Nvidia faces mounting complications in its efforts to penetrate the Chinese market with advanced artificial-intelligence semiconductors, though the Street’s conviction in the chipmaker remains unshaken.
The Santa Clara-based company finds itself mired in regulatory uncertainty over its H200 chip sales to Chinese enterprises—a predicament that puts approximately $30 billion in potential fiscal 2025 revenue at risk as management awaits clarity from Beijing on whether the transactions will receive approval.
Supply chain partners manufacturing Nvidia’s China-specific H200 processors have suspended production following a decision by customs authorities to block hardware shipments, according to weekend reporting from the Financial Times. Nvidia had not issued a statement on the matter as of Monday morning.
The latest China setback compounds Nvidia’s ongoing valuation stagnation. Shares trade near $186, effectively flat since August despite robust top-line expansion forecasts for the current fiscal year. Market participants have rotated capital toward alternative AI exposure, notably Alphabet —whose tensor processing units compete directly with Nvidia’s accelerators—and memory semiconductor manufacturers including Micron Technology.
Nevertheless, sell-side analysts remain constructive on Nvidia’s prospects. Jefferies’ Blayne Curtis elevated his price objective to $275 from $250 last week, while RBC’s Srini Pajjuri launched coverage with an Outperform rating and $240 target.
“Relative to peer Magnificent Seven constituents, Nvidia commands a 15% valuation discount despite superior growth trajectories and margin profiles,” Pajjuri noted in his initiation report. Consensus targets cluster around $260 per FactSet data. The stock’s forward price-to-earnings multiple sits below 25x—at the lower bound of its three-year 20x-60x range, according to RBC’s analysis.