In This Article:
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On Monday, Nvidia (NVDA) fell to a new low for 2022 as panic seized the stock market.
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Despite a secular growth story, semiconductors remain out of favor as bears roam the land.
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Recession fears are overshadowing the solid fundamentals of NVDA stock. Don’t buy it until the trend changes.
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We’re in a baby-and-bathwater market, where seemingly good companies with solid growth numbers are seeing their share prices swoon. Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA) is a prime example of this. With Monday’s market massacre, NVDA stock is officially 50% off its 52-week high.
The halving hasn’t come as a result of poor management or a mass deterioration in the company’s fundamentals. On the contrary, its February earnings report revealed a 53% revenue increase year-over-year (YOY), among other rosy metrics and upbeat forward guidance. Instead, Nvidia’s woes are born from a broader shift in investor sentiment as high inflation and soaring interest rates have investors re-thinking stock market valuations.
In short, investors have looked into the not too distant future and seen a hawkish Fed solving inflation by pushing the economy into a recession. Were that to happen, Nvidia’s growth path would slow and demand a lower share price. Of course, as equities are wont to do, they aren’t waiting around for the earnings decline to arrive before reacting. True to their discounting and forward-looking nature, stocks are sliding now.
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Nvidia | $1775.99 |
Is Nvidia Stock Now Cheap?
Source: yCharts.com
The halving in NVDA stock has transpired while its earnings per share have continued marching higher. As a result, the price-to-earnings ratio (P/E) has shrunk considerably.
At its richest point, Nvidia’s P/E ratio topped 100. Now, it’s in the mid-40s. Fans will point to the steep discount as a reason to gobble up shares now while the flames of the fire sale are burning bright.
On the one hand, they may be right. As economist Paul Samuelson joked, the stock market has predicted nine of the past five recessions. Sometimes stocks see a bogeyman that simply isn’t there. Perhaps the pendulum of pessimism has swung too far. There’s a chance the Federal Reserve won’t over-tighten, will successfully get inflation under control, and will deliver the much-desired but all-too-rare soft landing.
In that case, Nvidia is indeed a rousing buy here — as are most stocks, for that matter. Only time will tell. As for pinning your hopes on Nvidia’s seemingly cheap valuation, remember it can get far cheaper before all is said and done.