Stock Market Today: Dow edges lower
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Investor's Business Daily on MSNNvidia Stock Sinks On Fears Of AI Bubble, AI Winter
NvidiaNVDA stock has pulled back from recent highs amid concerns of a bubble in artificial intelligence stocks.Last week, OpenAI Chief Executive Sam Altman told reporters that he thinks the AI market is in a bubble,
Following the robust rally, NVDA's valuation has reached an elevated level, with its Price-to-Sales (P/S) at 30, markedly higher than the sector median of 3. This suggests the stock is priced at a premium compared to its peers.
U.S. stock indexes ended mixed after Nvidia, Palantir and other superstar stocks pared most of their steep losses from the morning. The S&P 500 dipped 0.2% Wednesday after trimming a
This AI infrastructure play has delivered bigger gains than its larger peers since going public earlier this year.
A Pivotal Moment for Nvidia As the summer earnings season winds down, Big Tech giants like Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT), Meta Platforms (NASDAQ:META), Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN), and Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOG)(NASDAQ:GOOGL) have delivered robust quarterly results,
The sudden reversal shows how the hottest AI trade and top-performing stock of the year is colliding with a broader market rotation out of big tech.
Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) shares fell 3.5% on Tuesday, closing at $175.64, as tech stocks broadly pulled back following a recent rally. The chipmaker traded 183 million shares, just above its three-month average of 181 million, signaling a cooling of momentum after reaching record highs earlier this month.
The week’s biggest news for Wall Street is likely arriving on Friday, when Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell will give a highly anticipated speech in Jackson Hole, Wyoming. The setting has been home to big policy announcements from the Fed in the past, and the hope on Wall Street is that Powell will hint that an interest rate cut is coming soon.
Nvidia ( NVDA) may be the market's biggest AI stock, but institutional investors are still shying away. "NVDA is now the most under-owned large-cap tech stock," Morgan Stanley analyst Erik Woodring wrote in a note.