds spends several trillions per year on public and private R&D. The AI frenzy could go on for a decade without making any money simple by R&D spend world wide.
That's what people don't get. We're still primarily in AI research mode. The race in LLM training isn't about making money, it's about a R&D race and whoever gets a better product faster than competition.
Therefore Nvidia won't fail, because we're far far away from any AI production mode since the computing for that would need decades to install. Imagine how much compute power you would need for 24/7 assistant inferencing in real time for every person on earth. We're are just scratching the surface. For Nvidia to fail at this time would be the same as that the world would stop on AI research lol.
Imagine, you have an industry where 80% of all companies' / private investors R&D money becomes revenue of a single company. That's basically Nvidia's position in a nutshell.
Basically, Nvidia could do $1 trillion revenue on world wide R&D budgets alone, no need for their customers to make money yet.
One meta-lesson is probably that sustained effort by the same people or same culture matters
i.e. maybe you need “two hits” to become this big, separated by ~2 decades
For nvidia, it was graphics and then programmable GPUs (CUDA)
For Apple, it was GUI desktops and music players/phones
Google is up there, but I’d argue it’s closer to “one hit”, and limited by the founders stepping back and turning the company into an investment conglomerate, rather than being mission-based
When the founders leave, efficiency and creativity seem to be slowed by competing factions of upper management, often working at cross purposes
I’d say that in the best cases, institutional knowledge can build over 2 decades, but it’s also very possible to lose it
I'm not suggesting this is all luck, Nvidia has executed very well and their early investments in programmable GPUs really paid off as a result, but a lot of their insane valuation now is due to crypto and then LLMs which are basically two back to back once in lifetime goldrushes where Nvidia happened to be the best positioned shovel seller.
You can run a company well to prepare to ride such a wave should it appear, but you've also got to be born with horseshoes up your ass for this to work out as well as it has for Nvidia
The other thing I find interesting is that Jensen Huang has said that he wouldn't do it all over again. That is, knowing how hard it is now to build a startup, he wouldn't do it again.
I find this pretty crazy given that (at least for now) NVidia is the most successful startup of all time. Imagine the millions of other entrepreneurs, many of whom worked just as hard, who completely failed in the process.
There's almost nothing interesting that any CEO says publicly, including this. They're celebrities; they'll say anything that helps them get higher in the celebrity popularity contest even if they're contradicting themselves during every other interview.
I may concede it's "luck" to start a company in computing, rather than another industry. All the $1T+ companies seem to be in computing -- if you go into fossil fuels or real estate, you're not going to get to $1T apparently!
BUT one thing I didn't know was that, from the very beginning, Nvidia was not a graphics or gaming company. In college, I thought of them as the company that made graphics cards.
Rather, they were looking for applications of fundamental semiconductor technology, and gaming turned out to be the most promising one at the time.
I learned that from one of the Acquired podcasts; it might have been this one:
I'd say it's analogous to Amazon -- Jeff Bezos was actually not interested in books, per se. He was interested in Internet retail, because he saw a rocket that was taking off. The "meta" was that he understood that an online bookstore could inherently have more selection than a physical bookstore. And that he could build this vertical slice business, and expand from there.
This strategy succeeded wildly, and he was misunderstood for a long time.
Jensen said something like "Intel and Nvidia are like Tom and Jerry -- whenever I see Intel in a market, I pick up my chips and run !!!"
So crypto and AI were applications of semiconductors that Intel was not occupying. If you wanted to make money in semiconductors 2000-2015, you would probably go for desktops, servers, phones. But Jensen explicitly understood that his smaller company had to find other markets.
So he made a bet, that turned out to be correct. From that perspective, I would not call it luck. All the big companies have been lucky, to some extent, but they haven't become as big as Nvidia.
It's so, so , so hard to walk the line between persistence (which leads to glory) and stubbornness (which leads to more time following already wasted time.)
-Bruce_511 (HN)
So sure preparation meets opportunity but don't be stubborn just cause you feel like you are prepared.
Work hard but honestly, if you walk the line like bruce said (then persistence will result in you doing the hard work too tbh that's my philosophy right now)
So Everybody just need to figure out this line b/w stubborness and persistance especially in the startup world. But I think we need a book written on this topic tbh,
any suggestions anybody?
