US Stock Market News | Goldman Sachs Concerned about AI Industry Valuation, Nvidia Drops 3% Temporarily

Zhitong
2024.07.11 14:47
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On Wednesday, NVIDIA's stock price fell by 3% at one point, but as of the time of publication, the stock's decline has narrowed to less than 2%, trading at $132.22. Other chip stocks followed suit, with TSMC falling by over 1.3%, Qualcomm by over 1.7%, and Broadcom by nearly 2%. Goldman Sachs strategist Ryan Hammond's team stated in a recent report that internet giants such as Amazon, Meta Platforms, Microsoft, and Google-C have spent approximately $357 billion on capital expenditures and research and development in the past year, with a "significant portion" of these expenditures allocated to artificial intelligence, accounting for nearly a quarter of the S&P 500's total capital and R&D expenditures. Goldman Sachs warned that today's mega-cap companies will ultimately be required to prove that their investments can generate revenue and profit. A lack of profitability could lead to a devaluation of their valuations

According to the financial news app Zhitong Finance, on Wednesday, the stock price of NVIDIA (NVDA.US) fell by 3% at one point. As of the time of writing, the stock has narrowed its decline to less than 2%, trading at $132.22. Other chip stocks also followed suit with declines, such as TSMC (TSM.US) dropping over 1.3%, Qualcomm (QCOM.US) falling over 1.7%, and Broadcom (AVGO.US) declining by nearly 2%.

Goldman Sachs strategist Ryan Hammond's team stated in a recent report that tech giants including Amazon (AMZN.US), Meta Platforms (META.US), Microsoft (MSFT.US), and Google parent company Alphabet (GOOG.US) have spent approximately $357 billion on capital expenditures and research and development in the past year. A "significant portion" of these expenditures were allocated to artificial intelligence, accounting for nearly a quarter of the total capital expenditures and R&D spending of the S&P 500 index (.SPX.US).

Goldman Sachs warned that today's mega-cap companies will ultimately be required to prove that their investments can generate revenue and profits. Failure to demonstrate signs of profitability could lead to a devaluation of their valuations