NVIDIA made headlines at Computex with its biggest announcement, but that might not be the most important news for investors. Shares dropped 1.4% in premarket trading on Friday, wiping out earlier gains from the week after the RTX Spark PC chip was revealed. Investors are waiting to see if consumers will pay higher prices for AI-powered personal devices. Meanwhile, some of the more important updates from the conference have gone mostly unnoticed. Here’s what investors should pay attention to.
The RTX Spark, Nvidia’s new processor for consumer PCs designed to run AI agents directly on the device, generated significant media coverage at Computex in Taiwan. It is an unproven market, however, and the stock’s inability to hold its early-week gains reflects that skepticism. Consumers have yet to demonstrate a clear willingness to pay up for on-device AI capability at the premium price points Nvidia’s hardware will require.
A more important update from Computex is that Nvidia’s next-generation Vera Rubin AI hardware is set to start mass production, with large shipments expected in the third quarter. The new stand-alone Vera CPU also gives Nvidia access to a much bigger market beyond just data center GPUs. Morgan Stanley kept its Overweight rating and $288 price target, saying Computex was another positive step for the stock. They believe the risk and reward in the semiconductor sector is looking better, even though many investors are already involved.
NVIDIA’s forward price-to-earnings ratio is now about 21.7, down from around 26 earlier this year when the stock was seen as undervalued. This lower ratio could make the stock more attractive for investors who are willing to wait for Vera Rubin’s sales to boost revenue.