Dona Ferentes
A little bit OC⚡DC
- Joined
- 11 January 2016
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with the rise and rise of Nvidia, how are investors going to piggyback
Nvidia’s December quarter earnings report was even better than expected; revenue more than tripled to $US22.1 billion ($33.7 billion), earnings came in about 12 per cent ahead of market and guidance for sales of $US24 billion in the March quarter blew past analyst expectations.
Nvidia surging 16.4 per cent to add $US277 billion to its market capitalisation, which now stands at $US1.954 trillion. That’s a record single-day gain in value, but it’s particularly stunning because Nvidia had already risen 40 per cent since the start of the year, and 65 per cent since the bull rally that began on Wall Street on 01November, 2023.
It’s the halo effect it is having on other stocks that is where the threat of irrationality lies. Every other member of the Magnificent Seven rose on Thursday night and the semiconductor index, the Nasdaq and the S&P 500 indices hit new records.
Sadly, there are no really direct ways to play the Nvidia/AI boom in Australia .... perhaps local investors can think about the AI boom in another way.
... With three of the key ingredients that are likely to drive AI gains – massive data sets, deep pockets to invest in AI development, and an existing level of digital maturity – it becomes clearer that big banks, big retailers and big miners like those listed above have the most to gain from early AI adoption.
Using analytics to optimise operations; personalisation, automation, predictive operations and maintenance – but they have an opportunity to create an even bigger gap between themselves and smaller rivals that do not have the ability to invest in AI. Potentially, AI investment in the next few years could set up an advantage for the next decade.
Nvidia’s December quarter earnings report was even better than expected; revenue more than tripled to $US22.1 billion ($33.7 billion), earnings came in about 12 per cent ahead of market and guidance for sales of $US24 billion in the March quarter blew past analyst expectations.
Nvidia surging 16.4 per cent to add $US277 billion to its market capitalisation, which now stands at $US1.954 trillion. That’s a record single-day gain in value, but it’s particularly stunning because Nvidia had already risen 40 per cent since the start of the year, and 65 per cent since the bull rally that began on Wall Street on 01November, 2023.
It’s the halo effect it is having on other stocks that is where the threat of irrationality lies. Every other member of the Magnificent Seven rose on Thursday night and the semiconductor index, the Nasdaq and the S&P 500 indices hit new records.
Sadly, there are no really direct ways to play the Nvidia/AI boom in Australia .... perhaps local investors can think about the AI boom in another way.
Picking local winners
The expense of AI development is such that size matters. ASX investors have long recognised the advantaged position of big players in our relatively small markets – BHP, Commonwealth Bank, CSL, NAB, and Westpac - plus ANZ, Wesfarmers, Macquarie Group, Woodside, Goodman Group, Fortescue Rio Tinto and Telstra, Transurban and Woolworths – as having the most potential.... With three of the key ingredients that are likely to drive AI gains – massive data sets, deep pockets to invest in AI development, and an existing level of digital maturity – it becomes clearer that big banks, big retailers and big miners like those listed above have the most to gain from early AI adoption.
Using analytics to optimise operations; personalisation, automation, predictive operations and maintenance – but they have an opportunity to create an even bigger gap between themselves and smaller rivals that do not have the ability to invest in AI. Potentially, AI investment in the next few years could set up an advantage for the next decade.