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Nvidia Is Down 26% From Its All-Time High -- Here's How Far It Can Fall, Based on Historic Precedent

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For well over two years, the stock market has been roaring higher, with all three major indexes -- the Dow Jones Industrial Average, S&P 500, and Nasdaq Composite -- reaching multiple record-closing highs.

While select catalysts have played a role in lifting equities, such as stock-split euphoria, better-than-expected corporate earnings, and Donald Trump's November victory, nothing has sustained this rally quite like the emergence of artificial intelligence (AI).

Empowering software and systems with the ability to reason, act on their own, and evolve to learn new skills, gives this technology a seemingly limitless ceiling. Although the analysts at PwC pegged the global addressable market for AI at $15.7 trillion by 2030 in Sizing the Prize, the sky truly is the limit if businesses adopt AI solutions at a high rate and the technology gains mainstream utility across a wide swath of industries.

No company has been a more direct beneficiary of the rise of AI than Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA). At its peak, Nvidia stock added more than $3 trillion in market value in less than two years.

A visibly worried person looking at a rapidly rising then plunging stock chart displayed on a tablet.
Image source: Getty Images.

Despite being placed on Wall Street's pedestal, Nvidia stock has shed 26% of its value – calculated from its all-time intra-day high of $153.13 on Jan. 7, 2025, through its closing price of $112.69 per share on March 7.

The million-dollar question is: How much further can Nvidia stock fall? Historic precedent can be a useful tool to answer this question.

Make no mistake, Nvidia is doing a lot of things right

But before making assumptions about the future, it's just as important to understand the path Nvidia took to get where it is today.

Investors can make an argument that the AI revolution doesn't occur without Nvidia's hardware. The company's graphics processing units (GPUs) are the effective brains that power split-second decision-making in high-compute data centers. Demand for Nvidia's Hopper (H100) chip and now its successor Blackwell GPU architecture has been off the scales.

To build on this point, Nvidia hasn't been afraid to invest aggressively in innovation. Even with its Hopper GPU maintaining well-defined computing advantages over other AI chips, the debut of Blackwell further solidifies its hardware as the fastest. Additionally, Blackwell is considerably more energy efficient than its predecessor.

Something else that's undeniably helped Nvidia get to where it is today is AI-GPU scarcity. Even with Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing ramping up its monthly chip-on-wafer-on-substrate (CoWoS) capacity -- CoWoS is necessary to package the high-bandwidth memory needed for high-compute data centers -- demand for AI-GPUs has decisively overwhelmed their supply. For Nvidia, it's led to exceptional pricing power and sizable uptick in its gross margin.