Is Nvidia Still a Millionaire-Maker Stock?

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With shares up 29,000% since 2014, Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) is the quintessential millionaire-maker stock. People who were lucky to get in early could have turned modest investments into fortunes.

That said, past performance doesn't necessarily guarantee future results. Let's try to read the tea leaves to see if this iconic chipmaker is still a buy.

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A history of boom-and-bust cycles

While generative artificial intelligence (AI) has been Nvidia's latest big break, the opportunity was virtually nonexistent before late 2022, when OpenAI's ChatGPT burst onto the scene. Before that, the company experienced a series of boom-and-bust cycles as its advanced graphics processing units (GPUs) were adapted to various bubble industries.

In the early and mid-2000s, Nvidia specialized in video gaming. However, the launches of Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies created unprecedented demand for its GPUs for mining: solving complex computations to verify transactions and mint new digital coins.

Eventually, both opportunities (lumped into Nvidia's gaming segment) stagnated and declined, representing only $2.9 billion of the company's fiscal second-quarter sales -- under 10% of the total.

The data center segment now represents around 88% of its sales. While the company doesn't break this down product by product, most of its sales likely come from advanced AI chips like the H100 and H200, used to run and train large language models (LLMs). If LLM demand fades, much of Nvidia's recent growth will evaporate.

The bear case

In the worst-case scenario, Nvidia's recent AI-led growth is on the cusp of a significant slowdown, if not an all-out crash. Granted, the company's growth looks spectacular -- second-quarter revenue jumped 122% year over year to $30 billion. But this could be based on an unsustainable AI race as capital-rich tech companies overspend on chips to avoid the perception of falling behind, even if they don't expect to profit.

The worst offender might be Meta Platforms, one of Nvidia's top customers. In 2024, the company expects to have $38 billion to $40 billion in capital expenditures, with much of that going to Nvidia GPUs. However, while CEO Mark Zuckerberg is confident in the opportunity, it is still unclear how the company expects to turn his optimism into returns.

Unlike Amazon or Alphabet, Meta doesn't have a cloud platform to rent out its computing power to start-ups. Furthermore, its flagship LLM, Llama, is open source and free, which will make it difficult to monetize.