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Blammar | 1 year ago

NVDA's forward PE is ~37, about what it has been for the past ~5 years I've been tracking that. So it's not overpriced based on that metric.

If you're convinced the stock is that overvalued, go short some or, if you like to live dangerously, buy some long-term put options (don't be an idiot and buy short-term options.)

I have no idea if NVDA is like Cisco Systems in 2000, or if it's something unique. What I am aware of is that there's around 5-7 trillion that were moved from stocks to t-bills since the Fed raised rates in March 2022. If and when they drop their rates back to the historical ~2.5%, it's reasonable to predict these funds will go back into stocks, which will presumably drive up prices.

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TheAlchemist|1 year ago

That's exactly what I'm saying below - PE is still very high, hence projecting the past growth into the future. But the scale changed a bit. A 37 PE ratio is extremely high by historical standards - this was reserved for very promising, small startups. Not for 2T companies. I know this got distorted in the past 15 years by abnormally low interest rates, but sooner or later it will come back to something that makes sense.

Buying long-term put options on Nvidia now is extremely expensive - the stock was so volatile that the price you pay for those options almost annihilate any gains you could expect, even if the stock losses 50% in 12 months.

You got me curious about those 5-7 trillions. Where these numbers come from ?

solumunus|1 year ago

People need to stop focusing on “historical standards”. For better or worse, retail entering the market en masse (often with options trading) has created a new standard. The market over the last 10 years is the new normal, the smart people have worked this out and are making huge returns. TSLA at its peak had a WAY higher PE than NVDA does now, and NVDA is just as popular, with even stronger fundamentals.

rytill|1 year ago

Then be the options seller. You can sell cash secured puts, or a put credit spread, or a call credit spread. Calls are even more expensive than puts right now.

fspeech|1 year ago

"What I am aware of is that there's around 5-7 trillion that were moved from stocks to t-bills since the Fed raised rates in March 2022."

This doesn't make much financial sense. Since every T-Bill is held by someone the amount of T-Bill outstanding is completely determined by government issuance. And since the amount of T-Bill outstanding will only grow over time, no "money" will ever flow out of it. Now if you narrow you inclusion of T-Bill holders to a specific group of people the amount this group holds could certainly go up and down over time. But then I wonder how you know this group sold stocks to buy T-Bills, and why this is more significant than the action of their counterparties: every share they sold was bought by someone else after all.

dkrich|1 year ago

We are at a very unique time. The stock market has basically been in a bull market for 15 years with some very short-lived sell-offs along the way. During that time we've had some incredible innovations such as the iPhone, FANG stock dominance and unprecedented profitability for years.

You've also had three or four bona fide bubbles in that span, starting around 2017. First was Bitcoin along with the stock market as a whole (with Nvidia being one of the leading stocks of that bull market advance).

Then you had Tesla go parabolic and lots of people become rich. Then you had the whole post-COVID speculative mania.

The result of this has been extreme credulity by the average person. Today's keynote is the perfect summation of this phenomenon. I saw multiple people who almost certainly couldn't explain in any level of detail how Nvidia GPUs are used for training and inference, but rather rely on the secondhand talking points like CUDA that they've learned by watching Jim Cramer, watching this keynote with excitement and anticipating how much it would pump their shares or call options.

Contrast this with Steve Jobs keynotes from 15 years ago when Apple's best days were well ahead of them. Most keynotes were questioned, in some cases even mocked. When Tesla stock broke out, many people couldn't make sense of it. Ditto for cryptocurrencies. But now, taking their cues from those cycles, the average person wants to ride the next bubble to riches and is trying to catch the wave and so now believes every story attached to a rising asset price.

CEO's aren't blind to this and are using every opportunity to create favorable storylines. The leadup to a keynote like this carries with it an enormous amount of pressure to deliver. Hence a company like Nvidia leaning into generative artwork and straight up made up storylines like robot development.

At the end of the day, I'm afraid that there likely isn't all that much substance and the evidence is beginning to pile up that the megacap tech stocks have run out of ideas which is why they are laying off people en masse and appealing to the AI hype cycle to carry their stocks higher.

Consider that Nvidia has gone up 8x- 800%!- in just over a year. The cycles are moving faster and faster. I remember just a year ago when lots of people said Nvidia at $250 was insane. Now here we are with the stock at more than three times that level and most people are calling it cheap. The stock market seems to have in certain areas like semis, completely disconnected from the fundamentals and taken flight. Yes, Nvidia earnings have grown. But understand that this is all part of a positive feedback loop where tech CEO's are pressured by their competitors and shareholders to show that they are investing in AI. Thus they all talk about it on their earnings calls and spend massively. All of their stocks rise in unison as you have a market that increasingly looks like its chasing momentum stock trends up. Nvidia's moves of late have almost nothing to do with any fundamental developments in the company. It has been routinely trading upwards of $45 billion a day. The Friday before last that number was over $100 billion. These are absolutely insane figures. Compare that to Microsoft, the largest company by market cap in the world, which trades on average around $8 billion per day.

I think this is generally how bull markets end and I think we may be actually forming the top of the great bull market for the megacaps that began around 2010 but really hit its stride starting in 2017.

svnt|1 year ago

I’ll buy the credulity problem, and agree there is considerable risk in NVDA’s market position.

However they went up 8x because (neglecting crypto) they overnight transitioned from providing accessories to PC gamers and high end engineering workstations (both increasingly niche markets with tapering growth or decline) to being for the moment the only substrate of an entirely new consumer product segment that has seen the most rapid adoption of any new technology in the history of the world.

This could be the way things work now: the time constants shrink as the pipeline efficiency increases.

55555|1 year ago

Good post, thanks.