Earnings from AI-heavyweight Nvidia to test US stocks’ record run
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[May 22, 2024] By
Lewis Krauskopf
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Earnings from semiconductor bellwether Nvidia on
Wednesday are set to provide the latest test for a U.S. stock market
rally that has taken indexes to record highs this year.
A 90% run in Nvidia’s shares this year has made it the third-biggest
U.S. company by market value, trailing only Microsoft and Apple.
Its influence on broader markets has also grown. Because Nvidia’s chips
are the gold standard in artificial intelligence, its results are widely
seen as a barometer for the burgeoning AI industry, whose evolution has
stoked investor enthusiasm and helped drive the bull run in U.S. stocks.
At the same time, Nvidia’s growing weighting in indexes and
exchange-traded funds has given its share price moves an outsized
influence over broader markets. The stock now has a weighting of over 5%
in the S&P 500, while accounting for 6.5% of the Nasdaq 100 and 20% of
the VanEck Semiconductor ETF.
"If they do well ... there are going to be a lot of stocks that ride its
coattails," said Jay Woods, chief global strategist at Freedom Capital
Markets. "It's very rare you have one stock that can have such a
dramatic impact on the overall market. But Nvidia has earned that."
Nvidia’s results come as the S&P 500, Nasdaq Composite and Dow Jones
Industrial Average have all notched record highs this month after a
turbulent April, boosted by a strong earnings season and renewed hopes
that the U.S. economy is headed for a so-called soft landing.
Robust earnings from Nvidia could complement well-received reports from
other U.S. megacap companies such as Microsoft and Alphabet, helping
justify stock market valuations that have grown stretched in recent
months. The S&P 500 trades at 20.8 times forward earnings, compared with
a historical average of 15.7, according to LSEG Datastream.
Nvidia's presence in AI means "what they report can have a pretty
significant bearing on a perception of the major investment theme that's
out there right now," said Chuck Carlson, chief executive officer at
Horizon Investment Services. AI is "touching every single area, and the
nexus of all that is Nvidia," he said.
Nvidia's fiscal first-quarter results are due after the market closes on
Wednesday. The earnings could impact the share prices of AI-related
companies - some of which have stumbled in recent weeks after massive
runs.
Super Micro Computer, Advanced Micro Devices, Arm Holdings and Palantir
Technologies are among the stocks that sold off following their results
this period. Those stocks all are off at least 20% from their 52-week
highs.
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NVIDIA logo is seen near computer motherboard in this illustration
taken January 8, 2024. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
Nvidia, by contrast, was recently about 2% from its all-time
intraday high ahead of its report. The company's quarterly revenue
is expected to roughly triple to $24.6 billion, according to LSEG.
"The bar is high," said Bryant VanCronkhite, senior portfolio
manager at Allspring Global Investments. "Investors are being very
demanding right now, and I don’t see why Nvidia wouldn’t have the
same hurdle rates that these other companies have had."
BIG SWINGS
Nvidia's blockbuster results a year ago - when the company projected
quarterly revenue more than 50% above Wall Street estimates - helped
accelerate the market’s excitement for all things AI. The company’s
stock rose 24% the following day.
This time around, bets in options markets imply an 8.6% move in
Nvidia’s shares in either direction by Friday, Trade Alert data
showed. That would translate to a market cap swing of $200 billion -
larger than the market capitalization for about 90% of S&P 500
companies.
To be sure, Nvidia's surging share price means the company must meet
a high bar to support its stock. For example, some investors may be
looking for the company to report particularly powerful revenue and
project it to be robust going forward.
"As great and as sure as things seem right now for Nvidia, the
revenues are still very volatile and I think fairly highly
unpredictable," said Matt Benkendorf, chief investment officer at
Vontobel Quality Growth.
However, Nvidia's valuation has moderated even as the shares have
soared as analysts rapidly raised their expectations for the
company's expected profit. The stock was recently trading at about
34 times forward 12 months earnings estimates, down from over 80
times in the middle of last year, according to LSEG Datastream.
“Unlike some of the AI-driven names ... it’s actually been driven
primarily by fundamentals,” said Deepon Nag, portfolio manager of
large cap value strategy at ClearBridge Investments.
(Reporting by Lewis Krauskopf in New York; Additional reporting by
Saqib Iqbal Ahmed in New York; Editing by Ira Iosebashvili and
Matthew Lewis)
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