어플

Bank of America Raises Nvidia Price Target to $190 Amid Strong AI Chip Demand

World / Kim SangJin / 10/22/2024 03:07 AM

(Photo= Yonhap news)

 

[Alpha Biz= Reporter Kim Sangjin] Bank of America (BoA), a major U.S. investment bank, has significantly raised its price target for Nvidia. On October 18 (local time), BoA set Nvidia's target price at $190, an increase of $25 from the previous target of $165, citing continued demand for artificial intelligence (AI)-specific chips.


Nvidia's stock closed at $138, up 0.78% on the same day. Despite a 13% surge in October that far outpaced the S&P 500's increase of 1.4%, BoA expressed optimism that Nvidia's stock could rise nearly 40% further.

In a recent report, BoA analyst Vivek Arya described Nvidia as a "once-in-a-lifetime opportunity," emphasizing the positive outlook based on TSMC's strong third-quarter performance and CEO Jensen Huang's comments on "unprecedented demand for Blackwell."

The Blackwell chip, praised by Huang, is referred to as a "monster chip" due to its 2.5 times faster processing capabilities compared to previous models. Production is set to ramp up in the fourth quarter, with Nvidia reporting that the entire year's supply of Blackwell has already been sold out.

BoA noted that TSMC's stronger-than-expected performance and positive outlook for the current quarter indicate robust demand for AI-specific chips. The majority of Wall Street analysts share a positive sentiment toward Nvidia, with 37 out of 43 investment banks recommending a buy. However, BoA's target price of $190 is notably higher than those set by other banks.

 

 

 

AlphaBIZ Kim SangJin(letyou@alphabiz.co.kr)

Related articles

Meta Acquires AI Voice Startup WaveForms to Accelerate Development of Superintelligent AI
Disney Reports Doubling of Net Income, but TV and Film Units Drag on Growth
OpenAI Pursues New Secondary Share Sale at $500 Billion Valuation
ChatGPT Weekly Active Users Expected to Surpass 700 Million — A Fourfold Surge from Last Year
Trump Fires U.S. Labor Statistics Chief Over Weak Jobs Report Amid Allegations of Data Manipulation
comments >

SNS