logo
Nvidia becomes first company to hit $4 trillion market value

Nvidia becomes first company to hit $4 trillion market value

Express Tribune17 hours ago
Nvidia logo is seen in this illustration taken, January 27, 2025. Photo: Reuters/ File
Listen to article
Nvidia became the first company to reach $4 trillion in market value on Wednesday, a new threshold in Wall Street's bet that artificial intelligence will transform the economy.
Shortly after the stock market opened, Nvidia, which is led by electrical engineer Jensen Huang, vaulted as high as $164.42, giving it a valuation above $4 trillion before retreating slightly.
"The market has an incredible certainty that AI is the future," said Steve Sosnick of Interactive Brokers. "Nvidia is certainly the company most positioned to benefit from that gold rush."
Read More: Nvidia unveils AEON humanoid robot in bid to expand AI power
Nvidia has now attained a market value greater than the GDP of France, Britain or India, a testament to investor confidence that AI will spur a new era of robotics and automation, potentially boosting productivity while also challenging incumbent sectors and companies.
The California chip company's latest surge is helping to drive a recovery in the broader stock market, even as Nvidia itself outperforms major indices. Part of this is due to relief that President Donald Trump has walked back his most draconian tariffs, which pummeled global markets in early April.
Even as Trump has announced new tariff actions in recent days, the S&P 500 and Nasdaq have lingered near records.
"You've seen the markets walk us back from a worst-case scenario in terms of tariffs," said Angelo Zino, technology analyst at CFRA Research.
Also Read: Nvidia unveils AEON humanoid robot in bid to expand AI power
While Nvidia still faces US export controls to China as well as broader tariff uncertainty, the company's deal to build AI infrastructure in Saudi Arabia during a Trump state visit in May showed there was also potential upside in Trump's trade policy.
"We've seen the administration using Nvidia chips as a bargaining chip," Zino said.
Nvidia's latest surge to $4 trillion marks a new threshold in a fairly consistent rise over the last two years as AI enthusiasm has built.
In 2025 so far, the company's shares have risen 20 percent, whereas the Nasdaq has gained six percent.
The Taiwan-born Huang has wowed investors with a series of advances, including its core product: graphics processing units (GPUs), which are foundational to many of the generative AI programs pursued throughout the technology sector, with applications in autonomous driving, robotics and other cutting-edge domains.
Read More: Xbox developer says any Series S game could be ported over to Nintendo Switch 2
The company has also unveiled new advances in recent months, highlighting its Blackwell system, which Huang said in March will soon enable virtually all productions to be "created and brought to life long before it is realized physically."
However, Nvidia's winning streak was challenged early in 2025 following revelations about the Chinese DeepSeek venture, which prompted worries that AI investment growth would slow. The company lost some $600 billion in market valuation during this period.
Nvidia's Huang has welcomed DeepSeek as a growing presence in technology, while arguing against US export constraints.
In the most recent quarter, Nvidia reported earnings of nearly $19 billion despite a $4.5 billion hit from US export controls designed to limit sales of cutting-edge technology to China.
The first-quarter earnings period also revealed that momentum for AI remained strong throughout the tech industry. Many of the biggest technology companies -- Microsoft, Google, Amazon and Meta -- are racing each other in the multi-billion-dollar race to win the AI race.
A recent UBS survey of technology executives showed Nvidia widening its lead over rivals.
Also Read: Nvidia revenue rises 69% despite $4.5bn inventory write-down
Zino said Nvidia's latest surge reflected a fuller understanding of DeepSeek, which has acted as a stimulant to investment for complex reasoning models rather than a threat to Nvidia's business.
Nvidia is at the forefront of "AI agents," the current focus in generative AI in which machines are able to reason and infer more than in the past, he said.
"Overall the demand landscape has improved for 2026 for these more complex reasoning models," Zino said.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

India automaker Mahindra, parts maker Minda eye local magnet production
India automaker Mahindra, parts maker Minda eye local magnet production

Business Recorder

timean hour ago

  • Business Recorder

India automaker Mahindra, parts maker Minda eye local magnet production

NEW DELHI: Indian auto company Mahindra & Mahindra and parts maker Uno Minda are looking to make rare earth magnets locally to cut reliance on China, as New Delhi draws up incentives for production of the critical components, company and government sources told Reuters. China, which produces around 90% of the world's rare earth magnets, put restrictions in April on their export, and while it has restarted some supplies to the United States and Europe, Indian companies are still awaiting clearance from Beijing. The disruption has prompted Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government to look at building up stockpiles of magnets and offering incentives for the domestic manufacture of the components critical to making electric vehicles and electronics. 'Some companies have shown interest in investing or setting up rare earth magnet production, including Mahindra,' said a senior government official in Modi's administration. Top Indian carmakers' sales slump in June amid weak urban demand 'It will take a year or two to have our own production … But we have to find ways to be independent,' he said. During a meeting in June with India's ministry of heavy industries, Mahindra said it is open to partnering with a company to make magnets or entering a long-term contract with a supplier producing them locally, according to one of the sources. Mahindra, which recently launched two electric SUVs, has captive demand for magnets and has indicated that the investment to make them locally is not that high, said the source. Uno Minda, supplier of parts to major carmakers in India like Maruti Suzuki, also expressed interest in local magnet manufacturing at the same meeting, two of the sources said. Maruti has already warned of production delays amid the disruption of rare earth magnet supply from China. Component maker Sona Comstar, which supplies gears and motors to companies including Ford and Stellantis , was the first Indian company to show interest in making magnets domestically, it told Reuters in June. Mahindra declined to comment. Minda and the ministry of heavy industries did not immediately respond to a request for comment. A final decision by the two companies on the timeline of any investment into making rare earth magnets will depend on incentives offered by the government and the availability of raw materials, two of the sources said. Availability of raw materials in India, which has the world's fifth-largest reserves of rare earth minerals, is not the biggest challenge. But the mining of them is. The government controls rare earth mining through its entity IREL, which had an output of about 2,900 tons of rare earth ores in 2024. Most materials are used by the country's atomic and defence units, while some are exported to Japan. But after the recent disruption of China's exports, IREL has plans to stop exports and expand its domestic mining and processing. JSW Steel has expressed an interest in mining rare earths in India but it would need government approval, two sources said, adding that mining, unlike magnet production, could take several years. JSW declined to comment. India is also looking to secure raw materials from elsewhere. Last December, IREL sent a team to Myanmar to study local rare earth resources and Modi's government is working with five Central Asian countries to jointly explore the mining of critical minerals.

