The company reported another blowout quarterly result after the close on Wednesday. Yet NVDA is down about 12% since then as I’m writing this, in a slightly down market.
There was a similar period about a year ago, when the stock fell from $140 or so into the low $90s. The reason back then, I think, was that the stock had run so far ahead of other AI-related names that the market rotated in two directions–away from AI into cheaper areas and into admittedly inferior plays on the AI theme that were, however, substantially less expensive.
My cursory glance says this time is slightly different, in that the secondary plays also appear to be selling off.
two things, maybe three, are going on, I think
–Nvidia, Apple, Alphabet (two classes) and Microsoft together make up about 25% of the value of the S&P 500. Nvidia has already been a stellar performer for a long while. now having the largest market cap, about 7.5% of the index, of any S&P 500 member.
It’s extremely well-known. Every professional manager has likely long since made a decision about the stock, the successful managers presumably holding considerably more than the market weighting. Detractors presumably have had no inclination to buy, especially after the rocket ship ride of the past two years.
So, where are the new buyers needed to send the stock higher coming from? Sounds kind of stupid, but it’s a legitimate issue. And I think the market is reading the weakness of NVDA as meaning there are none.
–the US-as-a-third-world-country trade that has (unfortunately for us as US citizens) been a great success since the inauguration is getting long in the tooth. This is partly a question of relative value between the stars of the past year or so, which, generally speaking, have US costs and foreign revenues vs. the laggards (with the reverse structure). Here the gap between the haves—foreign revenues–and the have-nots–foreign costs—has become wide enough, I think, that portfolio managers who have been successful to-date are deciding to lock in gains. They’re doing this by shrinking their AI overweights and building up their domestic economy-oriented positions. They may still be betting on continuing domestic economic weakness, just not so much as before.
–since the inauguration, the S&P 500 is up by about 10%. EAFE, the standard measure of the world’s major stock markets ex the US, is ahead in US dollars by about 40%. Not only is the US at the bottom of the pile among world markets today, but this may be the worst relative market performance of the US since the mid-1980s. forty years ago. Two consequences: foreign portfolio investors are most likely shifting away from the US market to higher potential return markets elsewhere and domestic managers are likely doing the same. It may also be that foreign PMs are being directed by their clients, where collective memories of the Axis powers of WWII may still be vivid, to do so.