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Nvidia passes Apple in market cap as second-most valuable public U.S. company

Daniel Nenni

Admin
Staff member
KEY POINTS
  • - Nvidia passed Apple in market cap on Wednesday as investors continue betting on the chipmaker behind the artificial intelligence boom.
  • - Nvidia is now the second-most valuable public company, behind Microsoft.
  • - Nvidia also hit a $3 trillion market cap milestone on Wednesday after shares rose over 5%.

Jensen Huang, co-founder and chief executive officer of Nvidia Corp., during the Nvidia GPU Technology Conference (GTC) in San Jose, California, US, on Tuesday, March 19, 2024. Dubbed the Woodstock festival of AI by Bank of America analysts, GTC this year is set to draw 300,000 in-person and virtual attendees for the debut of Nvidia Corp.'s B100. Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Jensen Huang, co-founder and CEO of Nvidia, during the Nvidia GPU Technology Conference in San Jose, California, on March 19, 2024.
David Paul Morris | Bloomberg | Getty Images


Nvidia passed Apple in market cap on Wednesday as investors continue betting on the chipmaker behind the artificial intelligence boom. It is now the second-most valuable public company, behind Microsoft.

Nvidia also hit a $3 trillion market cap milestone on Wednesday after shares rose over 5%. At market close, Nvidia had a market value of $3.019 trillion, versus Apple’s, which stood at $2.99 trillion. Microsoft is the most valuable publicly traded company, with a market cap of $3.15 trillion, as of Wednesday.

Nvidia shares have risen more than 24% since the company reported first-quarter earnings in May and have been on a tear since last year. The company has an estimated 80% market share in AI chips for data centers, which are attracting billions of dollars in spending from big cloud vendors.

Investors are also becoming more comfortable that Nvidia’s huge growth in sales to a handful of cloud companies can persist. For the most recent quarter, revenue in its data center business, which includes its GPU sales, rose 427% from a year earlier to $22.6 billion, about 86% of the company’s overall sales.

Meanwhile, Apple shares are up only about 5% this year, as the iPhone maker’s sales growth has stalled in recent months. In its most recent quarterly earnings report, Apple said overall sales dropped 4% and iPhone sales fell 10% from the year-ago period. Apple faces strategic questions and issues about demand in China, manufacturing and mixed reactions to its new virtual reality headset, Vision Pro.

Apple was the first company to reach a $1 trillion and $2 trillion market cap. It long held the title of most valuable U.S. company but was passed by Microsoft earlier this year. Microsoft has also benefited from investor demand for AI infrastructure.

Nvidia has been more volatile as a stock than Apple. Founded in 1991, the company was primarily targeting gaming, selling hardware to play 3D computer games. More recently, it sold cryptocurrency mining chips and cloud subscription services.

Nvidia shares have gone parabolic as its AI business has developed, rising more than 3,290% over the past five years. The company announced a 10-for-1 stock split in May.

 
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KEY POINTS
  • Nvidia passed Apple in market cap on Wednesday as investors continue betting on the chipmaker behind the artificial intelligence boom.
  • Nvidia is now the second-most valuable public company, behind Microsoft.
  • Nvidia also hit a $3 trillion market cap milestone on Wednesday after shares rose over 5%.
In this article
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Jensen Huang, co-founder and chief executive officer of Nvidia Corp., during the Nvidia GPU Technology Conference (GTC) in San Jose, California, US, on Tuesday, March 19, 2024. Dubbed the Woodstock festival of AI by Bank of America analysts, GTC this year is set to draw 300,000 in-person and virtual attendees for the debut of Nvidia Corp.'s B100. Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg via Getty Images's B100. Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Jensen Huang, co-founder and CEO of Nvidia, during the Nvidia GPU Technology Conference in San Jose, California, on March 19, 2024.
David Paul Morris | Bloomberg | Getty Images


Nvidia passed Apple in market cap on Wednesday as investors continue betting on the chipmaker behind the artificial intelligence boom. It is now the second-most valuable public company, behind Microsoft.

Nvidia also hit a $3 trillion market cap milestone on Wednesday after shares rose over 5%. At market close, Nvidia had a market value of $3.019 trillion, versus Apple’s, which stood at $2.99 trillion. Microsoft is the most valuable publicly traded company, with a market cap of $3.15 trillion, as of Wednesday.

Nvidia shares have risen more than 24% since the company reported first-quarter earnings in May and have been on a tear since last year. The company has an estimated 80% market share in AI chips for data centers, which are attracting billions of dollars in spending from big cloud vendors.

