Weekend Herald

The AI company that is boosting your KiwiSaver

- Liam Dann Brought to you by Pie Funds The Market Watch video show is produced in associatio­n with Pie Funds.

Nvidia, the smart computer chip company with the funny name, is growing at a pace that could see it become the world’s largest company in the next year.

It’s also one of a handful of stocks lifting sharemarke­ts and keeping our KiwiSaver funds looking good this year.

But that raises the risk that we might all be exposed if it heads into bubble territory — and if it pops.

“Nvidia’s results are breathtaki­ng,” Pie Funds chief investment officer Mike Taylor says.

“It’s something that I haven’t seen very often in my investing career, particular­ly at that scale. We’ve got a company that was earning US$5 billion in revenue per quarter now earning US$22 billion per quarter.”

Most of that was coming from Nvidia chips that were being put into data centres to power AI language learning models.

“If you think about it in terms of a gold rush, they are the picks and shovels, you can’t mine your gold without a pick or a shovel, you can’t run your AI without a chip.”

Nvidia’s market share of AI chips is estimated to be somewhere between

85 and 90 per cent, he said.

“So they control the market.” So will it all crash and burn?

So far, Nvidia’s earnings growth has matched the investor hype, Taylor said.

“If you think about where Nvidia was trading a year ago, or even the lows of the market at the end of 2022, it was on an earnings multiple about

30 times and today, despite the price going up considerab­ly over this period, it’s still only trading about 30 times.”

Typically with a stock market bubble, you see earnings going up, but you also get the price people are paying for those earnings significan­tly expanding, he said.

“For example, the dot.com bubble, when things were really crazy, it was not unheard of to see companies trading at 100 times [price to earnings], or companies with no revenue at all trading at huge valuations,” Taylor said.

“So this particular cycle still feels a little bit in its infancy.”

The risk for Nvidia was that it didn’t operate as a software service model, with ongoing licensing fees. Chips were hardware and while they were expensive, once they were in place they were good for a decent period of time, he said.

“So at some point, these sales will hit a wall.”

Nvidia had already been through a number of cycles since being listed, including the gaming boom and the cryptocurr­ency boom, he said.

The good news for the world was that AI as a technology should be very deflationa­ry, Taylor said.

“There’s all the signs that it will be for the world and for productivi­ty.”

“If that plays out over the next couple of years, then that should be a nice tailwind to bring inflation down and keep it down.

“And if that’s the case, then we can start to see these interest rates come down from levels that we know are restrictiv­e on the economy, particular­ly, places like New Zealand and Australia.”

That, of course, would be good news for markets.

 ?? Photo / AP ?? “Nvidia’s results are breathtaki­ng.”
Photo / AP “Nvidia’s results are breathtaki­ng.”

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