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Nvidia and other chip stocks surge with no sign of AI spending slowdown — for now

The stocks of AI chipmakers such as Nvidia and TSMC have been on a tear as Wall Street stays bullish on artificial intelligence — in the short term, at least. Read More...

Nvidia’s (NVDA) record close on Monday comes as AI hardware stocks continue a recent tear fueled by investor enthusiasm over surging artificial intelligence demand.

Nvidia shares are up 8% from last week, pushing the chipmaker closer to unseating Apple (AAPL) as Wall Street’s most valuable company. The stock’s rally follows recent comments from CEO Jensen Huang and the chipmaker’s partners touting an intense need for the company’s AI chips.

Other AI chip and hardware stocks Arm (ARM), Qualcomm (QCOM), Broadcom (AVGO), Super Micro Computer (SMCI), Astera Labs (ALAB), and Micron (MU) have risen, too, as the companies have given separate indications of strong demand for their products, thanks to the AI boom. TSMC (TSM) stock also closed at a record high Monday.

All in all, the PHLX Semiconductor Index (^SOX) is up 4.5% over the past five days, outperforming the S&P 500 (^GSPC), which rose 2.9% over the same time frame.

The upward trajectory of AI chip stocks is a positive sign for AI hardware spending that assuages Wall Street’s concerns of a near-term slowdown on investment.

“While Phase 2 stocks [i.e. AI infrastructure-related stocks, such as Arm, TSMC, and SMCI] appear modestly expensive relative to history, it is possible that the demand for AI leads the mega-cap tech stocks to spend even more on AI-related capex than investors and analysts currently expect,” Goldman Sachs analysts wrote in their report on Oct. 10.

Google (GOOG), Microsoft (MSFT), Amazon (AMZN), and Meta (META) have all indicated that they will continue to spend large sums on AI infrastructure through next year, to the benefit of AI hardware companies, led by Nvidia. As a whole, megacap tech companies are set to spend $215 billion on AI capital expenditures in 2024 and $250 billion in 2025, according to Goldman Sachs.

OpenAI’s recent $6.6 billion funding round is also expected to put cash in the hands of hardware companies — namely Nvidia — as it continues evolving its AI models.

People visit the booth for Nvidia during the Apsara Conference 2024 of Alibaba Cloud in China in Sept. 2024. (Photo credit should read LONG WEI / Feature China/Future Publishing via Getty Images)

People visit the booth for Nvidia during the Apsara Conference 2024 of Alibaba Cloud in China in Sept. 2024. (Photo credit should read LONG WEI / Feature China/Future Publishing via Getty Images)

People visit the booth for Nvidia during the Apsara Conference 2024 of Alibaba Cloud in China in Sept. 2024. (Photo credit should read LONG WEI / Feature China/Future Publishing via Getty Images) (Feature China via Getty Images)

JPMorgan analyst Harlan Sur sees revenues for the semiconductor industry growing 6% to 8% in 2024. “We remain positive on semiconductor and semiconductor equipment stocks,” he said in a recent note to investors, “as we believe stocks should continue to move higher in anticipation of better supply/demand in 2H24/25 and stable/rising earnings power trends in CY24/25.”

A slowdown in investment will eventually come, though. The question is when.

Whereas AI software is typically offered on a subscription basis, hardware is a one-time sale. Analysts have warned that AI chip stocks are in a bubble that will eventually burst once Big Tech’s massive spending on AI infrastructure eases.

Indeed, tech giants’ most recent earnings reports put on display a widening gap between their hefty spending on artificial intelligence infrastructure and their return on investment — and tested Wall Street’s thinning patience. The stocks of Google, Microsoft, and Amazon all fell late this summer following their quarterly financial reports, which showed billions in AI spending.

“We continue to believe that spending on data center infrastructure will be strong this year and possibly into next year,” D.A. Davidson analyst Gil Luria told Yahoo Finance in an email, “but that there is an eventual peak of capex spending by the hyperscalers, as early as next [calendar] year.”

Laura Bratton is a reporter for Yahoo Finance. Follow her on X @LauraBratton5.

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