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This Supercharged Growth Stock Will Soar to $10 Trillion by 2030

  • Many experts say it’s still early days for AI, and Nvidia’s chips underpin the technology.

  • Some investors fear that the adoption of AI is slowing, but in absolute terms, it’s still going strong.

  • Despite a meteoric rise in recent years, Nvidia stock is still attractively priced, and the opportunity remains vast.

  • 10 stocks we like better than Nvidia ›

The popular narrative over the past few months is that demand for artificial intelligence (AI) is slowing, but the truth is much more nuanced. Faced with tough comps, some of the biggest players and early beneficiaries are experiencing decelerating growth rates, but the numbers are still off the charts in absolute terms.

Take Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA), for example. The company pioneered the graphics processing units (GPUs) that quickly became the foundation upon which AI training and inference are built. Demand remains strong for these AI-centric chips, but relative growth rate has slowed.

When the company reported its recent financial results, investors gave a collective shrug. However, putting the results in context reveals that Nvidia is on the fast track to earn a charter membership in the $10 trillion club. Let’s take a look at the company’s results and how it gets there from here.

Image source: Getty Images.

Nvidia stock has been a windfall for patient investors. Those who bought in after the company’s initial public offering (IPO) in early 1999 have notched total returns of 482,600%. Put another way, a $100 investment made 26 years ago is now worth $482,600 (as of this writing).

Some investors may dismiss this as ancient history, but consider this: Over the past 10 years, the stock has gained 31,770%. That same $100 investment made a decade ago would be worth $32,110 (including dividends). Much of its growth in recent years has been fueled by the broad adoption of AI.

During Nvidia’s fiscal 2026 second quarter (ended July 27), the company delivered record-setting revenue that grew 56% year over year to $46.7 billion. This fueled adjusted earnings per share (EPS) of $1.05, which jumped 54%. Driving the results was a superb performance by the company’s data center segment, which includes processors used for AI, data centers, and cloud computing. Revenue for the segment jumped 56% to $41.1 billion, almost entirely the result of demand for AI.

Bears will point to the 56% growth rate as a sign of impending doom. After all, it wasn’t long ago that Nvidia was putting up year-over-year growth rates north of 100%.

Again, some context is in order. For the coming quarter, Nvidia is guiding for quarterly revenue of $54 billion, which is double what the company made in all of fiscal 2023. That’s hardly a death knell.

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