Nvidia May Lose Its Crown: Apple Approaches in Market Value
The competition for the title of the world's most valuable company has intensified once again. Nvidia, which comfortably held the position during the AI rally, saw its market value drop from $5.5 trillion in mid-May to about $4.91 trillion this week. Hot on its heels, Apple stands at $4.88 trillion. The difference between the two is less than 1%.
This movement is not random. June marked a significant reversal in the American markets: the Nasdaq ended the month down 3%, while the S&P 500 fell 1%. The technology sector, especially stocks more closely associated with the AI thesis, led the losses. Nvidia dropped more than 2% in a recent session, trading at $203.07.
What lies behind this movement is something experienced investors know well: the thesis hasn't died, but prices ran too fast. And when that happens, the gravity of valuation does its work.
To understand the decline, one must look at the context. The tech rally began back in April, driven by robust quarterly results and the corporate rush to invest in AI infrastructure. Nvidia was the big beneficiary, with its GPUs dominating the data center market for training language models.
The problem is that, after consecutive weeks of appreciation, the multiples became stretched. The market's assessment became that, even with solid fundamentals, prices were already reflecting overly optimistic scenarios. This opened the door for profit-taking, especially among institutional investors who had accumulated heavy positions in previous months.
The loss of $600 billion in market value since the peak in May illustrates the magnitude of this correction. For comparison, this amount is more than twice the market value of Petrobras. As we discussed in our coverage of the global financial market, corrections of this nature are common in cycles of sectoral euphoria.
While Nvidia declines, Apple benefits from a classic phenomenon: sector rotation. Investors who sold positions in AI stocks redirected some of those funds to technology companies with a more defensive profile. Apple, with its predictable cash flow and installed base of over a billion devices, fits this profile perfectly.
The iPhone maker has also made relevant strategic moves. It recently announced a deal worth over $30 billion with Broadcom for chip purchases, along with plans to expand a Broadcom factory in Colorado. The message to the market is clear: Apple is heavily investing in its semiconductor supply chain, reducing dependence and gaining efficiency.
This type of investment in proprietary infrastructure is what differentiates companies that ride trends from those that build durable competitive advantages. Apple has proven in the past, with the transition from Intel chips to Apple Silicon, that it can internalize critical capabilities and generate value through hardware innovation.
The short answer: it’s not over. What is happening is a natural adjustment of expectations. The generative AI market continues to grow. The demand for GPUs for data centers remains high. Hyperscalers like Microsoft, Google, and Amazon continue to expand their investments in AI infrastructure, with combined capex expected to exceed $200 billion by 2025.
What has changed is investors' willingness to pay any price for this exposure. When Nvidia's stock reached $5.5 trillion in market capitalization, the market was pricing in an almost perfect scenario: accelerated revenue growth, expanding margins, and absolute dominance in the AI chip market. Any sign of deceleration, no matter how small, would be enough to trigger profit-taking.
It is important to note that this type of correction does not necessarily mean that Nvidia will cease to be a dominant company. Historically, as we have analyzed in our articles on market cycles, leaders of structural theses often experience corrections of 20% to 30% before resuming upward trends, as long as the fundamentals remain intact.
For those following the technology sector, some indicators deserve attention in the coming weeks. The first is the relative performance between Nvidia and Apple. If Apple surpasses Nvidia in market value, it will be a clear signal that sector rotation still has momentum.
The second point is the earnings calendar. The upcoming earnings season will be crucial for calibrating expectations around AI companies. Nvidia's revenue numbers and guidance will be the most important test. If the company delivers growth above expectations, the current correction may prove to be an opportunity. If it disappoints, selling pressure is likely to intensify.
The third factor is the macroeconomic environment. With American indices showing signs of fatigue after months of gains, the behavior of interest rates and the Federal Reserve's monetary policy will continue to influence risk appetite. Technology stocks, being long-duration assets, are particularly sensitive to changes in interest rate expectations.
What this competition between Nvidia and Apple reveals, at its core, is something larger: the market is reassessing how much the promise of artificial intelligence is worth in the short term, without necessarily abandoning the thesis in the long term. For investors, the lesson is the same as always. Fundamentals matter, but the price you pay for them matters even more.
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