Investors are also becoming more comfortable that Nvidia’s huge growth in sales to a handful of cloud companies can persist. For the most recent quarter, revenue in its data center business, which includes its GPU sales, rose 427% from a year earlier to $22.6 billion, about 86% of the company’s overall sales.

Meanwhile, Apple shares are up only about 5% this year, as the iPhone maker’s sales growth has stalled in recent months. In its most recent quarterly earnings report, Apple said overall sales dropped 4% and iPhone sales fell 10% from the year-ago period. Apple faces strategic questions and issues about demand in China, manufacturing and mixed reactions to its new virtual reality headset, Vision Pro.

Apple was the first company to reach a $1 trillion and $2 trillion market cap. It long held the title of most valuable U.S. company but was passed by Microsoft earlier this year. Microsoft has also benefited from investor demand for AI infrastructure.

Nvidia has been more volatile as a stock than Apple. Founded in 1991, the company was primarily targeting gaming, selling hardware to play 3D computer games. More recently, it sold cryptocurrency mining chips and cloud subscription services.

Nvidia shares have gone parabolic as its AI business has developed, rising more than 3,290% over the past five years. The company announced a 10-for-1 stock split in May.


At market close, Microsoft's market cap is $3.151 trillion vs Nvidia's $3.011 trillion. The difference is rather small now. Will Nvidia become the first semiconductor company takes the #1 position in the world company market cap ranking?

Source: https://companiesmarketcap.com/

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At market close, Microsoft's market cap is $3.151 trillion vs Nvidia's $3.011 trillion. The difference is rather small now. Will Nvidia become the first semiconductor company takes the #1 position in the world company market cap ranking?

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The foundation for Apple and Nvidia 6T comes from # 9 company at a paltry 0.85T! One could argue all technology would come to a halt if #9 stumbled the rest on the list not so much.

It surprises me Buffett didn’t have the stomach to hold his investment, risk to high, maybe he bought NVDA?
 
The foundation for Apple and Nvidia 6T comes from # 9 company at a paltry 0.85T! One could argue all technology would come to a halt if #9 stumbled the rest on the list not so much.

It surprises me Buffett didn’t have the stomach to hold his investment, risk to high, maybe he bought NVDA?

Mr. Buffet got bad advice on whether to hold or sell TSMC shares.

Furthermore if you look the market cap ranking, #1, #2, #3, #4, #5, #7 all utilize TSMC as chips foundry. The same situation happened for many those top 100 highest market cap companies too.
 
I won't look too much into market cap of US companies, it is merely a reflection of the status of US capital market,rather than global leadership/competitiveness of the company.

A good example is "First Solar". It is a US based solar company which currently has the hightest market cap among solar companies in the global,but this company actually trails far behind global leaders in terms of market share/capacity/technology/global reach etc.
 
I won't look too much into market cap of US companies, it is merely a reflection of the status of US capital market,rather than global leadership/competitiveness of the company.

A good example is "First Solar". It is a US based solar company which currently has the hightest market cap among solar companies in the global,but this company actually trails far behind global leaders in terms of market share/capacity/technology/global reach etc.

It's the world company market cap ranking, not the US companies ranking. For example, #6 Saudi Aramco is from Saudi Arab, #9 TSMC is from Republic of China (Taiwan), #12 Novo Nordisk is from Denmark.

Source: https://companiesmarketcap.com/
 
I won't look too much into market cap of US companies, it is merely a reflection of the status of US capital market,rather than global leadership/competitiveness of the company.

A good example is "First Solar". It is a US based solar company which currently has the hightest market cap among solar companies in the global,but this company actually trails far behind global leaders in terms of market share/capacity/technology/global reach etc.
Some of the values may be over-inflated right now, but what is astonishing about the "top 10" companies table is that the top 5 are both American and less than 50 years old. Roll back 30-40 years and this list was dominated by older, established companies like oil majors, banks and pharma companies. I look at this and wonder why some of you you Americans are sometimes so down on yourselves (all the semi manufacturing pessimism) - you're winning !

And the US companies are there because they are the global leaders (which is also why First Solar isn't there). Who the leader is can change very rapidly of course.
 
If I were Jensen, I would demand a 25% stake and tell the BOD that without that, I won't be "comfortable" and will walk!
 
I won't look too much into market cap of US companies, it is merely a reflection of the status of US capital market,rather than global leadership/competitiveness of the company.

