Wall Street Sees Nvidia Hitting $5 Trillion by 2026: Could It Happen?

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The AI revolution has catapulted Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) stock to all-time highs, with its market cap reaching $3.38 trillion as of this writing, now second only to Apple today.

But Wall Street doesn't see Nvidia stopping here, with some analysts seeing Nvidia surpassing Apple, and hitting a $5 trillion valuation by 2026. Here are the reasons for Wall Street's optimism, and what could also disrupt the bullish thesis.

Hopper, Blackwell, Rubin, and the software to tie it together

Nvidia's rise is sure to garner a lot of skeptics. But the bulls have a compelling case that one, the AI revolution is real, and will only grow bigger in the years, and two, that Nvidia will continue to dominate the space, generating not only growth but maintaining its super-high margins.

There have been several bullish predictions on both fronts in recent weeks. At its own recent AI event, Advanced Micro Devices (NASDAQ: AMD) CEO Lisa Su predicted the AI data center chip market will reach $500 billion by 2028, up from just $45 billion in 2023. And recent Wall Street banks discovered that Nvidia's new Blackwell chip is now sold out for the next 12 months.

Two Wall Street sell side analysts also just weighed in with very high price targets. Back in June, boutique firm Rosenblatt increased its price target on shares from $140 to $200. That $200 price target is the highest on the street, and just a hair shy of a $5 trillion market cap. Of note, Wall Street analysts usually give price targets based on what they believe the stock will do in the next year.

Rosenblatt's analysts upped their target after being encouraged by Nvidia's new Blackwell chip, which is just being shipped now. And the analysts see the demand continuing with the launch of Rubin, which will probably come out at the end of 2025 or beginning of 2026. Of note, Nvidia announced last year it would be increasing the pace of new chip architectures every year, versus a prior two-year cadence.

But Nvidia can't just hit $5 trillion by growing earnings; it also has to maintain a high multiple to get there. That's where Rosenblatt sees Nvidia's non-chip offerings helping. Remember, Nvidia isn't just a chip provider, but increasingly a full system solutions provider, providing networking infrastructure and full data center server system reference designs. It also has newer software offerings that help developers use and improve its hardware to specific AI outcomes.

Software earnings, with their recurring, subscription-like nature, generally garner a higher valuation that chip earnings, which can be more cyclical. As the AI industry matures, Rosenblatt sees Nvidia's mix of software revenue increasing, keeping its P/E ratio high.