New York, June 12, 2026, 19:02 ET
Nvidia shares ended Friday flat, closing at $205.19, up just 0.16%. The stock moved between $203.44 and $207.07 during the session. Compared with the S&P 500’s 0.5% rise and the Nasdaq Composite’s 0.3% gain, Nvidia’s slight gain shows investors still weighing strong AI demand signals and a valuation that bakes in years of fast growth.
AI infrastructure funding helped the bull story Thursday. Reuters said a KKR group started Helix Digital Infrastructure with $10 billion in backing. Nvidia and Vistra are anchor investors; Nvidia will provide know-how on AI data centers, and Vistra is expected to supply power. Helix CEO Adam Selipsky, who ran AWS before, said, “Large users of digital infrastructure have an urgent need to reduce complexity and unlock new capacity.” This could matter for Nvidia shares, since AI chips only drive revenue when customers get data centers, power, and financing at scale. Reuters
Nvidia put out new performance data Friday, saying its Blackwell Ultra GB300 NVL72 platform topped the first AgentPerf benchmark from Artificial Analysis. The company said the platform can run up to 20 times more agents per megawatt than Nvidia Hopper. Agentic AI, as Nvidia describes it, covers AI that plans and executes tasks across different models and tools, not just single-prompt answers. Nvidia says the results back up its view that the AI cycle is moving away from training to actually running many AI agents at once, which could keep demand up for its high-margin data center products.
China is more complicated. Nvidia is pitching its Vera CPU to Chinese customers, Reuters said Friday, with availability as soon as August and orders now in the works. CPUs are not governed by the same rules or competition as the GPUs that drive most AI chips, so this could bring Nvidia some new revenue. But Nvidia’s H200 GPU shipments to China have stalled, Reuters also reported. CEO Jensen Huang has said the company’s China market share has dropped to almost zero. Sources told Reuters Vera could face adoption hurdles, including testing, software, and shifting customers off local chips.
Nvidia shares barely moved after the numbers, which tracks given the stock’s lofty levels. Nvidia posted fiscal Q1 revenue at a record $81.6 billion, up 85% from last year, with Data Center revenue at $75.2 billion. The company’s outlook is for about $91 billion in Q2 sales, expecting no Data Center compute revenue from China. By Friday’s close, Google Finance put Nvidia’s market cap around $4.97 trillion and showed a P/E of 31.42. P/E is price divided by earnings per share, a standard profit measure for investors.
Nvidia’s bulls see more upside from an already big revenue base, betting on fresh infrastructure plays, efficiency gains from Blackwell, and the Vera/Rubin pipeline putting more market within reach. S&P Global Ratings just bumped Nvidia up to AA from AA-. TipRanks lists 39 analysts with a Strong Buy on the stock and an average 12-month target of $311.41. Bears warn that the bar might be set too high. S&P points to Nvidia’s big TSMC dependency, risk of weaker AI spend if funding gets tight for customers, and power shortages that could slow down data-center builds.
Nvidia’s next catalyst is the June 24 online annual stockholder meeting, but investors are watching for management’s take and the next earnings to see if Blackwell, Vera and AI-factory demand line up with the $91 billion second-quarter revenue target. The numbers so far support Nvidia for those betting on bigger AI infrastructure spend. Still, this isn’t a low-risk entry: valuation, China concerns, supplier concentration and power issues all add to the risk if demand just slows even a little.