A good example is "First Solar". It is a US based solar company which currently has the hightest market cap among solar companies in the global,but this company actually trails far behind global leaders in terms of market share/capacity/technology/global reach etc.
quite the leap. Conflating the two is rather pedantic. It's undeniable U.S tech companies are profoundly successful and the valuations of big tech reflect that. They aren't made up numbers. People from around the world invest in these companies because they are the best companies with the best financials anywhere. It's not arbitrary. And no this isnt the dotcom bubble before someone brings up that comparison. Companies were at P/E's of 100+ then and pre REVENUE. Not just pre profit. These companies have forward P/E's in the 20's and are profoundly profitable.
 
Mr. Buffet got bad advice on whether to hold or sell TSMC shares.

Furthermore if you look the market cap ranking, #1, #2, #3, #4, #5, #7 all utilize TSMC as chips foundry. The same situation happened for many those top 100 highest market cap companies too.
he would have more then 2x his investment. It was a head scratcher at the time and even more so now. Especially when considering how much the entire market and world economy will tank in the event of a chinese invasion or blockade. Naive to think you can risk manage WW3!!! Considering his apple position it makes even less sense. I do wonder if someone advised him poorly.
 
he would have more then 2x his investment. It was a head scratcher at the time and even more so now. Especially when considering how much the entire market and world economy will tank in the event of a chinese invasion or blockade. Naive to think you can risk manage WW3!!! Considering his apple position it makes even less sense. I do wonder if someone advised him poorly.

When Berkshire sold its TSMC holdings, it turned around bought several Japanese trading forms' stocks. It did make decent gains from that move. But just like holding Apple stocks, it contradicted to its China-Taiwan risk aversion strategy.

If there is a war around Taiwan, Japan and US will certainly get involved without doubt. Why Berkshire bothered to walk away from TSMC to avoid the potential risks but walk right back into the same risks it tried to avoid?
 

U.S. regulators to open antitrust probes into Nvidia, Microsoft and OpenAI​

  • The Federal Trade Commission and the Justice Department are set to open antitrust investigations into Microsoft, OpenAI and Nvidia, examining the powerful companies’ influence on the artificial intelligence industry, a source familiar confirmed to CNBC. The FTC will take the lead on looking into Microsoft and OpenAI, while the DOJ will focus on Nvidia, and the investigations will focus on the companies’ conduct, rather than mergers and acquisitions, according to the source.

 

U.S. regulators to open antitrust probes into Nvidia, Microsoft and OpenAI​

  • The Federal Trade Commission and the Justice Department are set to open antitrust investigations into Microsoft, OpenAI and Nvidia, examining the powerful companies’ influence on the artificial intelligence industry, a source familiar confirmed to CNBC. The FTC will take the lead on looking into Microsoft and OpenAI, while the DOJ will focus on Nvidia, and the investigations will focus on the companies’ conduct, rather than mergers and acquisitions, according to the source.

FTC not learn anything from Chinas crackdown? Why kill the golden geese?
 
When Berkshire sold its TSMC holdings, it turned around bought several Japanese trading forms' stocks. It did make decent gains from that move. But just like holding Apple stocks, it contradicted to its China-Taiwan risk aversion strategy.

If there is a war around Taiwan, Japan and US will certainly get involved without doubt. Why Berkshire bothered to walk away from TSMC to avoid the potential risks but walk right back into the same risks it tried to avoid?
Japan has said as much. They out and said Taiwans security is an existential issue for them. Hard to imagine Japan doesn’t get involved along with the U.S
 
quite the leap. Conflating the two is rather pedantic. It's undeniable U.S tech companies are profoundly successful and the valuations of big tech reflect that. They aren't made up numbers. People from around the world invest in these companies because they are the best companies with the best financials anywhere. It's not arbitrary. And no this isnt the dotcom bubble before someone brings up that comparison. Companies were at P/E's of 100+ then and pre REVENUE. Not just pre profit. These companies have forward P/E's in the 20's and are profoundly profitable.
Microsoft and Apple P/E are between 25 and 40. Nvidia P/E is 60 to 140. Great company but I think the share price is driven by fear of missing out.
 
quite the leap. Conflating the two is rather pedantic. It's undeniable U.S tech companies are profoundly successful and the valuations of big tech reflect that. They aren't made up numbers. People from around the world invest in these companies because they are the best companies with the best financials anywhere. It's not arbitrary. And no this isnt the dotcom bubble before someone brings up that comparison. Companies were at P/E's of 100+ then and pre REVENUE. Not just pre profit. These companies have forward P/E's in the 20's and are profoundly profitable.

During Covid the US fed printed trillions of dollars, then US stocks rise sharply, is that a coincidence? I don't think so
 
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