Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) is up a mind-numbing 21,840% over the last decade. At first glance, it might seem like a stock that was a generational buy rather than one that can still deliver incredible returns. The same goes for its “Magnificent Seven” peers.
Here’s why Nvidia still has a long runway for growth and why it remains a generational buying opportunity hiding in plain sight.
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In October, Nvidia became the first company to surpass $5 trillion in market capitalization, reaching an all-time intraday high and closing at a high on Oct. 29. But roughly six months later, the stock remains down by about 4% from that peak at about $4.85 trillion, even though Nvidia has continued to grow earnings, innovate, and raise its long-term guidance.
Nvidia now says it expects at least $1 trillion in artificial intelligence (AI) chip revenues in 2026 and 2027. The stagnating stock price, paired with optimistic earnings expectations, has pushed Nvidia’s forward price-to-earnings ratio down to just 24.
Nvidia is already a reasonable value, but it could end up being dirt cheap in hindsight if its AI roadmap comes to fruition.
Nvidia’s best quality is its flexibility — an especially rare attribute for a company of its size.
It has, over the years, pivoted from a professional visualization and gaming company to primarily providing AI chips for data centers. But its data center business has been anchored by general-purpose graphics processing units (GPUs) for training AI models. Hyperscale data centers have far higher energy and compute requirements, demanding energy and cost efficiency across AI chips, networking, and IT equipment. On its March earnings call, Nvidia competitor Broadcom said it believes its custom application-specific integrated circuits, which are designed for narrower workloads, will eventually overtake traditional GPU designs in data centers — a threat to Nvidia.
Nvidia has wasted no time addressing this concern. It has developed a rack-scale solution under its Vera Rubin architecture that includes a GPU, a central processing unit (CPU), memory chips, and interconnects to achieve what Nvidia calls extreme co-design. The system is purpose-built for the age of AI inferencing, which uses AI models on previously unseen data, such as autonomous driving or AI agents. Nvidia is betting big on the widespread adoption of AI agents and a boom in demand for AI inference tokens — the currency needed to pay for AI usage. Nvidia’s hardware and software are built to process tokens as fast as possible, which is appealing to its hyperscale customers.
In addition to inference, Nvidia is investing heavily in physical AI. This means applying AI in the real world beyond the data center through robotics, autonomous vehicles, manufacturing, and so on. Physical AI is less than 3% of its revenue but could transform the business in the coming decades.
Nvidia marks a distinct paradigm shift in the stock market. Historically, when companies reach large-cap or megacap size, it can give them increased operating leverage, but it can also make it harder to sustain a higher-percentage growth rate. For example, Apple has evolved into more of a consumer staples company than a high-growth tech giant, now that the iPhone and Apple’s product ecosystem have become mainstream. And the world can only consume so much Coca-Cola. But Nvidia is quite literally creating new markets in the digital and physical worlds.
I expect Nvidia’s market cap to increase several-fold over the next decade, but the stock could also endure significant volatility and steep drawdowns along the way, driven by economic cycles, spending patterns among key consumers, and investor sentiment. All told, Nvidia is still a generational buying opportunity and a foundational AI stock to buy and hold, but only for risk-tolerant investors.
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Daniel Foelber has positions in Nvidia. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Apple, Broadcom, and Nvidia. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.
I Don’t Use the Term “Generational Buying Opportunity” Lightly. Here’s Why It Applies to This “Magnificent Seven” Growth Stock. was originally published by The Motley Fool

















