HomeBusinessWhere will Nvidia stock be in two years?

Where will Nvidia stock be in two years?

The last two years have been absolutely phenomenal Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) investors, as the graphics card specialist’s shares rose 736% during this period as it became clear that the company will play a central role in the spread of artificial intelligence (AI).

Nvidia’s stellar returns can be justified by its rapid revenue and profit growth during this period, due to its monopoly position in the AI ​​chip market. The good thing is that Nvidia seems poised to continue its stunning rally over the next three years, especially after management’s comments on the company’s recent earnings conference call.

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Let’s take a look at the reasons why Nvidia investors can expect this high-flying semiconductor stock to deliver more upside potential.

When Nvidia announced third-quarter fiscal 2025 results (for the three months ending October 27) on November 20, it reported record revenue of $35.1 billion. The company’s revenue rose 94% year over year, mainly due to a 112% spike in data center revenues to $30.8 billion.

Nvidia originally expected fiscal third-quarter revenue to come in at $32.5 billion, but blew past that estimate thanks to aggressive production increases of its next-generation Blackwell processors. The company is witnessing “staggering demand” for its Blackwell AI chips, which is why it is “racing to scale up supply.”

It’s not surprising why Blackwell’s question is so solid. After all, recent tests indicate that Nvidia’s latest generation of AI processors can deliver a 2.2x performance jump over the previous generation of Hopper chips. Furthermore, this tremendous performance boost comes with a drop in computing costs. As CFO Colette Kress noted:

The 64 Blackwell GPUs are required to run the GPT-3 benchmark, compared to 256 H100s or a fourfold cost savings.

So Nvidia is doing the right thing by increasing the output of its Blackwell processors, even if it takes a short-term margin hit. The company expects non-GAAP (adjusted) gross margin to be 73.5% in the current quarter, down from 76.7% in the same period last year. However, Kress points out that Nvidia’s gross margin will grow back to the mid-70s once production of the Blackwell processors is fully ramped up.

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