Nvidia’s $26.64 Billion Volume Tops Market as AI Momentum Faces Rising Rivals
Nvidia (NVDA) closed on Sept. 9 with a 1.46% gain, trading with a daily volume of $26.64 billion, the highest in the market. The stock has rebounded 25% year-to-date despite a 7% decline since its Aug. 27 earnings report, driven by sustained demand for its AI infrastructure and Blackwell GPU architecture.
Citi analyst Atif Malik downgraded his price target for NvidiaNVDA-- to $200 from $210, citing emerging competitive pressures. The firm highlighted that rivals like BroadcomAVGO-- are gaining traction with custom accelerators, which could erode Nvidia’s dominance in the AI compute market. While Nvidia’s Q2 earnings beat estimates and revenue rose 56% year-over-year, data center revenue fell short of expectations for the second consecutive quarter. CitiC-- projected a 5% reduction in 2026 GPU sales forecasts, factoring in potential market share losses to rivals and slower adoption of new platforms.
A strategic partnership between Nvidia-backed NebiusNBIS-- and MicrosoftMSFT-- further underscored the company’s ecosystem influence. Nebius secured a $17.4 billion AI infrastructure deal with Microsoft, leveraging access to Nvidia’s GB200 and GB300 GPU instances. The agreement, which could expand to $19.4 billion, reinforces Nvidia’s role in enabling hyperscale cloud providers. Nebius’s shares surged over 40% post-announcement, reflecting confidence in its position within Nvidia’s AI infrastructure strategy.
To run this back-test robustly, I need to pin down a few practical details: market universeUPC-- (e.g., U.S.-listed stocks), rebalancing mechanicsMCHB-- (e.g., top-500 by volume), treatment of corporate actions, and transaction costs (e.g., 2 bps per trade). Once these parameters are confirmed, the back-test will evaluate performance from Jan. 3, 2022, to the present.


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