Nvidia shares tumbled 6% in morning trading Tuesday as concerns about competition from Google’s AI chips sparked a fresh wave of selling. The stock fell to its lowest level in nearly three months.
NVIDIA Corporation, NVDA
The decline came after The Information reported Meta Platforms is considering using Google’s tensor processing units for its data centers starting in 2027. This follows last week’s release of Gemini 3, which was trained on custom chips co-designed with Broadcom rather than Nvidia’s processors.
Cramer pointed to concrete fundamentals. Nvidia reported strong earnings last week with visibility extending to $500 billion in orders for its Blackwell and next-generation Vera Rubin chip platforms. The stock also trades at what he considers a low price-to-earnings multiple.
The broader tech sector has faced pressure recently as worries about AI company valuations and massive data center spending commitments weigh on investor sentiment. Nvidia’s stock has been caught in this downdraft despite its strong order book.
In his Mad Money segment later Tuesday, Cramer doubled down on his view that fear rather than fundamentals is driving the selling. He said too many investors buy stocks only after rallies and dump them at the first sign of trouble.
Cramer acknowledged the competition concerns are legitimate. Alphabet’s increased reliance on its own AI chips developed with Broadcom represents real business risk. Reports of Meta potentially following suit add another layer of uncertainty.
The stock portfolio used by CNBC’s Investing Club holds positions in Nvidia, Meta, and Broadcom. Cramer has long advocated for “owning, not trading” Nvidia stock as part of his Magnificent Seven strategy.
Nvidia shares closed at $175.60 in after-hours trading, down an additional 1.25%. The chipmaker continues to face questions about whether its dominance in AI processors can withstand growing competition from custom chip designs.
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