Nvidia Makes History as First $5 Trillion Company
Nvidia has achieved an unprecedented milestone, becoming the world’s first company to reach a $5 trillion market valuation. The chipmaker’s stock surged 4.9% on Wednesday, driven by the ongoing artificial intelligence boom and positive market sentiment.
Key Takeaways
- Nvidia becomes first $5 trillion market cap company
- Stock gained 4.9% driven by AI boom
- Company added $2.5 trillion in value since April
- Analysts see continued growth potential
What Drove the Record Valuation
The milestone follows remarks from President Trump that boosted optimism about Nvidia’s sales prospects in China. Wall Street also gained overall as technology stocks rallied and investors awaited Federal Reserve signals on interest rate cuts.
Matt Britzman, Senior Equity Analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown, commented:
“Nvidia hitting a $5 trillion market cap is more than a milestone; it’s a statement. Nvidia has gone from chip maker to industry creator. For investors who think they’ve missed the boat, even at $5 trillion, this still isn’t an overly expensive stock.”
Analyst Perspectives on Sustainability
Kim Forrest of Bokeh Capital Partners noted: “They have earned this victory lap. At this point, the great AI bubble doesn’t look like it’s close to popping. And so this is what we get: a $5 trillion company because it makes the things that are driving the AI cycle.”
Russ Mould, Investment Director at AJ Bell, highlighted the rapid growth: “Nvidia has added $2.5 trillion in market cap since the post-Liberation Day low in April, more than doubling its stock market value.”
Future Growth Drivers
Michael Brown of Pepperstone pointed to strong guidance from CEO Jensen Huang about $500 billion worth of business in the next five quarters. He emphasized that capital expenditure projections from major tech companies will be crucial for sustaining Nvidia’s momentum.
Arthur R. Hogan III of B. Riley noted that despite the massive valuation, Nvidia trades at 35 times next twelve months earnings estimates while producing 70% gross margins, suggesting the valuation remains defensible.
Daniela Hathorn of Capital.com explained: “We have an AI-driven capex boom specifically in the chip sector. The AI bubble that’s been talked about isn’t really a bubble because it’s backed by fundamentals and earnings growth.”
Ipek Ozkardeskaya of Swissquote Bank highlighted Nvidia’s expanding international partnerships and positioning with political leadership, suggesting the company is well-positioned for continued global expansion.





