Nvidia (NVDA) Stock Slides 7% Despite Analysts Projecting 35% Rally Ahead

Table of Contents Nvidia shares commenced Tuesday’s session at $198.51, marking a position approximately 6.9% beneath the level established five trading days earlier. NVIDIA Corporation, NVDA The chip giant’s shares escaped their $165–$195 consolidation zone last week amid semiconductor sector optimism, only to surrender those gains rapidly. The psychological $200 barrier continues to present challenges. Market participants may need to exercise patience until May 20 — when Nvidia releases its quarterly results — before witnessing more definitive price movement. “Nvidia’s current valuation appears reasonable, potentially even attractive,” observed Julian Koski, chief investment officer at New Age Alpha, highlighting the company’s impressive streak of 12 consecutive quarters delivering revenue expansion. Foxconn, a critical Taiwanese manufacturing ally of Nvidia’s, provided encouraging signals Tuesday. The electronics manufacturer disclosed 30% April revenue growth versus the prior year, propelled by AI server systems and cloud networking hardware. Foxconn indicated that “AI rack deployments should sustain their upward trajectory,” despite traditional tech hardware markets entering typical seasonal weakness. This represents a significant indicator. Foxconn’s primary revenue generator has shifted to cloud and networking infrastructure — surpassing its longstanding reliance on Apple product assembly. Trading at a forward earnings multiple hovering around 22x, Nvidia appears attractively priced relative to AMD, which commands a valuation exceeding 40x ahead of its quarterly report scheduled for Tuesday evening. Analyst consensus points to an average price objective of $269.82 per FactSet data — representing roughly 35% appreciation potential from current price levels. Among 54 Wall Street analysts monitored by MarketBeat, 48 assign “Buy” recommendations, four rate it “Strong Buy,” while only two maintain “Hold” positions. Zero sell ratings exist. Morgan Stanley maintains a $260 price objective. Wolfe Research projects $275. New Street Research reduced its forecast from $307 to $275 while preserving its “Buy” stance. Not every indicator points upward. CEO Jensen Huang conceded that Nvidia presently holds “zero market share in China,” a direct result of American export restrictions on cutting-edge semiconductor technology. Additional concerns emerge around customer diversification efforts. Anthropic has reportedly entered discussions with chip newcomer Fractile, while Cerebras pursues public market listing plans — suggesting certain buyers are exploring alternative suppliers. Regarding insider transactions, CFO Colette Kress divested 20,000 shares during March at $174.89, representing a 19.41% reduction in her stake. Board member John Dabiri similarly decreased his holdings that month. Institutional capital, conversely, has flowed inward. PDS Planning expanded its Nvidia allocation by 3.5% during Q4. Multiple additional funds increased their positions throughout the third and fourth quarters. Bernstein analysts characterized AI agent-driven semiconductor demand as escalating “off the charts,” with supply chains unable to satisfy requirements — a situation that directly reinforces Nvidia’s pricing authority. Nvidia’s most recent quarterly disclosure, published February 25, revealed $1.62 earnings per share, exceeding analyst projections of $1.54. Revenue reached $68.13 billion, representing 73.2% year-over-year growth. The semiconductor leader maintains a market capitalization of $4.82 trillion, a minimal debt-to-equity ratio of 0.05, and established a 12-month peak at $216.82. Attention now shifts entirely toward May 20.