Not random, but always in the places where the big and easy to get money is. You're not gonna get much VC funding in Botswana or Bangladesh no matter how good your idea is and how smart you are.
That's why so many sacrifice everything to go live in the bay area even if it's an overpriced shithole full of homeless, drug addicts and feces.
I think Nvidia's market development efforts have meant more than its culture. Ever since Nvidia started moving towards general purpose compute with the 8800 GPU back in the mid 2000s, it's been actively growing markets - first in research (leading to AI advances), and now in autonomous driving, world simulation, biotechnology, and robotics.
The market for compute is endless, and Nvidia makes huge efforts to commoditize the software side of things so people can buy hardware.
Well, I'd say that actively growing markets and seeking out new application areas is part of a company culture.
For example, I'd argue it's a thing that's NOT in Google culture.
Google culture is more about technical advantage, scalability, etc. These kinds of values are typically enforced by employee performance evaluations and so forth
NVIDIA put a lot of effort into making their hardware and accompanying software useful and usable. CUDA by itself might have never got any attention if not for the effort that NVIDIA puts into helping their customers use their technology, effectively. And they are by no means perfect at it. Most of their products are a horrible mess and they often have 7 different ways to do the same thing. A lot of their libraries are closed source and you're forced to use an API that links to a black box. There's lots to complain about.
I'd say Amazon had 2 hits - Online retail, and then cloud computing. (AWS is now most of their profit.)
And even Warren Buffett said that it's unusual for a company to succeed in two different areas, yet Amazon did it.
I would say Meta had only one hit -- social networking. Instagram and Whatsapp
were good acquistions, but I think of them more as monopoly plays. Zuck has been investing in VR and AI, looking for the next big thing -- but like Google, he doesn't really know what it is. I'd say it's more driven by a desire to be big and powerful and profitable, than by mission (although of course every case is a mix)
I'd argue that Google also has one hit. Chrome and Android are impressive, but they are not businesses on their own. Self-driving cars didn't turn into a great business.
Google invented transformers, and OpenAI turned it into a product. But neither one got the product + business combo right. OpenAI is very far from profitable, and Gemini looks like a ChatGPT clone to me.
Microsoft is a weird case -- I'd argue that they were second in most of their hits:
- Windows - the GUI desktop was second to Apple
- Enterprise software - Excel was second to Lotus; Word was second to WordPerfect; databases were second to Oracle
- Cloud - Azure was second to Amazon
- Bing - was second to Google
I think Microsoft got to $3T by operational competence -- by cloning and embrace and extend, as opposed to nailing a new hit product + the associated business.
I would give them credit for the early BASIC and OS, but I don't think that's how they reached $3T. Whereas Google basically reached $2T with search+ads, and Meta with social networking.
---
To summarize my off the cuff theory, which I admit you can poke holes in:
- Apple, Amazon, Nvidia: nailed a hit product + associated business combo TWICE
- Google, Meta: nailed it ONCE (and they are younger companies, so to be charitable, they may not have had time)
AWS for Amazon was a logical step because who is AWS largest customer? Amazon of course.
If you build large eCommerce like Amazon then of course you need huge IT infrastructure for it. Amazon was kind of forced to build the IT infrastructure and in that process Bezos saw another business opportunity because not every smaller company can easily build large IT infrastructure but many companies need it. And just as AWS built "SW services" for Amazon eCommerce it also became the foundation of the cloud business.
Time for some grossly oversimplified back-of-the-proverbial-envelope value crunching! I’ll assume the average GPU price, for the sake of argument, is $1000. Let’s also assume their per-unit profit margin is roughly 30% (I found conflicting numbers for this on a casual search, esp. between figures that measure quarterly and annual income, I suppose it isn’t a surprise that their accountants frequently pull rabbits from hats).
Nvidia would need to move on the order of 4,000,000,000 units to hit $4T in revenue, more than triple that to realize $4T in profits. Even if the average per-unit costs are 2-3x my estimated $1k, as near as I’ve been able to tell they “only” move a few million units each year for a given sku.
