NVIDIA In Focus: CES This Week, J.P. Morgan Healthcare Conference Next Week, February Earnings

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The same themes that drove sharp 2024 returns among the Magnificent 7 stocks appear to be very much alive in the new year. All eyes are on how the AI story plays out in 2025 after many quarters of heavy capex spending among US megacaps. Indeed, it has been an arms race to secure leading positions in the current tech revolution. One of the most notable beneficiaries has been NVIDIA (NASDAQ:NVDA).

The semiconductor industry company enjoyed tailwinds throughout last year's first half. Shares soared from under $50 a year ago (split-adjusted) to above $140 by late June of 2024. Despite healthy earnings beats in August and November, the stock traded sideways through year-end. Despite the churn, NVDA returned 171% for the year, leaving the S&P 500's 25% total return in the dust.[1] Given the chip stock's massive weighting in the SPX, NVDA accounted for more than one-fifth of the S&P 500's 2024 gain.[2]

So, there are mixed signals with the AI darling. On the one hand, 2024 was yet another stellar year, but recent momentum has wavered. What's more, ahead of earnings in February, investors may have key events on tap this month that could bring about share-price volatility. Our data show that NVIDIA is set to present at a pair of the biggest industry conferences of 2025.

NVIDIA Events on Tap

First, CEO Jensen Huang will deliver a keynote at CES (formerly known as the Consumer Electronics Show) on Monday, January 6, at 6:30 p.m. PT.[3] The event in Las Vegas brings together some of the brightest minds in the consumer and tech worlds. Monday night is just the beginning, though, as CES runs through Thursday this week. Next, NVIDIA is confirmed to take part in a fireside chat with analysts at J.P. Morgan on Tuesday morning.[4] Later in the day, the management team will hold a financial analyst Q&A with the event organizer.[5]

NVIDIA is expected to showcase its latest robotics innovations, the launch of its RTX 50xx gaming graphics cards, a possible entry into the AI PC market, and, of course, the latest happenings with its Blackwell and Rubin chips. Investors will likely pay particular attention to what Jensen and others have to say about reported Blackwell issues, including possible defects and production delays, which may have pressured shares at times during 2024's second half.[6] On the plus side, NVIDIA reported record quarterly Data Center revenue in Q3, which blew past analysts' estimates.[7]

The trio of specific volatility catalysts in the coming sessions should command investors' attention. Heading into CES, NVDA shares traded with 45% implied volatility, according to data from Option Research & Technology Services (ORATS). NVDA's realized volatility has dropped from peak levels seen last August and September (between 70-80%), now ranging from 35-40% since November.[8]