Hit the sell button.....
Since you are telling us to short, I am assuming you have integrity to at least follow your own advice. How many shares of NVDA you short and at what price?
Hit the sell button.....
This chart Looks similar to AOL going into 2000
https://money.cnn.com/1999/01/27/technology/aol/
(AXIOS)The only comparison is Cisco in the 2000 bubble burst or RCA in the 1929 crash. Before Cisco's fall from grace it was sporting a trailing P/E of 1000. Currently NVDA would have to rise 20X to achieve a 1000 P/E.
That graph comparison is one of the worst manipulation I’ve ever seen(AXIOS)
Nvidia's high will eventually come down
By Scott Rosenberg
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Data: Yahoo! Finance; Chart: Tory Lysik/Axios Visuals
Nvidia is the AI revolution's bellwether investment. When it starts going down instead of up, the entire AI market is likely to retrench.
Between the lines: The fat profit margins that have fueled Nvidia's phenomenal stock price run-up stem from marketplace bottlenecks that are bound to ease.
By the numbers: Nvidia's $2 trillion valuation looked bubbly about three months ago.
Yes, but: Nvidia's climb is going to get harder and hit limits, whatever fun speculators have along the way.
- The company took 25 years to hit the $1 trillion mark, nine months to hit $2 trillion and a little more than three months to hit $3 trillion.
- At this rate, $4 trillion could arrive in July.
That won't last forever. The company's many competitors — including Intel, Qualcomm and Apple — have ramped up their efforts at AI chipmaking in ways that will inevitably fence in Nvidia's growth.
- The company's strength lies in its chokehold over the most powerful chips needed to train and run today's advanced AI services.
- With giants like Google and Microsoft and startups like OpenAI, Anthropic and xAI stockpiling those processors and bidding up their prices, Nvidia can command enormous margins.
Flashback: Something like that happened25 years ago.Cisco, which sold the routers every company needed to get online, was the Nvidia of the 1990s internet boom. Its stock price chart in the late '90s looks very similar to Nvidia's today.
- The best case for Nvidia and its competitors is that AI demand will keep growing at a mad pace, and all these firms will get to slice up an ever-bigger pie. But there's no guarantee of that.
- If big AI providers don't solve the technology's many problems — from inaccuracies and "hallucinations" to uncertain consumer demand and long-term fears of runaway AIs — demand for these specialized chips could soften or vanish, and the AI frenzy would stop dead in its tracks.
The bottom line: The "sell pickaxes to miners" phase of every tech gold rush is real — but it never lasts that long.
- From 1998 to 2000, Cisco quintupled in price — and then, from 2000 to 2002, it collapsed, when a hardware glut arrived just as a market downturn dampened demand.
How so?That graph comparison is one of the worst manipulation I’ve ever seen