We recently compiled a list of the 15 AI Stocks That Are Dominating Headlines. In this article, we are going to take a look at where NVIDIA Corporation (NASDAQ:NVDA) stands against the other AI stocks that are dominating headlines.
The European Union recently released the initial draft for the general-purpose AI code of practice under the AI Act, its comprehensive framework aimed at regulating artificial intelligence. This section of the AI Act, which became law earlier this year, specifically addresses general-purpose AI model providers, setting out standards and practices they must follow to ensure responsible AI development and deployment. Some of the AI models that will be impacted by regulations drafted as discussions on this draft progress include GPT models by OpenAI and Claude by Anthropic, among others. Meanwhile, London-based AI startup Tessl recently raised more than $125 million in a funding round led by prominent venture capital firms like Index Ventures, Accel, GV, and Boldstart. According to a report by TechCrunch, this has pushed the valuation of the startup to more than $500 million. The startup is building an AI native platform that developers and their teams can use to create and maintain software. The firm is still developing the product and plans to launch it in the open market by sometime next year. The basic idea behind the business is to help write code to match specifications set by developers and their teams, in natural language or code. For this article, we selected AI stocks by combing through news articles, stock analysis, and press releases. These stocks are also popular among hedge funds. Why are we interested in the stocks that hedge funds pile into? The reason is simple: our research has shown that we can outperform the market by imitating the top stock picks of the best hedge funds. Our quarterly newsletter’s strategy selects 14 small-cap and large-cap stocks every quarter and has returned 275% since May 2014, beating its benchmark by 150 percentage points.
NVIDIA Corporation (NASDAQ:NVDA) provides graphics, computing and networking solutions. On November 14, Raymond James analyst Srini Pajjuri raised the price target on the stock to $170 from $140 and kept a Strong Buy rating on the shares. Raymond James sees another strong quarter driven by healthy Hopper demand and early Blackwell ramps, but supply remains a wildcard and consensus has already moved higher, which could limit near-term upside, the advisory told investors in a research note. The advisory thinks $34 billion revenue for Q3 and $37 billion – $37.5 billion guidance is a more likely outcome, and says its base case is for Nvidia to ship roughly 100,000 Blackwell GPUs in Q4, near the low-end of expectations, though Blackwell ramps should accelerate in the first half of 2025 and see strong demand through 2025. Raymond James views any pullback due to high expectations as a buying opportunity.