NEW YORK, March 13, 2026, 09:01 EDT
Nvidia stock hovered near $183 going into Friday, slipping 1.55% in the last session. Investors are now eyeing next week’s GTC developer conference as a possible catalyst, with the shares still searching for traction after their post-earnings stumble. Reuters
Timing’s crucial here. Chief Executive Jensen Huang has turned GTC into his go-to stage, and this year, the conference comes on the heels of a solid quarter. Still, shareholders aren’t letting up — they want answers on returns, rivals, and just how much more cash Nvidia will throw into the AI push. Reuters
Jacob Bourne, an analyst at EMarketer, says he’s looking for Nvidia to lay out a “full-stack roadmap update” and put more focus on inference—the process where trained AI models spit out answers—plus networking and the underlying infrastructure for AI agents, those software tools that handle tasks across different apps. Investors, according to Reuters, are also waiting to hear how Nvidia aims to integrate Groq’s rapid inference technology into CUDA, its main chip-programming platform. Reuters
The margin for missteps looks razor-thin as the week kicks off. Nvidia posted a 73% surge in quarterly revenue, hitting $68.1 billion on Feb. 25, and projected first-quarter sales of $78 billion—topping Wall Street’s expectations. Still, shares barely budged after hours, then dropped roughly 4% the following day, with investors zeroing in on management’s payout strategy and concerns over aggressive reinvestment. Mahoney Asset Management CEO Ken Mahoney described the quarter as “a good beat and raise,” but noted most of the upside seemed already baked into the price. NVIDIA Newsroom
Rivals are closing in. Meta’s rolling out its in-house chips, aiming for updates twice a year. Even so, Nvidia controls over 90% of today’s training and inference markets, according to Summit Insights Group managing director KinNgai Chan. But he notes: competition is “definitely going to see more competition compared to a year ago.” Reuters
Analysts are eyeing whether Nvidia will expand its narrative past just its well-known graphics chips. William McGonigle at Third Bridge points to CPUs — traditionally the territory of Intel and Advanced Micro Devices — calling them “back in focus” with AI now leaning into orchestration, that coordination layer for software agents. “With the rise of agentic AI, the bottleneck is now at the agent orchestration level, which is carried out by the CPUs,” he said. The Economic Times
Huang isn’t pulling back on spending to keep Nvidia in front. The company announced another $2 billion outlay this week, this time into AI cloud player Nebius. That follows a pair of $2 billion deals with optics firms Lumentum and Coherent—both supply the high-speed laser tech used to shuttle data between chips in sprawling data centers. As Huang put it, Nebius is building an AI cloud for what he calls the “agentic era.” Reuters
The market’s mood soured fast. Nasdaq stumbled 1.78% on Thursday, with oil prices pushing close to $100 a barrel after renewed fighting in the Middle East. That spike stoked inflation fears and dimmed the outlook for rate cuts from the Federal Reserve. Reuters
Nvidia bulls face a risk: GTC might just deliver another competent, but not especially exciting, update. Following last month’s earnings, Bourne pointed to a larger concern—Nvidia needs to defend its lead as Meta moves toward AMD and big cloud players roll out more of their own chips. If Huang fails to offer Wall Street a clearer roadmap from all this spending to stable profit growth, the shares could remain stuck where they are. Reuters