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Post-Nvidia’s Q2 2023 Earnings—Will the ‘AI Hype’ Keep Driving Equity Performance?

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This article was originally published on ETFTrends.com.

By Christopher Gannatti, CFA, Global Head of Research

On August 23, we saw another set of incredible results from Nvidia.

The company’s data center business grew revenues by more than three times in six months, hitting $10.323 billion and a year-over-year growth figure of more than 171%. Guidance for the current quarter is now $16 billion, while consensus was for around $12.6 billion.1

Take a look at figure 1, where we see Nvidia’s year-to-date return alongside Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC), SK Hynix and the Nasdaq 100 Index.

At WisdomTree, when we build the semiconductor exposure in the WisdomTree Artificial Intelligence and Innovation Fund (WTAI), this is the type of thing we are thinking about—for AI accelerators to work, it’s not solely Nvidia, it’s an ecosystem.

Figure 1: Year-to-Date Performance, Select Companies in the AI Semiconductor Ecosystem

It’s clear that the train of AI adoption has left the station, but it’s possible that the journey itself is still in the early stages.

As investors consider Nvidia’s valuation in the fall of 2023, it is rational to think of two primary factors. One is whether this forecast—that the total market size for AI-accelerating semiconductors in 2027 will be around $150 billion,2—will prove true. It might be too high…or too low. The other regards how much market share Nvidia itself will be able to maintain.

From what we can see today, the biggest risk to Nvidia’s continued domination of AI computational resources are the Big 3 cloud providers 1) designing their own chips and 2) incentivizing their customers to use them for their AI workloads. We say this because it is difficult to picture either AMD or Intel, on their own, making a significant dent.

While Nvidia might be perceived as being at the center of the AI megatrend, exemplifying its hopes and predictions of many, Nvidia GPUs do not operate in isolation. Nvidia doesn’t even fabricate the physical chips.

TSMC fabricates the actual H100 chips that firms are presently racing to buy. TSMC is the most significant fabricator of semiconductors in the world. With all the attention on AI, one would assume that TSMC would be on fire as Nvidia has been, but that has not been the case.

Even if AI-related semiconductors are dominating the headlines, they do not dominate, yet, the full global market for semiconductors.

Consider this—in 2023, are people or companies racing to buy new smartphones or personal computers?

These are two important areas to monitor if one is thinking about the totality of the semiconductor market, and while they have been hot in recent years, in the ongoing cyclical trend, 2023 is one of the colder years for this type of demand.