Of all the mega-cap growth stocks in the market, Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA) has to be the most sought-after name right now, for good reason.
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Nvidia’s upcoming Rubin architecture offers three times the performance of Blackwell Ultra GPUs.
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The stock trades at a forward price-earnings multiple of 24x.
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A $300 per share target implies a valuation exceeding $7.4T by 2026.
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Sales of the company’s GPUs have exploded, as demand for the highest-performance and most powerful semiconductors continues to balloon. With nearly every company in every industry at least looking at ways that artificial intelligence can potentially improve their productivity, I think the robust demand trends we’re seeing from consumers all the way through to corporations and governments will remain in place for a long time.
The question of course is just how robust this growth will ultimately be, and if spending will slow at some point. After all, while chips continue to get more and more powerful, and there is a replacement time horizon with these chips (much in a similar fashion as smartphones and other technologies), the question is whether customers will ultimately pony up for the latest and greatest next-generation chip or not. And with more lower-cost rival chips coming from companies like Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOG), there are real competitive threats to Nvidia worth thinking about.
I’m well aware of these headwinds, and my own personal tilt is actually more on the bearish end of the spectrum right now. That said, I thought it would be interesting to dive into the bullish thesis around Nvidia, and why this stock could certainly hit $300 per share (or a valuation of more than $7.4 trillion) in 2026.
Wall Street bull charging forward
Artificial intelligence. There’s your bull case.
I joke, but not really. Nvidia is about as pure-play of a stock as there is in the world of AI. The company’s chips power most of what’s currently out there in the form of LLMs and other AI applications. Whether we’re talking about domestic U.S. builds or applications and LLMs being built in China, Nvidia’s chips are absolutely everywhere.
That’s mostly because Nvidia’s chips, from its mid-tier chips to its most powerful Blackwell GPUs, Nvidia’s dominance in the world of AI chips has positioned the company for explosive growth, which has continued to outpace even the most bullish Wall Street analysts almost every quarter.



