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Is Nvidia an Undervalued Growth Stock or a Falling Knife?

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Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) was one of the market's hottest growth stocks of the past decade. From the first trading day of 2014 to the last trading day of 2024, its stock surged 33,430%. From fiscal 2015 to fiscal 2025, which ended in January, its revenue grew at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 39% as its earnings per share (EPS) increased at a CAGR of 58%.

That breakneck growth was initially driven by its brisk sales of graphics processing units (GPUs) for gaming, which were also used for professional graphics production and cryptocurrency mining. But over the past few years, its data center GPU sales skyrocketed as the generative AI market exploded.

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A digital illustration of an AI chip.
Image source: Getty Images.

Nvidia's data center GPUs can process artificial intelligence (AI) tasks much faster than standalone CPUs, so all of the world's top AI companies -- including OpenAI, Microsoft, and Alphabet's Google -- use its chips. As the leading seller of the picks and shovels for the AI gold rush, Nvidia naturally became the bellwether of that booming market.

However, Nvidia's stock has declined about 23% this year as the Trump administration's unpredictable tariffs, the intensifying trade war, and other macroeconomic headwinds drove investors toward more conservative investments. Let's see if Nvidia's becoming an undervalued growth stock after that pullback -- or if it's a falling knife which could cut bargain-seeking investors.

How fast is Nvidia growing?

In fiscal 2025, Nvidia's revenue rose 114%, its adjusted gross margin expanded 170 basis points to 75.5%, and its adjusted EPS increased 130%. Most of that growth was driven by its data center revenue, which surged 142% to $115 billion and accounted for 88% of its top line. Those growth rates are explosive, but Nvidia's quarterly numbers reveal two near-term issues: Its year-over-year growth rates are slowing down, and its gross margin is slipping sequentially.

Metric

Q4 2024

Q1 2025

Q2 2025

Q3 2025

Q4 2025

Total revenue growth (YOY)

265%

262%

122%

94%

78%

Data center revenue growth (YOY)

409%

427%

154%

112%

93%

Adjusted gross margin

76.7%

78.9%

75.7%

75%

73.5%

Adjusted EPS growth (YOY)

486%

461%

152%

103%

71%

Data source: Nvidia. YOY = Year over year.

For the first quarter of fiscal 2026, Nvidia expects its revenue to rise 44% year over year as its adjusted gross margin dips to a midpoint of 71%. For the full year, analysts expect its revenue and adjusted EPS to grow 54% and 48%, respectively, as the AI market continues to expand and it ramps up its production of its newest Blackwell GPUs.