What have we learned from Nvidia’s growth? Chinese companies do it properly, they cross all t’s and dot all i’s, perhaps as a result of all the extra scrutiny and trepidation that exists in the market over eastern businesses.
You may think that is speculative, but if Nvidia was an American company it would been backed to the hilt. Just think Facebook; scandals, years of negative growth and 500 million of friends and nothing.
Even investors on X are raving about the success of the company, some have give it an A+.
What have we learned from Nvidia’s growth?
Nvidia is not an overnight success and is here to stay, but if you make it work through innovation and good governance, backed by steady growth over decades it can lead to unsurmounted success.
The Blackwell chips have experienced problems with overheating in servers. The chip already faced production issues earlier this year.
Analysts have been watching closely to see how Nvidia’s new generation of chips, known as Blackwell, launched earlier this year, might affect short-term revenue growth, and whether the chip is encountering any technical issues as it is implemented at scale.
With a market value of $3.6tn
Nvidia’s shares are up more than 200 per cent year to date, as the race to develop and adopt AI fuelled the company’s breakneck growth. With a market value of $3.6tn, it is the world’s most valuable listed company and has come to have an outsized impact on the stock market.
Earlier in the year Nvidia was driving about a quarter of the gains on the S&P 500.
Citi analysts said the results were better than expected, with demand for Blackwell expected to exceed supply well into the 2026 fiscal year.