'Super Bowl' Nvidia earnings stand to test searing AI trade
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[August 24, 2024] By
David Randall
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The rally in U.S. stocks faces an important test
next week with earnings from chipmaking giant Nvidia, whose blistering
run has powered markets throughout 2024.
The S&P 500 has pared a sharp drop it suffered after U.S. economic
worries contributed to a sell-off at the beginning of the month and
again stands near a fresh all-time high.
Nvidia, whose chips are widely seen as the gold standard in artificial
intelligence, has been at the forefront of that rally, jumping by more
than 30% since its recent lows. The stock is up some 150% year-to-date,
accounting for around a quarter of the S&P 500’s 17% year-to-date gain.
The company’s Aug. 28 earnings report, coupled with guidance on whether
it expects corporate investments in AI to continue, could be a key
inflection point for market sentiment heading into what is historically
a volatile time of the year. The S&P 500 has fallen in September by an
average of 0.78% since World War Two, the worst performance of any
month, according to CFRA data.
"Nvidia is the zeitgeist stock today," said Mike Smith, a portfolio
manager at Allspring Global Investments, which holds the company's
shares in its portfolios. "You can think of their earnings four times a
year as the Super Bowl."
Some investors are getting ready for fireworks. Traders are pricing in a
swing of around 10.3% in Nvidia’s shares the day after the company
reports earnings, according to data from options analytic firm ORATS.
That's larger than the expected move ahead of any Nvidia report over the
last three years and well above the stock's average post-earnings move
of 8.1% over that same period, ORATS data showed.
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The results come at the end of an earnings season during which investors
have taken a less forgiving view of big tech companies whose earnings
failed to justify rich valuations or prodigious spending on AI. Examples
include Microsoft, Tesla and Alphabet, whose shares are all down since
their July reports.
Nvidia’s valuations have also climbed, as the stock soared about 750%
since the start of 2023, making it the world’s third-most valuable
company as of Thursday, while also drawing comparisons to the dotcom
bubble of more than two decades ago. The company’s shares trade at about
37 times forward 12-month earnings estimates, compared with a 20-year
average of 29 times, according to LSEG Datastream.
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The Wall St. sign is seen outside The New York Stock Exchange (NYSE)
in New York, U.S., February 16, 2021. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File
Photo
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Market sentiment could depend as much on Nvidia's guidance as its
results. Evidence that it sees robust demand will be a bullish sign
that companies are continuing to invest rather than pull back in
anticipation of an economic slowdown, said Matt Stucky, chief
portfolio manager, equities, at Northwestern Mutual Wealth
Management.
Nvidia's "connection to the largest companies in the U.S. stock
market makes this a must-watch event," he said. "The biggest piece
that investors want to know is whether there is sustainability and
what demand will look like in '25 and '26," he said.
The trajectory of monetary policy and the U.S. economy also looms
large for investors. In a Friday morning speech in Jackson Hole,
Wyoming, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell offered an explicit
endorsement of interest rate cuts, saying further cooling in the job
market would be unwelcome.
Investors will be watching U.S. labor market data on Sept. 6 for
evidence of whether last month’s unexpected downshift in employment
carried over to August. Signs that employment is continuing to
weaken could bring back the recession fears that rocked markets
earlier this month.
A tight presidential race between Vice President Kamala Harris, a
Democrat, and Republican former President Donald Trump may also whip
up market uncertainty in the weeks ahead.
The August surge in stocks may make it difficult for markets to make
much more headway in the near term even if Nvidia’s earnings impress
Wall Street, said John Belton, a portfolio manager at Gabelli Funds,
which holds shares of the chipmaker.
The S&P 500 trades at 21 times expected earnings, far above its
long-term average of 15.7.
"The stock market as a whole is still trading at stretched
valuations so the bar remains high," Belton said.
(Reporting by David Randall; Additional reporting by Lewis Krauskopf
and Saqib Iqbal Ahmed; Editing by Ira Iosebashvili and Jonathan
Oatis)
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