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Nvidia Hits $4 Trillion Valuation Becoming World’s Most Valuable Public Company

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Nvidia has become the first public company in history to reach a $4 trillion market valuation, cementing its dominance in the AI race and taking the top spot on Wall Street.

Shares in the semiconductor giant rose 2.5% on Wednesday to a record $164, propelling it past tech rivals Apple and Microsoft and setting a new benchmark for investor confidence in artificial intelligence. Nvidia now carries the highest weight on the S&P 500 index at 7.3%, ahead of Apple (7%) and Microsoft (6%).

From Graphics to Global Powerhouse

The company’s rise has been nothing short of meteoric. Once known for powering gaming PCs, then riding the crypto mining wave, Nvidia is now the undisputed backbone of AI infrastructure — its high-performance chips powering everything from ChatGPT to data centres and autonomous vehicles.

“It started out as a gaming chipmaker, then a crypto chipmaker, and now it’s a chipmaker for artificial intelligence computing power,” said Art Hogan, chief market strategist at B Riley Wealth. “It is a clear early winner of artificial intelligence.”

Nvidia first crossed the $1 trillion threshold in June 2023. It has since tripled its value in just over a year — a pace that outstrips even Apple and Microsoft’s historic runs.

Its $4 trillion valuation is now larger than the entire value of all listed companies in the UK and surpasses the combined market capitalisations of Canada and Mexico.

AI Optimism Overcomes Global Jitters

The latest surge in Nvidia stock comes despite a rocky start to 2025. In April, markets were rattled by the emergence of a Chinese-made discount AI model from DeepSeek and renewed global trade tensions sparked by former U.S. President Donald Trump’s tariff threats.

But Nvidia rebounded strongly — up 74% from its April lows — as optimism returned around U.S. trade deals and the AI boom continued unabated. So far this year, the stock is up more than 22%, outpacing the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index, which has gained just under 15%.

Market sentiment has also been buoyed by strong financials. Nvidia reported first-quarter revenue of $44.1 billion — up 69% year-on-year — with earnings of 81 cents per share. It expects second-quarter revenue to come in around $45 billion, and investors will be watching closely when it reports on 27 August.

Still Room to Grow?

Despite its astronomical rise, analysts suggest Nvidia may still be undervalued relative to its future earnings potential. The company is trading at a forward price-to-earnings ratio of 32 — lower than its three-year average of 37, according to LSEG data.

Meanwhile, its AI-fuelled growth is increasingly being seen as strategic infrastructure. The company’s influence spans not only big tech, but defence, finance, and even geopolitics — making it a key player in the shifting global tech landscape.

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