Meet the Newest Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stock in the Dow Jones. It Has Soared 268% Since Early Last Year, and It’s Still a Buy Right Now, According to Wall Street

  • Nvidia is the newest member of the Dow Jones, providing the index with some much-needed exposure to the technology sector.

  • While Nvidia stock has risen by almost 300% since early 2024, several powerful catalysts could fuel shares even higher.

  • Wall Street is overwhelmingly optimistic on Nvidia stock.

  • 10 stocks we like better than Nvidia ›

The Dow Jones Industrial Average is home to some of the most storied, iconic American brands. Companies such as Coca-Cola, Disney, Home Depot, IBM, and Walmart are just a handful of the index’s components.

About a year ago, the Dow shook things up, replacing longtime member Intel with semiconductor giant Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA). From a structural standpoint, the change makes sense. Over the last few years, Intel has struggled to keep pace with its peers in the chip space. Meanwhile, Nvidia has essentially become the ultimate barometer of the stock market’s latest megatrend: The artificial intelligence (AI) revolution.

Since last January, shares of Nvidia have gained nearly 270% as of this writing (Oct. 23). For perspective, this is more than five times the gains generated in the Nasdaq Composite and S&P 500.

NVDA data by YCharts.

While this type of momentum might have you thinking the Nvidia train is headed for a speed bump, analysts across Wall Street beg to differ. Let’s explore several key tailwinds that could help fuel Nvidia’s generational run even further, and assess why now still looks like a great time for long-term investors to double down on the stock.

For the last three years, Nvidia’s primary source of revenue and profits has been its compute and networking business. This is the segment of the company responsible for selling high-performance AI accelerators, known as graphics processing units (GPUs), and accompanying data center services.

Right now, Nvidia’s next-generation chip architecture — dubbed Blackwell — is in high demand among big tech hyperscalers like Microsoft, Alphabet, Amazon, Meta Platforms, Oracle, and OpenAI. What’s even more encouraging, however, is Nvidia’s pace of innovation. Over the next couple of years, the company is slated to release even more powerful successor chips, known as Blackwell Ultra and Vera Rubin.

This dense product roadmap brings up an important question: Why is Nvidia already planning next-generation hardware as it currently scales Blackwell?

The answer to that can be summed up by looking at the long-term forecasts of capital expenditures (capex) from the hyperscalers. Over the last few years, cloud hyperscalers and big tech titans have poured hundreds of billions of dollars into AI data centers, packing these facilities with best-in-class GPU clusters and networking equipment.

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