I am struggling to work out how these markets get so inflated, such that it pins a company’s worth to some astronomical figure (some 50x total equity, in this case) that seems wholly untethered to any material potential?
My intuition is that the absence of the rapid, generationally transformative, advances in tech and industry that were largely seen in the latter half of the 20th-century (quickly followed with smartphones and social networking), stock market investors seem content to force similar patterns onto any marginally plausible narrative that can provide the same aesthetics of growth, even if the most basic arithmetic thoroughly perforates it.
That said, I nearly went bankrupt buying a used car recently, so this is a whole lot of unqualified conjecture on my part (but not for nothing, my admittedly limited personal wealth isn’t heavily dependent on such bets).
NVDA's current forward P/E ratio (price to earnings) is about 37.
That means if we hold constant the profit earnings, if you bought the whole company at its current valuation ($4tr), it would take you 37 years to break even.
Is this reasonable? Depends on sector and growth potential. To me, this is a "fair" valuation and not overly inflated based solely on existing earnings.
37x only makes sense if the growing continues, otherwise better to put the money is a high yield savings account. The big question mark of course is how long that growth can continue for. At the current rate their revenue and earnings are both growing I don't see how that's sustainable long term. But maybe sustainable enough to a point where the current investment can get to a break even in say 15 years.
I can understand that, at least in theory. I feel like this is one of the only contexts where markets accommodate long-term thinking, which frustrates my own sensibilities. Thanks for the add’l perspective.
Fair point, but without an engraved prophecy from a licensed and bonded deity, I probably wouldn't have bought AAPL or MSFT in 1988 either, certainly not with the intent of holding it until 2025. I would have been wrong in some sense, but one has to take on the risks one is comfortable with. I'd rather hold a broad index and focus on other things!
As someone who bought NVDA in 2016/2017 and held till now, I'm very happy with the way I applied my software knowledge to profit where I won't have to work again.
Risk taking is best done in domains where you have an edge!
I bought shares, a sum that I could afford to lose but also a non-trivial amount.
As it went up, I occasionally sold some and took profit, but not much, till now.
I saw how important and productive machine learning was, and it seemed like NVDA had an excellent CUDA moat, so that was my thesis for that bet. In the last couple years I sold some and bought a house.
This is obviously a story with survivorship bias. But anyway my superpower isn't technical knowledge, its the lack of emotion and bias towards non-action when markets tumble. As you probably know, time in the market is better than timing the market.
Doesn't need to be sustainable until 2062 though. It'll take until 2062 to break even if they keep with projected numbers for next year. They can be flat forever after that and it'll still be 37 years to break even. If they maintain the same growth for even 5 years, the break even time shrinks down dramatically.
Nvidia's trailing P/E ratio is 53 (stock hitting a new high today). Its forward P/E ratio is 38.
A year ago both its trailing and forward P/E were higher. So the stock is relatively a bargain compared to what it was a year ago.
The price implies that revenues and profits are expected to continue to grow.
> My intuition is that the absence of the rapid, generationally transformative, advances in tech and industry that were largely seen in the latter half of the 20th-century (quickly followed with smartphones and social networking), stock market investors seem content to force similar patterns onto any marginally plausible narrative that can provide the same aesthetics of growth
DC GPUs from Nvidia are sold at $30-40k per piece. You might want to rethink your calculations.
Nvidia is going to sell >5 million Blackwells this year and will do $200b in revenue with that alone.
Nvidia has a high net profit margin of >50%. If Nvidia would make $4 trillion in revenue then they would have >$2 trillion in net profit. Then the market cap would easily be 5-10x higher than today because otherwise Nvidia would be the cheapest stock in history of all time.
Market cap is also a very bad indicator as it doesn't really tell how much money was really invested into the stock. Market cap is just a product of shares * prices. For example, I bought Nvidia shares in 2016 for a certain amount. These shares are >100x more valuable today but I didn't put any extra money into them. So 99% of "my" market cap was simply created by traders pushing up the stock price.
If tomorrow, the majority of Nvidia stock holders decide to sell and all stocks are sold then I guarantee you that never ever will $4 trillion be traded because if there is a strong sell move then the stock price will drop like a rock and the last sellers will get a fraction of money as they have based on todays market cap. We might be lucky to see $500b of trading volume.
