Nvidia Is Joining the Dow Jones Industrial Average. Will This "Magnificent Seven" Stock Be Next?

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It was bound to happen at some point.

On Friday after the close of trading, S&P Global announced that Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) would finally join the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJINDICES: ^DJI). The AI chip juggernaut has been the most valuable company that's not included in the blue-chip index for most of this year, and with its valuation hovering north of $3 trillion, it's now challenging Apple for the title of most valuable company in the world.

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As seemed likely after Nvidia's stock split, Nvidia will be replacing Intel (NASDAQ: INTC) in the Dow. S&P Global, which manages the Dow Jones, also said that Sherwin-Williams will replace chemical giant Dow on the vaunted index. S&P Global said the changes were "initiated to ensure a more representative exposure to the semiconductors industry and the materials sector respectively."

The Dow Jones manager also noted that the index is price-weighted, so lower-priced stocks have less of an impact on the index, and it observed that Dow is the smallest company on the index by market cap.

Both Nvidia and Sherwin-Williams have share prices that are significantly higher than Intel and Dow, respectively, so the move will increase the index's exposure to both semiconductors and materials sectors. The changes will be implemented before the opening of trading on Nov. 8.

The "Wall St: street sign outside near the New York Stock Exchange.
Image source: Getty Images.

Nvidia's in, and Intel's out

Nvidia's replacing Intel on the Dow has been a long time coming. Intel has been the only pure-play semiconductor stock on the Dow, but the industry has taken on increasing importance in the AI era, and nearly every chip stock has soared -- with the notable exception of Intel.

Nvidia, which is the leading maker of the powerful data center GPUs that are used to run generative AI applications, is now worth more than 30 times as much as Intel.

Nvidia has been more valuable than Intel since 2020, and their market caps have gone in opposite directions since then. Nvidia's profits have skyrocketed thanks to the AI boom kicked off by ChatGPT, while Intel has missed several opportunities and announced a massive restructuring in August. Nvidia rose 2.9% in after-hours trading on the news of its pending DJIA inclusion, while Intel fell 1.8%.

The AI chip giant now joins three of its "Magnificent Seven" peers -- Apple, Microsoft, and Amazon -- among the 30 Dow Jones components.

Which Magnificent 7 company will be the next to join the Dow?

The three Magnificent Seven companies left that aren't in the Dow and Alphabet (NASDAQ: GOOG) (NASDAQ: GOOGL), Tesla, and Meta Platforms.