- Sunday 14 July, 2024

As Nvidia soars in the stock market, becoming the company with the highest market value in the world, investors’ more selective attitude is leading to significant corrections for some of the stocks that had seen the biggest rises in 2023.

In fact, the chip giant’s boom has dragged down the entire sector, spurring the growth of stocks with far less solid fundamentals than those of the Santa Clara, California-based company.

1. A change of trend driven by funds ?

About 60 percent of the companies in the S&P 500 Index have experienced significant growth this year, but more than half of the key stocks in the AI sector have experienced corrections. The same trend can be seen in funds that invest on DI beneficiaries.

Meanwhile, Nvidia has surpassed giants such as Microsoft and Apple to become the most valuable listed company in the world. The company’s shares rose, bringing its market capitalization to $3.33 billion.

In less than two years, thanks in part to booming demand for chips for powerful generative artificial intelligence models such as ChatGPT, Nvidia has become one of the most powerful technology companies in the world.

Its performance has contributed to nearly one-third of Wall Street’s increase over the past year. Since January 2024, the stock has risen 178%, so much so that CEO Jensen Huang said the company is at the center of a new “industrial revolution.”

2. Which stocks are suffering the most

Companies such as Salesforce, Snowflake, Intel, and Adobe are experiencing sharp contractions, following substantial gains in 2023.

According to the Financial Times, some analysts interpret this change as a return to rationality, while others believe that the artificial intelligence-related rally still has the traits of a classic bubble .

“One of the characteristics of a classic bubble is that the small players fade away before the big ones start to suffer,” Rob Arnott, president of Research Affiliates, told the newspaper.

Salesforce, in particular, suffered its worst daily decline in two decades after reporting lower-than-expected quarterly results last month. Since the beginning of the year, the stock has fallen more than 7 percent; Snowflake, Intel, and Adobe have seen contractions of 32 percent, 33 percent, and 6 percent, respectively.