It seems fairly obvious, to me, that the issue is that most people make money from the stock price changing rather than from any kind of intrinisic value of the underlying company.
In other words, why should it matter to me what the company's profit margin or asset base or what not is actually worth when I make money if the stock number goes up?
In the short run, markets are a voting machine; in the long run, they’re a weighing machine. — Ben Graham
If you own a slice of nVidia’s shares at a current P/E of 37, after a year, they’ve earned 2.7% of the value and you still have the same stake as you did before. That’s pricing in further growth and upside in earnings from here (otherwise, you could buy US treasuries at a better price), but doesn’t seem outrageous to me.
Disclaimer: I don’t directly own any $NVDA; I do own mutual funds that own some.
Thing is, NVIDIA ships waaaay more than GPUs. Or, perhaps more accurately, NVIDIA ships chips. Other manufacturers install those chips. Sitting in my office right now, I have 5 computers, and between them I'd estimate I have 15 NVIDIA chips, minimum. Maybe more, I haven't carefully examined my NVIDIA-based, ASUS-manufactured graphics card to see how many name-brand chips it has.
That's to say nothing of all the other products and services they build. I just visited their website, clicked on "solutions" at the top, and there's waaaay more there than just desktop GPUs. And its worth noting that NVIDIA doesn't manufacture or sell any of the down-market NVIDIA-based boards.
Given NVIDIA's role in data centers, I think the 4T market cap is, while probably still somewhat inflated by speculation, not so inflated as to be a bubble ready to pop.
55% net profit doesn't include NRE right? The thing about selling fewer, bigger-ticket items is that the non-recurring engineering costs are amortized over fewer sales. Not to say they aren't printing money, but the unit cost to produce the second GPU pales in comparison to the effort to produce the first one.
How many racks are they selling? Is that 50% of their revenue? 10%? How sustainable will that be? I understand AI will probably continue to grow, but can they continue cornering such a market with 55% margins?
Fortunately, I opted to pivot towards ratio of total equity, the per-unit activity was a very rough attempt at moving away from abstractions, and that is obviously one of the many flaws in such an exercise.
I already noted the profit margins are incredibly unstable, so I don’t trust the reported figures where they quadrupled inside of a decade. I’m not suggesting it isn’t real, only that it isn’t possible to pin that 55% down as sustainable for any significant period of time, certainly not the 30-50 years is it would take to realize $4T of value at their current pace.
It's close to 90% of their revenue. They will sell about $115B this year, $180B in 2026 and $230B in 2027, with margins staying fairly constant. Their only real competitor is Broadcom, who has slightly worse margin on AI chips.
So my broader argument is that their current performance isn’t a reliable indicator for the future, as so much of their current position is circumstantial. Any investments that rely on their sustaining this sort of performance are inherently flawed as a result.
For the record, most recent graphics revenues were $14.3B, with $116B in compute/networking. [1]
So quite lopsided. That curtails my expectations even further, as this represents a lot of initial infrastructure investments whose long-term expenditures (and viability) remain to be seen.
The market price is supposed to account for future growth, not just for current revenue. Predicting future is speculative by definition, but it's not completely detached from reality to bet that Nvidia has the potential to grow significantly for some time (at some point either the market cap or the multiple will correct of course).
I also see where the reasoning here contradicts the reality. If we assume Nvidia only sells $1000 gpus and moves a few millions a year, then how did it received $137B in FY2025? In reality they don't just sell GPUs, they sell systems for AI training and inference at insane margins (I've seen 90% estimates) and also some GPUs at decent margins (30-40%). These margins may be enough to stimulate competition at some point, but so far those risks have not materialized.
It’s not unreasonable to bet that their 60% margin on data center products disappears either though. It only takes one competitor to get their act together and those margins will be cut in half.
>I’ll assume the average GPU price, for the sake of argument, is $1000.
They make big bucks on the premium end of their chips. Those contracts are typically on the 8-figure range, I would think they easily have thousands of them around the world.
Even Jensen has implied[1] that the consumer GPU market (i.e. gaming) holds a minor share of revenue these days.
