Nvidia shares hit record high as Wall Street shakes off anxiety about AI chip export controls

Nvidia shares were on track to close at an all-time high on Wednesday as Wall Street investors shook off fears that US limits on chip exports to China would hurt the company’s business.Led by CEO Jensen Huang, the AI chip giant’s stock rose 4% to nearly $154 per share in Wednesday trading.Nvidia’s previous all-time closing high was $149.43, which was achieved last Jan.

6 following President Trump’s election win.The stock is up about 11% since the start of the year.The surge pushed its market cap to $3.75 trillion, establishing Nasdaq-listed Nvidia as the world’s most valuable company.

Microsoft, a key Nvidia customer, ranked second at $3.65 trillion, followed by Apple at approximately $3 trillion.The rally has occurred despite lingering investor anxiety about President Trump’s move earlier this year to slap fresh export controls on Nvidia’s shipments to China.The restrictions halted shipments of Nvidia’s H20 chips – which had been the only AI processors it could legally export to the country.In May, Nvidia told investors it would lose $8 billion in expected sales from China.

Huang himself has grumbled that the “$50 billion China market is effectively closed to US industry.”However, overall demand for Nvidia’s chips remains strong.On Wednesday, Loop Capital analyst Ananda Baruah raised his price target on Nvidia stock to $250 – which, if achieved, would push its market cap to an unprecedented $6 trillion over time.“While it may seem fantastic that NVDA fundamentals can continue to amplify from current levels, we remind folks that NVDA remains essentially a monopoly for critical tech, and that it has pricing (and margin) power,” Baruah said in a note to clients.For the full year, Wall Street expects Nvidia’s revenue to surge 53% to nearly $200 billion, according to LSEG data.Nvidia shares popped despite mixed results for Wall Street’s main indexes.

The Nasdaq was up about 60 points, or 0.31%, while the broad-based S&P 500 was ...

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Publisher: New York Post

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