Nvidia’s push past a $5 trillion market cap capped a broader revival in chip shares, as investors rushed back into the AI trade after Intel posted better-than-expected earnings and logged its best day since 1987. The stock rose 4.3 percent to $208.27, its first record close since October, while AMD jumped 14 percent and Qualcomm climbed 11 percent.
That rally landed against a softer macro backdrop, with Wall Street’s recent highs coming under pressure from renewed Iran-war fears and firmer oil prices. At the same time, gold was at session highs after the University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment reading edged up to 49.8 and one-year inflation expectations eased to 4.7 percent, a reminder that confidence and inflation angst are moving in different directions.
For chipmakers, the immediate effect is obvious: money is rotating back into the suppliers closest to AI spending, just as next week’s earnings from the hyperscalers arrive. Nvidia still faces competition, though, after Alphabet unveiled new chips aimed at cloud customers later this year, and that could test whether the latest surge broadens beyond one strong session.
The next tell will be whether hyperscaler results and guidance confirm that AI infrastructure demand is still accelerating, or whether the rally stalls once investors have fresh numbers to price against the record run-up. If those reports disappoint, the trade that just carried Nvidia through $5 trillion could cool almost as fast as it heated up.