1: Citation needed, I know. I mean comments like "we are not going to abandon gamers, etc...".
Nvidia's revenue is $44 billion in the last quarter. It's been growing at 5 billion a quarter. With a 50% profit margin. It is the most profitable company in the world; just take a look at the fiscals.
If that justifies the valuation or not, your guess is as good as mine.
Yeah, but their AI/data center GPUs go for closer to $100K, and I've heard that they obtain >50% margins on those. I agree with your overall point that the $4T valuation is not justified by current profits.
Nvidias business is about data center now. The data center gpu’s sell for 50k+ each and have unit margins over 70%. They’re making truly fuckloads of money off the AI boom.
This should be compared though to the general trend in current US stocks valuations, that are on par with Tulip Mania and Dot-com bubble.
Some examples:
- Palantir - valued at 337B USD (more than Meta less than 3 years ago !), with a revenue of 2B and net incomre 500M
- Gamestop - valued at 10B USD, with a quickly declining revenue of 4B and net income 100M (they lost money most of the time in the past 10 years)
- Coreweave - valued at 74B USD, on 1B revenue (growing quickly), 300m net loss, and very discutable accounting
- Tesla - valued at 1000B USD, on 100B revenue (which is now collapsing), 7B net income which will most probably turn into a less starting this quarter (no more ZEV credits) or next quarter (no more 7500$ subsides)
- xAI - valued at what, 100B USD ? On probably 0 revenue and huge losses.
Same goes for OpenAI, SpaceX etc, and I'm not even starting to talk about crypto (yeah, Dogecoin has a 'market cap' of 27B USD...).
We are living almost unprecedented times in terms of US stock valuations.
Amazon also had a p/e over 100 and a p/s over 10 in its earlier history.
You also have to look at the market size these companies are addressing while having few competitors.
Tesla for example is addressing "driving cars" with its self-driving project. There are 2B cars on the road. If we value driving them at $5 per day, that is $5 * 365 * 2B = $3650B in annual value. Capturing 10% of that would be $365B per year. At a p/e of 30 that is over $10T - ten times Tesla's current market cap.
I think your numbers are a bit understated. You are missing some other important sectors Tesla is adressing - "driving cars on Mars" and "autonomous drones". You should add an additional 0 or maybe two 0s to your numbers.
To think the entire company could have failed multiple times in the 90s if not for Sega's CEO bailing Nvidia out after Sega fucked up the Dreamcast contract.
And even if Nvidia had won that contract, the Dreamcast ultimately failed. Nvidia was close to destruction multiple times in its early years.
I thought Apple would drive it to the ground after their fallout considering how Jobs handled things. Nvidia rode that crypto wave and AI was there at the very end of that rainbow. Having said that, they kept at CUDA all these years even before pandemic. They earned it 100%!
Everybody already uses AI, it's being shoved down our throats. You literally cannot use Google or Amazon without AI nonsense popping up. People don't seem too happy about it though. I can't say that these features have improved my Amazon or Google experiences. In fact, in the case of the latter, the experience has only gotten worse as they've injected more AI.
i ll give you the opposite viewpoint. 90% people are using AI because it is being forcefully shoved into google, amazon, microsoft etc. Most AI models offer little value at the moment and once the novelty wears off, even a real AI breakthrough will create aversion amongst the masses, this ll cause a huge crash
Eh, I don’t see it. People will try the new ChatGPT killer for sure, especially if all the first gen issues were fixed (lack of current world knowledge, hallucinations etc). I think the bubble is due a big pop but I don’t think it’s going to be that huge of a crash unless China somehow catches up
there have been enough GPT killers in the last 2 years that even if someone made an actual GPT killer, the level of interest among people is going to be low. Their first reaction would be like "oh no not another AI marketer"
My personal pet peeve is comparisons like this, which aren’t inflation-adjusted. Is this a higher real valuation than the any other company in existence so far? From the information provided, it is unclear.
The unspoken, rarely acknowledged element of this story and other valuation stories is the devaluation of the US Dollar. That certainly contributes to the trend of record valuation after record valuation.