Indian investigators told lawmakers black boxes undamaged in Air India crash, sources say
Indian investigators told lawmakers black boxes undamaged in Air India crash, sources say

Business Recorder

timean hour ago

  • Business Recorder

Indian investigators told lawmakers black boxes undamaged in Air India crash, sources say

NEW DELHI: Indian investigators of the deadly Air India airliner crash that killed 260 last month told a meeting of lawmakers that the plane's black boxes were not damaged, two people familiar with the discussions said. The revelation about the devices critical to reconstructing the events leading up to an air crash, comes after Indian media said they were damaged when the London-bound Boeing Dreamliner crashed on June 12, to erupt in a massive fireball. The Aircraft Accident Investigation Bureau has also been able to extract 'good data' from the black boxes, its officials told lawmakers on Wednesday during a parliamentary panel meeting on aviation, added one of the sources. Both sources declined to be identified as the discussions are private. The AAIB and India's aviation ministry did not respond to Reuters queries. The plane's cockpit voice recorder (CVR) and flight data recorder (FDR), as the black boxes are formally known, were recovered in the days after the crash, one from a rooftop at the site on June 13, and the other from debris on June 16. Air India jet's fuel switches in focus, as crash preliminary report nears The preliminary report from investigation into the crash is likely to be made public by Friday, Reuters has previously reported. The crash investigation had narrowed its focus to the movement of the plane's fuel control switches, and also focused, at least partly, on engine thrust issues, Reuters reported last month. Air India has faced intense scrutiny since the crash. Its chief executive, Campbell Wilson, appeared before the committee and the airline gave updates on its efforts after the crash, one of the sources said. The EU Aviation Safety Agency has said it plans to investigate the company's budget airline, Air India Express, after Reuters reported it did not follow a directive to change engine parts of an Airbus A320 in a timely manner and falsified records to show compliance. India's aviation watchdog has also warned Air India for breaching rules for flying three Airbus planes with overdue checks on escape slides.

US copper bounces after Trump sets a tariff date, but below peak
US copper bounces after Trump sets a tariff date, but below peak

Business Recorder

timean hour ago

  • Business Recorder

US copper bounces after Trump sets a tariff date, but below peak

LONDON: U.S. copper prices rebounded on Thursday after U.S. President Donald Trump said a 50% tariff would start on August 1, but held below their record peak due to a glut of metal already in the country and uncertainty over details. Trump signalled on Tuesday that he was imposing fresh tariffs on copper. He confirmed that and announced the date on Wednesday. The most active COMEX copper futures contract was up 2.1% to $5.60 a lb at 0945 GMT, down from a record high of $5.90 touched on Tuesday. 'I think the spike high will probably be left on its own for a little while,' said Ole Hansen, head of commodity strategy at Saxo Bank in Copenhagen. 'The market will now be left with ample supplies for the foreseeable future and that's one reason why premiums in New York should not reflect the 50% tariff,' he said. 'Also, plenty of things can happen in the next three weeks.' The premium of COMEX over LME on Thursday was at $2,690 a metric ton, or 28%, down slightly from a peak hit on Tuesday. Trump copper tariffs set to spark final scramble to get metal across the border Traders anticipating copper tariffs after a probe was announced in February have shipped about a year's worth of imports so far this year to the United States. Analysts say the COMEX premium will likely ease over coming months as the stockpile is slowly eroded and the stiff tariffs hit demand. Copper prices on the Shanghai Futures Exchange came under pressure, weighed down by expectations that copper shipments to China will rise as some supplies are redirected to countries outside the U.S., a Shanghai-based metals analyst at a futures company said. The most-traded copper contract on the SHFE fell for the fifth day, down 0.4% to 78,600 yuan ($10,952.87) per ton after touching its lowest since June 23. Benchmark three-month copper on the LME rebounded on Thursday after five days of losses, rising 0.5% to $9,681.50 a ton. Among other metals, LME aluminium added 0.6% to $2,613 a ton, nickel gained 1.2% to $15,165, zinc climbed 1.2% to $2,774, lead was up 0.1% at $2,057, and tin advanced 1.2% to $33,675.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store