Today: 2 July 2026
NVIDIA Corporation (NASDAQ:NVDA) stock tests $200 as chip selloff shifts to AI capacity risk

NVIDIA Corporation (NASDAQ:NVDA) stock tests $200 as chip selloff shifts to AI capacity risk

New York, July 2, 2026, 04:20 EDT

  • NVIDIA Corporation closed at $197.58 on Wednesday, down 1.25%, and was quoted at $195.50 in early premarket trade.
  • The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index fell 6.3%, making Nvidia’s smaller drop look defensive, but the stock again failed to hold $200.
  • Meta Platforms cloud-capacity plans and Nvidia’s new nuclear-data-center tie-up put two investor worries on the same tape: AI demand and AI power supply.

NVIDIA Corporation is starting Thursday with a cleaner test than most chip stocks: the stock is below $200, but it did not fall like the rest of the semiconductor tape. Nvidia closed Wednesday at $197.58, down $2.51, or 1.25%, after touching $193.45. It was quoted at $195.50 at 4:07 a.m. EDT in premarket trade.

The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index ended Wednesday down 6.3%, while the Nasdaq Composite lost 0.66% and the S&P 500 fell 0.22%. Meta Platforms rose 8.8% after a report that it is building a cloud business to sell excess AI computing capacity.

InstrumentLatest move citedPrice/level citedWhy it matters
NVIDIA Corporation -1.25% Wednesday close$197.58Back under $200 after one close above it
Nvidia premarket-1.05% at 4:07 a.m. EDT$195.50Early sellers still pressing the level
Philadelphia Semiconductor Index-6.3% Wednesday closeSector selloff was far deeper than Nvidia’s drop
Nasdaq Composite-0.66% Wednesday close26,040.03Megacap tech limited the index fall

At Nvidia’s current market value of about $4.82 trillion, each $1 move in the stock is equal to roughly $24.4 billion of equity value. Wednesday’s $2.51 drop therefore erased about $61 billion on paper, even though Nvidia outperformed the chip index by about five percentage points.

Nasdaq’s regular session is due to open at 9:30 a.m. EDT. The exchange lists July 3, 2026 as a closed U.S. market holiday for Independence Day observed, with premarket trading normally running from 4:00 a.m. to 9:30 a.m. EDT.

The $200 line now matters because Nvidia has traded around it for seven straight sessions. It closed at $208.65 on June 22, fell to $192.53 by June 26, got back to $200.09 on June 30, then lost the level again on July 1. The June 29 low of $189.80 is the next recent daily low on that short chart.

Paul Meeks, head of technology research at Freedom Capital Markets, called Nvidia a “screaming buy” in comments cited by Barron’s, and wrote that skeptics had “exaggerated the threats to its GPU franchise.” Barron’s also cited the stock’s struggle to keep a floor around $200 after a recent selloff. Barron’s

The bear case got a fresh data point from Meta. Reuters reported that Meta is building a cloud business to sell excess AI computing capacity, citing Bloomberg News. Gil Luria, managing director of D.A. Davidson, said the effect would likely fall more on neocloud firms than on big hyperscalers: “Those companies like CoreWeave and Nebius rely on Meta for their growth and Meta may not need them anymore.” Reuters

For Nvidia, the read-through is narrower. A customer looking to sell spare capacity does not by itself prove lower chip demand. It does show investors are now willing to mark down AI hardware names on any sign that data-center supply could catch up with demand faster than expected.

Nvidia also put out a different kind of answer to the AI-capacity concern. Valar Atomics said Wednesday it is partnering with Nvidia to develop a small Utah data center powered by a nuclear microreactor. The companies said it was the first time a small reactor powered a data center, and Nvidia said its DSX closed-loop liquid cooling could cut facility-cooling water use from about 2.6 million gallons per megawatt per year to near zero. Nvidia global vice president John Josephakis said the work explores how “waterless advanced nuclear systems” could support future AI factories. Reuters

Investor questionFresh evidenceStock-market read
Is AI demand still clean?Meta may sell excess AI capacityTraders question capex discipline
Can Nvidia hold premium valuation?Stock below $200, P/E near 30Price action is testing conviction
Can data centers get enough power and water?Valar-Nvidia nuclear demo, DSX cooling claimInfrastructure risk becomes part of the Nvidia trade
Is the business still growing fast?Q1 revenue rose 85% year over yearFundamentals still set a high bar

The fundamental base is still large. Nvidia reported first-quarter fiscal 2027 revenue of $81.6 billion, up 85% from a year earlier, and data-center revenue of $75.2 billion, up 92%. The company guided second-quarter revenue to $91.0 billion, plus or minus 2%, and approved an added $80.0 billion share repurchase authorization. Chief Executive Jensen Huang called the AI factory buildout “the largest infrastructure expansion in human history.” NVIDIA Newsroom

The Thursday setup is tight: a stock with $91 billion of quarterly revenue guidance is being traded against a round number, a chip-index rout, and a new worry that some AI buyers may already have capacity to resell.

Michał Rogucki is a senior markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and macroeconomic developments. A graduate of Humboldt University of Berlin, he previously worked in investment research and market analysis before transitioning to financial journalism. He covers the trends and events that matter most to investors worldwide.

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