Dan Ives Just Called the Nvidia Sell-Off a "Golden" Buying Opportunity. Here's Why I Think He's Absolutely Right

In This Article:

No one can control the market, and no one likes to lose money, so the fear of losing money in the stock market is common. It's also common for investors to sell a stock too quickly -- regardless of what it's doing. And while I understand the desire to reduce potential losses, allowing emotions to dictate your investing decisions is rarely a good idea, especially when it's based on a perceived problem rather than a real and tangible one.

Such is the case with Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) right now. For the last two years, Nvidia has been one of the top-performing stocks in the entire market -- thanks in large part to its critical role in the artificial intelligence (AI) movement. But on Jan. 27, shares of Nvidia cratered by 16% -- wiping out roughly $500 billion of market capitalization from the company.

Did everything just change for Nvidia, or is this sell-off emotional? Let's dig in and find out.

Why did Nvidia stock crash?

Nvidia's sell-off is linked to a Chinese start-up called DeepSeek. DeepSeek has developed its own large language model (LLM), which is allegedly on par with ChatGPT from OpenAI. On the surface, this isn't surprising. But it's how the DeepSeek feat was pulled off that is causing concern.

A GPU chip with the Chinese flag on it
Image source: Getty Images.

Why is DeepSeek such a big deal?

According to some reports, DeepSeek was built with a cluster of Nvidia A100 and H800 graphics processing units (GPUs). So wouldn't that be good news for Nvidia?

Well, the answer is a bit nuanced. While it could be perceived as a good thing that yet another cutting-edge AI application leverages Nvidia's hardware, the A100 and H800 are old GPUs not widely used by tech companies anymore.

Over the last few years, you may have heard management teams from Meta Platforms, Tesla, and many others specifically reference purchasing Nvidia's H100 and Blackwell architecture. These are Nvidia's newest and most expensive GPU products.

But if DeepSeek really has built something as powerful as ChatGPT using cheaper, less sophisticated infrastructure, tech companies may decide they don't need to shell out for Nvidia's latest and greatest. That's the idea that has sent investors into a full-fledged panic.

Is now an opportunity to buy the dip in Nvidia?

Dan Ives leads technology research at Wedbush Securities and has long been an Nvidia bull. Despite the news out of DeepSeek, Ives remains incredibly optimistic about Nvidia's future and just called the sell-off a "golden" opportunity to buy the dip.

DeepSeek is not the end of Nvidia

I think investors are worried about the wrong things here.