Wall St Week Ahead Investors zero in on NVIDIA results
Digest more
Founded in 1993, The Motley Fool is a financial services company dedicated to making the world smarter, happier, and richer. The Motley Fool reaches millions of people every month through our premium investing solutions, free guidance and market analysis on Fool.com, top-rated podcasts, and non-profit The Motley Fool Foundation.
NVIDIA Corporation (NASDAQ:NVDA) is one of the Must-Watch AI Stocks for Investors. On August 19, TD Cowen analyst Joshua Buchalter raised the price target on the stock to $235.00 (from $175.00)
The AI business is changing in ways that will mean disproportionately bigger opportunities for some of its players.
CoreWeave projects full-year revenue growth of 174% this year, as it is proving to be one of the fastest-growing AI stocks to buy right now. For investors, it could possess a lot of upsides, as it benefits from strong demand for Nvidia's chips and the ongoing need for greater computing capabilities as a result of AI.
Bloomberg journalists discuss today's biggest winners and losers in the stock market. Listen for analysis on the companies making news on Wall Street.
Nvidia stock is currently set to record its first two-week losing streak since April amid fears of an AI bubble.
Appaloosa's 13F regulatory filing for the second quarter of 2025 revealed several big AI moves. Tepper bought around 1.45 million additional shares of Nvidia in Q2, boosting his stake in the GPU maker by more than 483%. Nvidia now ranks as Appaloosa's seventh largest position.
2d
Futurism on MSNAI Industry Trembles as Nvidia's Stock Nosedives
Shares of AI chipmaker Nvidia dropped by nearly three percent in early trading and is down almost five percent in the past week.
U.S. stock indexes ended mixed after Nvidia, Palantir and other superstar stocks pared most of their steep losses from the morning.
Nvidia ( NVDA) may be the market's biggest AI stock, but institutional investors are still shying away. "NVDA is now the most under-owned large-cap tech stock," Morgan Stanley analyst Erik Woodring wrote in a note.