Nvidia opened Wednesday at $200.00 after closing down 4.1% at $200.03 on Tuesday, caught in a broader tech selloff that dragged the semiconductor sector lower.
The stock was up 0.8% to $201.60 in premarket trading. It’s a modest bounce, but it continues a pattern that’s been playing out since April.
Since breaking above its previous trading range, NVDA has dipped below $200 only briefly — and each time, buyers have stepped in. That level is starting to look like a floor.
At a forward P/E of 19.34x, Nvidia is trading below the S&P 500 average of 20.77x. For a company growing revenue at 85.2% year-over-year, that’s a number that tends to catch value-oriented attention.
The most recent earnings print backed that up. Nvidia reported $1.87 EPS for the quarter, beating estimates by $0.11. Revenue came in at $81.61 billion against expectations of $78.42 billion.
Despite the recent pullback, analyst sentiment hasn’t shifted. The stock carries 48 Buy ratings, 3 Strong Buy ratings, and just 3 Hold ratings. The consensus price target sits at $305.67 — roughly 52% above current levels.
DA Davidson reiterated its Buy rating with a $300 target. Morgan Stanley holds an Overweight rating at $288. Needham reiterated Buy at $270.
Nvidia is also giving cash back to investors. The company authorized an $80 billion share buyback and boosted its quarterly dividend from $0.01 to $0.25 per share. With $195.35 billion in free cash flow expected for 2026, that buyback represents about 50% of projected free cash flow.
Institutional activity is mixed. WESPAC Advisors trimmed its stake by 5.1% in Q1. On the other side, Brighton Jones raised its position by 12.4% and Hudson Value Partners grew its holdings by 30.7% in Q4.
The stock is up just 7.3% year-to-date while the PHLX Semiconductor Index has gained around 90% over the same stretch. That gap is hard to ignore.
Part of the drag is uncertainty around what comes next. Nvidia’s current-generation hardware is well understood by the market. The next leg of the story rests on Vera Rubin, the company’s next-generation AI chip architecture, which isn’t expected to ship until the second half of 2026.
There’s also some near-term noise. Two directors sold a combined $189 million worth of stock in early-to-mid June. Nvidia was also sued by music company Jamendo over AI training data. And broader concerns about the sustainability of AI capital spending are weighing on the whole chip complex.
NVDA’s 52-week range is $145.50 to $236.54. The 50-day moving average stands at $210.62 and the 200-day at $192.80.
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