Nvidia (NVDA) investors had been bracing for a tougher AI trade, but perhaps not this kind of reset.

Over the past three years or so, Wall Street has treated Nvidia as the cleanest way to own the AI buildout.

For perspective, Nvidia’s current market cap is at an eye-popping $4.98 trillion, up from roughly $422 billion on Nov. 30, 2022, the day OpenAI introduced ChatGPT, according to StatMuse.

Hence, Nvidia’s market value has risen by nearly 1,080%, or roughly 11.8x, since ChatGPT’s release.

However, even after a monumental run, the expectation was that demand for GPUs, data-center chips, and next-generation AI systems would likely keep the stock mostly insulated from a deeper multiple squeeze.

Case in point: Seeking Alpha still shows Nvidia stock delivering a 24% one-year gain, but that nevertheless marks a dramatic slowdown from the early days of the AI LLM frenzy. 

That assumption is now being tested.

Nvidia has pulled back sharply from its May high, and the stock’s valuation is sending a message that looks remarkably different from the one investors saw during the AI boom.

The tech giant’s growth story remains intact, but the market is no longer pricing it like the obvious winner.

Nvidia stock is trading at its cheapest forward valuation since early 2019

Ian Maule/Bloomberg via Getty Images

The valuation signal Nvidia investors cannot ignore 

Nvidia’s selloff has effectively pushed the stock into a valuation zone investors haven’t seen since before the AI boom changed the company’s entire earnings profile.

More Nvidia:

According to a Bloomberg analysis cited by Seeking Alpha, Nvidia trades at about 18 times projected earnings over the next 12 months, its cheapest forward valuation since early 2019.

Though it’s expected to continue growing at a robust pace, it now trades at a forward multiple lower than the S&P 500’s more than 20 times and the Nasdaq 100’s nearly 23 times earnings.

For context, a P/E ratio shows how much investors pay per dollar of a company’s profit. A forward P/E uses expected future profit instead of past earnings. It’s basically like paying rent for an apartment based on what you expect the neighborhood to become next year.

Nvidia stock has tanked about 16% from its May 14 record, wiping out $1 trillion in market value, while investors rotated into other semiconductor names. Memory stocks like Micron were the clearest beneficiaries, with shares up over 232% in 2026, according to Seeking Alpha.

Additionally, Advanced Micro Devices and Intel have also dramatically outpaced Nvidia this year.

So even though Nvidia remains critical to AI infrastructure, the market is no longer paying a clear leadership premium for that position. 

Wall Street price targets for Nvidia stock

  • Bank of America: $350. Vivek Arya reiterated a Buy rating, arguing that Nvidia’s lagging performance creates an “enhanced” buying opportunity.
  • Goldman Sachs: $285. James Schneider kept Buy, saying valuation already reflects market-share fears and still implies strong AI growth.
  • Morgan Stanley: $288. Joseph Moore kept Nvidia at overweight, with MarketBeat showing a modest target lift from $285.
  • JPMorgan: $280. Harlan Sur maintained an overweight rating after raising his target to $265.
  • UBS: $280. Timothy Arcuri kept Buy, with MarketBeat showing a target increase from $275.
    Sources: MarketWatch, Barron’s, MarketBeat, AOL, 9XMarkets.

Why Nvidia’s rebound still needs confirmation 

According to data from Barchart, Nvidia stock is currently trading near $204, keeping its chart in a mixed but improving position. 

The stock is above its 5-day moving average of $197.80, its 100-day average of $197.27, and its 200-day average of $191.40, indicating that buyers have defended the longer-term trend.

However, the issue remains in the middle of the chart. Nvidia is still below its 50-day moving average of $209.52, which is perhaps the first major resistance level. A clean move above $209 to $210 would suggest the rebound is much more durable. Until we see that, though, the stock is bouncing rather than fully breaking out.

On the downside, the first area to watch is around $201 to $202, near the 20-day moving average. Below that, $197 to $198 becomes a more important support zone, as it lines up with both short-term and 100-day trend levels. A deeper break might put the 200-day average near $191 back in focus.

Momentum is not overheated. Relative strength readings sit around 50-55, indicating balance, but volatility remains high, with the 14-day average true range near $7.13, or about 3.5%.

Nvidia’s chart has stabilized, but the stock needs to reclaim the $210 area before the technical picture turns bullish.

What has to happen next for Nvidia’s premium to return 

For Nvidia stock to regain its lofty highs, it needs a lot more than “AI demand is strong.” 

The next several results will require proof that AI spending can continue converting into earnings without being crushed by higher rates, capex fatigue, or a rotation into cheaper chip stock names.

The last earnings report still gave bulls plenty to work with. 

Nvidia reported record Q1 fiscal 2027 revenue of $81.6 billion, up 85% from a year earlier, spearheaded by Data Center revenue of $75.2 billion, showing the core AI engine hasn’t broken. The AI poster child has blown past estimates on both lines by handsome margins in each of the four previous quarters.

Nevertheless, that bar has now moved higher. 

According to Seeking Alpha, Nvidia’s next report is expected Aug. 19 post-market, with consensus EPS of $2.08 and revenue of $91.73 billion. The key detail is the revision balance: analysts have 34 upward EPS revisions and 3 downward revisions over the past 90 days.

That means a lot is riding on the next quarter, which has to do two things at once: confirm the growth curve while restoring confidence in its valuation. 

Related: Cathie Wood buys $2.1M of tumbling AI stock