NVIDIA Corporation (NVDA) stock traded near $217 on Monday after earlier surging to a fresh all-time high of $223.75, extending its massive rally as investors reacted to reports surrounding the company’s next-generation AI chip production plans. The rally briefly pushed Nvidia’s market capitalization above $5.4 trillion, cementing its position as one of the world’s most valuable companies.
The latest move came after reports indicated Nvidia finalized production plans for its upcoming Vera Rubin AI chips alongside several original design manufacturing partners. Trial production reportedly begins in June, while large-scale shipments could start as early as July for major cloud computing companies.
That list includes some of the biggest technology firms in the world. Microsoft, Google, Amazon, Meta, and Oracle are all expected to receive shipments as demand for AI infrastructure continues accelerating.
Vera Rubin Chips Drive Fresh Optimism
Investors have aggressively piled into Nvidia shares throughout the AI boom, but the Vera Rubin launch has created a fresh wave of enthusiasm. Why does the new chip matter so much? Analysts believe it could strengthen Nvidia’s already dominant position in artificial intelligence computing.
The company currently leads the global market for high-performance AI GPUs used in training and operating advanced AI models. Major cloud providers continue spending billions to expand AI infrastructure, and Nvidia remains one of the biggest beneficiaries of that spending wave.
Reports that the company already secured production timelines and customer demand helped fuel Monday’s rally. The planned rollout also signals Nvidia’s confidence in maintaining its leadership as competition intensifies across the semiconductor industry.
The company’s collaboration with ODM manufacturing partners also suggests Nvidia continues strengthening its supply chain strategy after years of tight GPU availability during the AI surge.
Wall Street Keeps Rewarding AI Leaders
Nvidia’s stock performance continues to separate itself from the broader market. Shares have gained nearly 17% year-to-date, sharply outperforming the S&P 500’s 7.5% return over the same period.
The longer-term numbers look even more dramatic. Nvidia stock has climbed more than 77% over the past year and nearly 669% over the last three years. Over five years, shares have surged more than 1,480%, compared to roughly 81% for the S&P 500.
That rally reflects Nvidia’s transformation from a gaming-focused graphics chip company into the backbone of the global AI infrastructure race.
Data centers now represent a major growth engine for the company as cloud providers race to deploy advanced AI systems. Nvidia’s GPUs power many of the world’s leading AI models, including systems developed by OpenAI, Anthropic, Google, and Meta.
Record Valuation Sparks Debate
Nvidia’s latest rally has also revived questions about valuation. The company’s market capitalization now exceeds the combined value of many traditional industrial giants and financial institutions.
Can the momentum continue? Investors appear convinced that AI spending remains in its early stages. Large technology firms continue increasing capital expenditures tied to AI data centers, networking, and computing infrastructure.
At the same time, some analysts warn that expectations surrounding AI growth remain extremely high. Any slowdown in enterprise AI spending or supply chain disruptions could pressure semiconductor stocks that have benefited from the sector’s explosive growth.
Still, Nvidia continues delivering one of the strongest growth stories in global markets. The upcoming Vera Rubin launch now gives investors another major catalyst as the company pushes deeper into the next phase of the AI race.
For now, Wall Street’s message remains clear: Nvidia still sits at the center of the artificial intelligence boom.