...no? Leading-edge semiconductor manufacturing is incredibly difficult. Keeping pace with it is nearly impossible. Many companies and entire countries have tried - and failed, over and over and over. You can't just throw billions of dollars at the problem and hope you solve it.
It is far, far smarter to design the chips and leave the manufacturing to others who will have the expertise and take on the risk.
TSMC isn't 'that much' competition? Good luck beating them at it. They're essentially the only game in town for top-end silicon.
AMD tried, realized it was completely pointless and split off into Global Foundries. The giant Intel struggled incredibly hard with the 10nm node and has now lost significant ground because of it.
Leading edge silicon is ruthless. You can burn hundreds of billions of dollars a year trying to catch up and if your product is even slightly worse it may as well be worthless - all the cost with none of the demand.
Going into older nodes is far more forgiving, but you can't make GPUs with that.
It's only a matter of time, SMIC will have all the funding it needs. They've hired former TSMC staff, and they have Huawei as a research hub, with its 30,000 person research campus. Huawei is also working on its own EUV machines and researching the next generation of chip-making technologies.
China has some of the best technical universities in the world. Many of the names you see in the U.S. AI/ML space are Chinese — and a significant number have returned to China, seeking new opportunities. The world has changed.
By 2035, China could be on par with TSMC, or even surpass it. Once, there were Nokias and Kodaks — and like them, TSMC will eventually face real competition. Nothing is eternal. TSMC doesn't possess secret knowledge that others can't obtain or special brains that others cannot match.
China’s future security and competitive edge depend on becoming self-sufficient in advanced node production. They now have all the necessary ingredients, more than anyone before, to challenge and possibly overtake TSMC. It's only a matter of time.
I agree - SMIC could in theory do it, if the government pours money on them and rigs everything in their favor as much as possible. (And a healthy bit of IP theft) But they definitely aren't there right this second.
Nvidia would probably not fail because they work already very closely with TSMC and have teams sitting there directly.
Also Nvidia could even afford to burn 100s of billions of dollars since they are becoming the most profitable company in the world with probably passing Apple this year.
BUT then Nvidia would compete with TSMC and that is a problem because Nvidia is building up a cash and supply moat. Why should Nvidia build TSMC competition if they can simply buy 95% of the packaging supply at TSMC so competitors like AMD and others struggle to get supply? By booking everything at TSMC, Nvidia can easily keep their market share even if competitors improve their products.
This is a huge differences to many industries where most companies have their own production. Imagine there would be only 1 car manufacturer and all other car companies would only design. And now 1 car company would book 100% of supply from the manufacturer. What would the other car design companies do? They would get out of business even if they design better cars.
Nvidia has done this before and that was in the 90s. By speeding up design and releasing new products and more products 2-3x faster than any competitor. The result was that from 90 competitors in 1993, there was only 1 left in 2003 for Nvidia in gaming GPUs.
And Nvidia is doing that again by speeding up their roadmap cadence and as well as booking all supply. Nvidia is crashing competition not only with a great product but by removing their competitors' option to place their product in the market.
TSMC works very closely with their customers and does everything they can to foster good relations with them. They would not allow any one company to completely push out all the others, they know it would be bad for them in the long run.
At the very least, Apple would stop them. They'd never allow anyone to stop production of their precious Apple Silicon.
It’s a bit short sighted to say that nvidia doesn’t physically make anything. Because they sure as hell physically sell something. One of the most wanted products on earth. For huge margins.
ok i took a look: i think i just did "companies by market cap" not "wikipedia companies by market cap"... should have refined rather than assume the wiki doesn't exist.
I don't fundamentally get it. How can a fragile company which doesn't even make their own chips be the most valuable company in the world. Why is it not some oil or shipping company? Something more "fundamental" in sense. Can someone explain how can Nvidia make so much money selling inference to big silicon valley companies?
What could actually drag Nvidia down and make them spend decades in the dark like Cisco still does? So far the two things I've come up with are: (a) general disillusionment in AI and companies not being able to monetize enough to justify spending on GPUs. (b) Big companies designing their own chips in-house lowering demand for Nvidia GPUs.
I don't think Nvidia can counter (a), but can they overcome (b) by also offering custom chip design services instead of insisting on selling a proprietary AI stack?