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Tech investors have had a volatile start to 2026, and artificial intelligence (AI) darling Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) hasn’t been spared. As of this writing, the semiconductor giant’s stock has fallen almost 5% year to date.
With shares taking a breather after an incredible multi-year run, investors might be wondering if this is a rare opportunity to buy the dip.
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Or is the market right to be cautious about a stock?
Looking at the company’s latest results, it’s hard to find much to complain about. The business is undeniably strong.
In its fourth quarter of fiscal 2026 (ended Jan. 25), Nvidia’s revenue was $68.1 billion, up 73% year over year. This top-line surge was fueled by the company’s crucial data center segment, where revenue jumped 75% from a year ago to a record $62.3 billion.
“Computing demand is growing exponentially — the agentic AI inflection point has arrived,” noted CEO Jensen Huang in the company’s earnings release.
The company’s massive revenue growth efficiently trickled down to the bottom line. Nvidia’s fourth-quarter earnings per share skyrocketed 98% year over year to $1.76.
And management is also putting its immense cash generation to work. During fiscal 2026, Nvidia returned $41.1 billion to shareholders through share repurchases and cash dividends. A buyback of this scale highlights management’s confidence and directly benefits shareholders by reducing the overall share count.
Even more, the company isn’t forecasting a slowdown anytime soon. Management guided for first-quarter fiscal 2027 revenue of approximately $78.0 billion, indicating sequential growth will persist. Even more, this guidance represents an acceleration, implying about 77% year-over-year growth, compared to the 73% growth the company reported in fiscal Q4.
The problem, however, lies in what the future might hold as the AI landscape matures.
The risk is not necessarily a sudden collapse in AI spending. It is rising competition and the potential for margin erosion over time as the competitive environment intensifies.
Hyperscalers like Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN), Alphabet, and Microsoft are spending heavily on Nvidia’s graphics processing units (GPUs) today, but they are also leaning increasingly on their own custom silicon solutions. These massive tech companies are some of Nvidia’s largest customers, but it makes sense for them to find ways to reduce their dependence on Nvidia over time. Alphabet, for example, has spent years deploying its Tensor Processing Units (TPUs), while Amazon continues to tout the cost-efficiency of its Trainium chips for training AI models.
Amazon specifically called out the need for cheaper AI computing chips during its earnings call, noting that it’s working to address the issue of high-priced chips directly.
“A significant impediment today is the cost of AI chips,” explained Amazon CEO Andy Jassy. “Customers are starving for better price performance […] and, understandably, the dominant early leaders aren’t in a hurry to make that happen. They have other priorities. It’s why we built our own custom silicon in training.”
This push for cheaper, custom alternatives could eventually pressure Nvidia’s pricing power.
But with shares trading at a price-to-earnings ratio of 36 as of this writing, Nvidia stock isn’t priced as if margins will erode over time. It’s priced as if the company remains the dominant leader with significant competitive advantages for the foreseeable future.
Of course, this isn’t an outlandish assumption, considering Nvidia’s extraordinary momentum.
Still, the risk of intensifying competition is one investors should consider carefully. If Nvidia is forced to compete more aggressively on price in the future to maintain its market share against these hyperscalers — who represent a massive concentration of its revenue base — margins could face severe pressure.
With this significant customer concentration risk and the potential for margin compression in mind, I’d be cautious at this price.
The company is fantastic, but the stock’s valuation demands continued dominance for not just the next few years, but for the next decade. For most investors, therefore, I think buying at this price doesn’t make sense. However, for investors who truly believe we are still in the early innings of the AI build-out and that Nvidia will maintain its iron grip on the market, this 5% pullback could be a reasonable opportunity to start a small position. But I’d keep any position size modest and recognize the risks involved.
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Daniel Sparks and his clients have no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Alphabet, Amazon, Microsoft, and Nvidia. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.
Nvidia Stock Has Fallen Almost 5% This Year. Is Now a Good Time to Buy? was originally published by The Motley Fool
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