Nvidia’s Hyper-Growth Keeps Stock Valuation Out of Bubble Zone

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<p>Jensen Huang during a conference in Taipei.</p>

Jensen Huang during a conference in Taipei.

For all the handwringing about Nvidia Corp.’s sky-high market value pushing the stock into bubble territory, its revenue growth keeps investors buying.

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While the chipmaker’s earnings this week weren’t the blowout Wall Street was hoping for, they did show that its sales are still climbing faster than those by the technology universe more broadly. Nvidia is expected to post revenue growth of at least 42% over the next four quarters, compared with an average of roughly 10% for the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 Index, according to data compiled by Bloomberg Intelligence.

The stock is actually getting cheaper as analysts raise their earnings estimates. Nvidia traded at less than 33 times projected profits as of Thursday’s close, down from 35 three weeks ago. The Nasdaq 100 was priced at 27 times, and there were 30 companies in the 100-member index with higher valuations than Nvidia, including Starbucks Corp. and Netflix Inc. Nvidia shares shed as much as 3.4% in Friday morning trading.

“If you went back a few years, people would’ve said that there’s no chance a company this big could grow this fast,” said Bill Stone, chief investment officer at Glenview Trust. “The valuation is certainly not out of bounds, especially relative to hyper-growers.”

To see the other side of this, take a look at Palantir Technologies Inc., whose stock was up 421% over the past 12 months and is the best performing stock in the Nasdaq 100 and S&P 500 Index in 2025. The maker of data analysis software is projected to deliver revenue growth similar to Nvidia over the next year, but is priced around 200 times estimated profits, making it the most expensive stock in the S&P 500.

If Nvidia, which has a market value of $4.4 trillion, had the same earnings multiple as Palantir, it would be worth about $26 trillion. And its stock price would be about 500% higher.

Boom And Bust

Even among the small group of megacap technology companies, Nvidia’s valuation doesn’t particularly stand out — even though it’s growing much faster. Microsoft Corp. was priced at 32 times estimated earnings, while Apple Inc. traded at 30 times. Revenue growth at both companies is expected to be a fraction of Nvidia’s in their current fiscal years, at 14% and 6%, respectively.

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