One of the most sought-after semiconductor behemoths, NVIDIA Corporation NVDA, recently flashed a bearish chart pattern amid regulatory headwinds. So, what’s next for NVIDIA investors? Do they sell the stock, or do they believe in NVIDIA’s inherent strength and hang on to it? Let’s find out.
Several chip stocks, including NVIDIA, suffered losses on Wednesday. The stock slipped 5.7% yesterday, while a death cross pattern emerged last week. This means NVIDIA’s short-term 50-day moving average (DMA) has dropped below its long-term 200 DMA, signaling a looming downtrend.
On Wednesday, the NVIDIA stock finished at $113.76, while the 50-DMA was $125.86 below the 200-DMA, which was $127.72. The last time NVIDIA stock faced a death cross was in April 2022, causing its shares to tank 50% over the next six months before hitting its lowest point in October 2022.
Technical Indicator & Overlays – NVIDIA
Image Source: Zacks Investment Research
The possibility of stricter regulations on NVIDIA’s chips in China hurt its shares. Compounding the decline was the U.S. government’s move to add several Chinese companies to a trade blacklist for national security reasons, adversely impacting NVIDIA’s sales.
Undeniably, regulators from China are discouraging its tech firms from buying NVIDIA’s H20 chips due to energy efficiency violations. However, sales of H20s are unaffected as rules are not strictly enforced, and NVIDIA intends to meet with regulators to address the issue.
Similarly, NVIDIA has successfully navigated U.S. regulatory challenges in the past and shown resilience to such issues. Anyhow, $100 is a strong support level for the NVIDIA stock. If it breaks below this, it could signal a long-term downward trend. NVIDIA had previously tested this level in August and September, only to rebound to an all-time high of $150.
In reality, insane demand for NVIDIA’s next-generation cutting-edge Blackwell chips and dominance in the graphic processing units (GPUs) market would drive its share price upward. Magnificent-7 stocks such as Alphabet Inc. GOOGL and Microsoft Corporation MSFT have chosen Blackwell chips due to their solid energy efficiency level and faster AI interface.
A market share of more than 80% in the discrete GPU space gives NVIDIA a competitive edge, and its CUDA software platform continues to gain prominence among developers over Advanced Micro Devices, Inc.’s AMD ROCm software platform.
Despite the current price fluctuations, NVIDIA remains a financially strong company. It saw its revenues climb 114% to $130 billion in fiscal 2025 (ended in January) and expects sales to jump 65% year over year in the first quarter.