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6 Reasons to Buy Nvidia Stock Like There's No Tomorrow

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Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) has been one of the hottest stocks out there for the past couple of years (up 582% since June 2021), but there are reasons to believe that it still has plenty of upside ahead.

Let's look at six reasons why now might be a good time to buy Nvidia stock like there's no tomorrow.

1. Nvidia is having trouble keeping up with product demand

Demand for Nvidia's graphic processing units (GPUs) is booming as companies clamor to get supplies of its chips for artificial intelligence (AI) model training and inference used in data centers. This has led to incredible growth in its data center segment, with fiscal 2025 first-quarter revenue surging 427% year over year to $22.6 billion.

The company credits its growth to its Hopper GPU computing platform, which includes its H100 and H200 chips. According to Nvidia, demand for its H200 chip along with its just-introduced Blackwell architecture far exceeds demand and this could continue to be the case well into 2025.

At this point, the only thing keeping Nvidia from selling even more GPUs appears to be supply constraints as its semiconductor manufacturing partners look to increase production capacity to keep up with the demand.

2. CUDA widened Nvidia's technological moat

Nvidia isn't the only GPU maker, but its chips have become the industry standard due to its CUDA software platform. The company created the free software platform in 2006 to allow programmers to directly program its chips. As a result, programmers learned to program GPUs using the CUDA platform.

This has created a huge moat for Nvidia since most GPU programmers are knowledgeable about the CUDA platform and how to use it. Retraining programmers on other software platforms would be timely and thus costly. Programmers having to know various software platforms would also likely make them less efficient.

By pairing its GPUs with CUDA, Nvidia has been able to control the entire tech stack, from the GPUs to the software to the firmware updates. Meanwhile, as it advances its technology, it makes it backward compatible, so its newer tech can work with its older tech.

Altogether, this moat has helped the company take about an 80% market share in the GPU market.

3. Nvidia continues to innovate

Another important part of the Nvidia story is its continued innovation in the GPU space. The company accelerated its development cycle to one year from two years, pushing out advancements. This should not only keep demand strong but also keep prices high as it continues to drive innovation.

The company's Hopper architecture drives huge demand, but it has already introduced its new Blackwell architecture to drive additional sales in the back half of this year and in 2025. Meanwhile, the company's new Rubin architecture is already slated to be released in 2026.