The most recent news causing NVDA stock to slide comes from rumblings that the Trump administration may impose export restrictions on the company’s chips to China. This is in response to DeepSeek, an open-source large language model (LLM) that China reportedly developed for approximately $6 million.
Investors Sell the News, But the Question Is Why?
Investors sold heavily on the news, and the knee-jerk explanation was that companies would curb spending on AI infrastructure and start using the less-expensive open-source model.
There are several reasons to debate that. First, since DeepSeek hit the scene, many analysts have already pointed to the limitations and biases embedded in DeepSeek. They also note that it’s likely that the Chinese LLM used a significant amount of NVIDIA GPUs in its creation.
NVIDIA still trades at over 44x forward earnings and has a price-to-sales ratio of over 49x. There’s no question that even with this pullback, investors continue to pay a premium to own the stock.
Why NVIDIA GPUs Will Remain in Demand
However, there are times when a stock is worthy of its premium price tag. And that appears to be the case with NVDA stock. The company launched its Blackwell chip and reports excess demand despite being at 100% capacity.
This quest for innovation is the real driver for AI spending, not in maintaining the status quo. To do that, the industry will continue to need hardware. And NVIDIA remains the clear leader in that area.
Analysts to the Rescue
The NVDA Chart Signals Choppy Price Action
Traders can’t help but notice that NVDA stock recently slipped below its 200-day simple moving average (SMA). Technical analysis isn’t a perfect indicator, but this is almost always a bearish indicator that suggests the long-term direction of the stock has changed.
If the stock continues to go lower, how low could it go? The charts suggest that if the breach of the 200-day moving average holds, the stock could reach its September 2024 low of around $103.
Investors should expect price action to be choppy before the company’s earnings report in February. It’s unlikely that institutional investors will want to plant their flag in one camp or another. However, this could work to the benefit of retail investors who are convinced to buy this dip.
The article "NVIDIA's Slide Continues: Can Retail Investors Stop the Fall?" first appeared on MarketBeat.
© 2026 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.
To add Benzinga News as your preferred source on Google, click here.
