Prediction: This Will Be Nvidia's Stock Price In One…
By Daniel Sparks – Apr 1, 2026 at 9:22PM EST
Key Points
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Nvidia’s fourth-quarter revenue surged 73% year over year, driven by intense demand for AI data center infrastructure.
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Management expects the company’s top line to hit $78 billion in the current quarter.
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Expanding earnings power could easily support a meaningful gain for the stock over the next 12 months even as its valuation multiple compresses.
Staggering momentum
The company’s latest financial update highlights why the market continues to reward the stock. Nvidia’s revenue in its fourth quarter of fiscal 2026 (a period that ended on Jan. 25, 2026) jumped 73% year over year to $68.1 billion.
This growth was driven primarily by its data center segment, which caters to clients building artificial intelligence (AI)-capable data centers. The segment generated a record $62.3 billion in revenue — up 75% year over year.
The sequential trend is just as telling. Total revenue rose 20% from the $57.0 billion Nvidia reported in fiscal Q3.
And profitability is moving higher right alongside sales. The company reported non-GAAP (adjusted) earnings per of $1.62 in fiscal Q4, up 82% year over year. Nvidia also maintained an impressive adjusted gross margin of 75.2% during the quarter.
This ability to defend pricing power while scaling production of its new Blackwell architecture underscores the strength of its dominant hardware ecosystem.
Further, management anticipates the company’s momentum will persist. Nvidia guided for fiscal first-quarter revenue of approximately $78.0 billion, signaling that we’re still in the early innings of this AI boom.
Putting the company’s extraordinary momentum into perspective, Nvidia chief financial officer Colette Kress noted in the company’s earnings call that Nvidia has expanded its data center business by nearly 13 times since fiscal 2023, attributing the ongoing momentum to a transition toward “agentic and physical AI applications […]”
The valuation multiple can fall even as the stock rises
This brings us to the stock’s valuation. Nvidia currently trades at a price-to-earnings ratio of about 36. But when looking at expected profits over the next four quarters, the stock’s forward price-to-earnings ratio drops to about 21.
This gap between the trailing and forward metrics sets up an interesting scenario. If the company simply meets Wall Street’s forward earnings estimates, the stock price could appreciate by 12% over the next year — pushing s to about $197 — while simultaneously leaving the stock with a significantly lower trailing price-to-earnings ratio 12 months from now than it has today.
In short, the underlying business possesses so much earnings momentum that the stock price can climb steadily even as the valuation multiple contracts.
Expand
NASDAQ: NVDA
Nvidia
Today’s Change
(0.77%) $1.35
Current Price
$175.75
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$4.3T
Day’s Range
$174.75 – $177.37
52wk Range
$86.62 – $212.19
Volume
168M
Avg Vol
181M
Gross Margin
71.07%
Dividend Yield
0.02%
Pricing in future risks
And a lower valuation multiple is exactly what investors should expect. By April 2027, the market will ly be looking ahead to fiscal 2028 and beyond. And it is highly ly that investors will demand a more conservative multiple as the current infrastructure build-out matures.
Historically, semiconductor companies operate in cyclical environments — and Nvidia is no exception. While the current artificial intelligence boom has defied traditional hardware cycles for several years, the market will naturally assign a lower price-to-earnings ratio to the stock as revenue growth rates inevitably decelerate at some point.
Additionally, hyperscalers cannot increase their capital expenditures at these extraordinary rates indefinitely.
Further, major cloud providers are actively developing their own custom silicon, and semiconductor competitors are launching alternative hardware solutions to capture a piece of the lucrative accelerated computing market.
In short, a contracting price-to-earnings ratio will ly eventually be necessary to price in these mounting competitive risks and cyclicality concerns.
But a shrinking multiple does not automatically mean a shrinking price. Nvidia’s operating margins are robust, and its near-term pipeline is extremely robust. I think the sheer volume of cash flowing to the bottom line provides plenty of structural support for the stock.
So, with all of this in mind, I believe a 12% gain over the next year is a plausible outcome for investors, putting my one-year forecast for the stock at about $197.
Ultimately, however, investors should keep in mind that Nvidia is a very high-risk stock. So my forecast should be taken with a grain of salt.
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About the Author
Daniel Sparks is a contributing Motley Fool stock market analyst covering technology, industrials, financials, and consumer goods. Daniel is the owner and chief investment officer of Sparks Capital Management. He holds a master’s degree in business administration from Colorado State University. The Globe and Mail profiled him and his investing philosophy in an article titled, “This stock picker is outperforming nearly everybody else. Here’s how he is doing it.”
Stocks Mentioned
Nvidia
NASDAQ: NVDA
$175.74
(+0.77%)+$1.34
*Average returns of all recommendations since inception. Cost basis and return based on previous market day close.
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