Observing Nvidia’s stock move sideways is unsettling. Shares have been oscillating between $165 and $195 for months, failing to break through either the ceiling or the floor. It’s not what you would anticipate from a business that just became the first in history to have a market capitalization of more than $5 trillion.
You get the impression that something greater is simmering beneath the surface calm when you stand outside Nvidia’s Santa Clara headquarters—those recognizable triangle-shaped structures that Jensen Huang commissioned in 2013.
| Category | Details |
|---|---|
| Company Name | Nvidia Corporation |
| Founded | April 5, 1993 |
| Founders | Jensen Huang, Chris Malachowsky, Curtis Priem |
| Headquarters | Santa Clara, California |
| CEO | Jensen Huang |
| Market Capitalization | Over $5 trillion (2025) |
| GPU Market Share | 92% of discrete desktop/laptop market (Q1 2025) |
| AI Training GPU Share | 80%+ of market |
| Stock Symbol | NVDA (NASDAQ) |
| Industry | Technology, Semiconductors, AI Hardware |
| Key Products | GeForce GPUs, CUDA Platform, Tegra Mobile Processors |
| Recent Stock Range | $165 – $195 |
| Official Investor Relations | investor.nvidia.com |
In premarket trading on Thursday, the stock fell 0.8% to $180.65 as investors anxiously awaited the precarious two-week ceasefire between the United States and Iran. For what was, until recently, the market’s undisputed AI darling, it’s an odd position. The company that powers more than 75% of the world’s top supercomputers and holds 92% of the discrete GPU market shouldn’t be feeling this uneasy. However, here we are.
The narrative of Nvidia has always included a hint of desperation concealed by achievement. The company’s CEO since its founding, Jensen Huang, used to start internal presentations with the terrifying warning, “Our company is thirty days from going out of business.”

Even as the company’s revenue increased and it solidified its position as the foundation of contemporary computing, he continued to say this for years. Huang might have realized something that most executives overlook: dominance in the tech industry is always ephemeral and just one bad quarter away from oblivion.
The company’s beginnings resemble a darker-themed Silicon Valley fairy tale. Three engineers came together at a Denny’s restaurant on Berryessa Road in East San Jose towards the end of 1992 to sketch out their idea for graphics-based processing. At LSI Logic, Huang oversaw his own division. Priem and Malachowsky were dissatisfied with Sun Microsystems. They didn’t have to go. However, Priem resigned first, with effect from December 31, compelling the others to follow suit. By early 1993, they had $40,000 in the bank and were working together in Priem’s Fremont townhouse.
What came next was a near-death experience that ought to have ended the company’s existence. Just as Microsoft’s DirectX only used triangles, Nvidia‘s first product, the NV1, bet on quadrilateral primitives. The chip failed. Next came the Sega Dreamcast collaboration, which lasted for a year before Sega selected a different supplier. The business was losing both money and engineers.
Huang reduced the number of employees from 100 to 40 by laying off over half of the workforce. Nvidia had one month’s worth of payroll remaining when the RIVA 128 was introduced in August 1997.
Shoichiro Irimajiri, the president of Sega, had enough faith in Nvidia to invest $5 million, which Huang subsequently referred to as the “only thing that kept them alive.” In just four months, the RIVA 128 sold one million units. Irimajiri’s risk paid off handsomely. Sega sold its Nvidia stock for $15 million after he departed in 2000. Irimajiri may have seen something in Huang’s desperation that felt like conviction, but it’s still unclear if he realized what he’d saved.
In 2025, Nvidia rules in ways that were unthinkable just five years ago. Over 80% of the market for GPUs used to train and implement AI models is controlled by the company. After spending more than $1 billion on its CUDA software platform in the early 2000s, it became the industry standard for massively parallel computing. Gaming systems and artistic workstations are powered by GeForce GPUs.
Automobile infotainment systems are powered by Tegra processors. The Shield gaming products established a distinct market niche. Nvidia is more than just a large company. It’s crucial.
However, essential does not equate to immune. The recent investment in Marvell Technology is an intriguing sign that Nvidia is realizing that partners, not just products, are necessary to maintain its dominance and that data center connectivity needs to be strengthened. The news caused Marvell’s stock to soar. It was dubbed strategic by analysts. It seems as though Nvidia is erecting barriers around its empire in anticipation of obstacles that have not yet fully emerged.
More than most investors would like to acknowledge, geopolitical risks are important. There is more to the Iranian situation than just background noise. Supply chains for semiconductors will be disrupted if the cease-fire breaks. Plans to expand data centers have stalled. Suddenly, the $165 to $195 trading range appears more like a ceiling imposed by uncertainty than a consolidation. Global AI infrastructure is powered by Nvidia’s chips. Until it turns into a liability, that is an asset.
Nvidia is frequently referred to by Wall Street as one of the “Magnificent Seven”—Bloomberg’s term for the largest tech firms by market capitalization. However, momentum is not ensured by magnitude. Years ago, as Elon Musk made more audacious claims, Tesla was caught between believers and skeptics. Although Nvidia lacks Musk’s volatility, it does have something potentially more hazardous: expectations that might already be fully priced in.
Next year, Huang will turn 63. In Silicon Valley, where founders frequently resign or are fired, he has served as CEO for more than thirty years. No explicit succession plan has been disclosed to the public. Even though no one is publicly expressing it, you can’t help but wonder if investor worries about life after Huang are reflected in Nvidia’s stock stagnation.
The company’s rise from a sketch on a Denny’s napkin to a $5 trillion valuation is truly amazing. However, the upcoming chapter seems less certain. In its first five years, Nvidia avoided bankruptcy twice. It now faces a different kind of test: can a business founded on existential urgency continue to dominate when the threat is no longer survival but merely sustaining the unsustainable? The stock price indicates that the market is still undecided. I haven’t either.
