Nvidia just had one of the better news weeks a chip company could ask for. Blowout earnings. A $1 trillion revenue forecast. Unblocked China sales. And yet, the stock barely moved.
NVIDIA Corporation, NVDA
NVDA ended the week trading around $178, still pinned inside the roughly $180–$190 range it has occupied for weeks. The problem isn’t Nvidia’s performance — it’s the market’s uncertainty about what comes next for its customers.
At its GPU Technology Conference this week, CEO Jensen Huang revealed that orders for Nvidia’s Blackwell and Vera Rubin architectures are expected to hit $1 trillion through 2027. That’s double the forecast from a year ago. On paper, it’s a stunning number.
But investors didn’t cheer. The stock dipped around 1% on the week.
That’s the core tension right now. Hyperscalers — the big cloud companies — account for 60% of Nvidia’s $1 trillion forecast. If they pull back on spending, Nvidia feels it fast.
The other 40% of that forecast is coming from smaller and industrial customers. That’s a chunk of revenue that doesn’t depend on whether Meta or Microsoft keeps writing big checks.
Jeff Bezos is reportedly in talks to raise $100 billion to acquire manufacturing companies and automate them with AI, according to The Wall Street Journal. That kind of buyer — large, industrial, AI-hungry — is exactly the type of new customer that could shift the narrative for Nvidia.
If a surprise deal or partnership with a non-hyperscaler customer lands, analysts say it could be enough to finally break the stock’s range.
Nvidia’s fundamentals still read well. Gross margin sits at 71%, and Wall Street projects revenue and earnings per share to grow at compound annual rates of 36.5% and 39.4% respectively over the next three fiscal years.
The stock is currently trading at a forward price-to-earnings ratio of 22.5, which some analysts view as modest given the growth profile.
Some analysts are asking whether NVDA can reach $500 — a move that would require a 173% gain from current prices around $183.
It’s not a near-term call. But based on the growth trajectory and current valuation, the bull case has legs if AI spending continues to expand beyond the hyperscaler cohort.
The risk is real though. If any major customer decides to cut back on AI investment, it could trigger a chain reaction. That fear is exactly what’s kept the stock range-bound despite the string of positive news.
Nvidia stock has returned 22,690% over the past 10 years. Investors who bought in 2016 are sitting on life-changing returns.
For now, the stock sits at $178.56, with a 52-week range of $86.62 to $212.19 and a market cap of $4.3 trillion.
The post Nvidia (NVDA) Stock: Why a $1 Trillion Forecast Still Wasn’t Enough for Investors appeared first on CoinCentral.

