Is It Too Late to Buy Nvidia and Broadcom? Here's What History Says.

Source Motley_fool

Key Points

  • Nvidia and Broadcom are still benefiting from robust AI-powered demand for compute capacity and networking components.

  • Historical valuation studies suggest investors can still overpay for great growth if expectations become too high.

  • Nvidia has built a broad AI stack, while Broadcom enjoys strong AI revenue visibility from large customer commitments.

  • 10 stocks we like better than Nvidia ›

Shares of Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) and Broadcom (NASDAQ: AVGO) have gained nearly 442% and 401% in the past three years. After such extraordinary gains, investors may wonder whether there is still enough upside potential left in these stocks or whether the artificial intelligence (AI) opportunity is already priced in.

Colleagues discussing in an office meeting.

Image source: Getty Images.

Will AI create the world's first trillionaire? Our team just released a report on the one little-known company, called an "Indispensable Monopoly" providing the critical technology Nvidia and Intel both need. Continue »

That question becomes harder because Nvidia and Broadcom are not rallying on hype alone. Nvidia's revenue rose 85% year over year to $81.6 billion in the first quarter of fiscal 2027 (ending April 26, 2026), while data center revenue rose 92% year over year to $75.2 billion. Broadcom also saw revenue rise 48% year over year to $22.2 billion in the fiscal 2026 Q2 (ending May 3, 2026).

So the question is not whether these are real AI winners. The question is whether future growth can still exceed the expectations already built into their stock prices. History offers a useful way to understand that risk.

History says valuation still matters

In their 1998 Journal of Finance paper, "Value versus Growth: The International Evidence," Eugene Fama and Kenneth French found that value stocks outperformed growth stocks in 12 of 13 major markets from 1975 to 1995. The global return spread between high and low book-to-market stocks was about 7.6 percentage points per year.

In another 2020 paper, "A Growth Adjusted Price-Earnings Ratio," Graham Baird, James Dodd, and Lawrence Middleton studied stocks listed on major U.S. stock exchanges from 1990 to 2015. The authors found that stocks with low growth-adjusted price-to-earnings (P/E) ratios outperformed stocks with high growth-adjusted P/E ratios in both absolute and risk-adjusted terms.

Together, these studies highlight that while growth matters, it should come at the right price. Investors can overpay even for companies with strong fundamentals if too many years of exceptional growth are already reflected in the stock. That is the real risk with Nvidia and Broadcom today.

Nvidia's growth prospects

Nvidia's top line is still growing at an impressive pace. Management is guiding for Q2 revenue in the range of $89.2 billion to $92.8 billion despite assuming no contribution from China data center compute business. Hence, even though restrictions in the Chinese market remain a real headwind, Nvidia expects Q2 revenue to grow year over year in the range of 91% to 98.7%.

Hyperscaler revenue grew 12% sequentially to $38 billion or roughly half of the total data center revenue in Q1. ACIE revenue, which includes AI clouds, industrial, and enterprise AI, grew 31% sequentially to $37 billion. Hence, beyond hyperscaler customers, Nvidia is also expanding its presence in AI-native clouds, enterprise AI factories, industrial use cases, and sovereign AI projects.

Networking is also emerging as a major growth catalyst. Nvidia's data center computing revenue grew 77% year over year to $60 billion in Q1. But data center networking revenue almost tripled year over year to $15 billion. Nvidia has positioned itself as a full-stack AI player, providing graphics processing units (GPUs), high-speed networking, software, and systems integration needed for AI infrastructure.

Nvidia is also developing new technologies to turn today's AI demand into a multigeneration upgrade cycle. Vera Rubin, Nvidia's next-generation CPU-GPU platform, is expected to start production shipments in the second half of calendar year 2026, beginning in Q3 of fiscal 2027. The company expects Vera, its next-generation central processing units (CPU) for agentic AI workloads, to open a new $200 billion addressable market. The company also has visibility to nearly $20 billion in CPU revenue in calendar year 2026. Nvidia also expects roughly $1 trillion in revenue from the sale of Blackwell and Rubin systems from 2025 through calendar 2027. That makes Nvidia's growth story less dependent on one GPU generation and more tied to a multiyear AI infrastructure cycle.

However, despite these tailwinds, Nvidia will likely need to consistently surpass analyst expectations in the earnings results to drive future share price growth.

Broadcom's growth strategy

Broadcom has become a key supplier of custom AI accelerators and AI networking chips for building AI infrastructure globally.

Broadcom is seeing solid traction not only in revenues but also in overall bookings. The company's AI semiconductor revenue was up 143% year over year to $10.8 billion, while AI semiconductor bookings reached over $30 billion at the end of Q2. This implies that customers are ordering well ahead of delivery.

Management now expects AI semiconductor revenue to grow about 180% year over year to $56 billion in fiscal 2026. The company also reiterated its fiscal 2027 AI semiconductor revenue guidance of over $100 billion and expects growth to continue even in fiscal 2028.

Large customer commitments back the revenue visibility. Alphabet's Google has entered into a long-term agreement with Broadcom to design and develop multiple generations of Tensor Processing Units (TPUs) and AI networking components. Anthropic, OpenAI, and Meta Platforms also have multigigawatt deployment plans with Broadcom that extend into 2027, 2028, and even 2029. With significant AI capacity already contracted, Broadcom is less dependent on the traditional semiconductor cycle than many chip companies.

Networking also accounted for almost 40% of Broadcom's AI revenue in Q2. Management expects networking revenue share to settle closer to 30% of AI revenue over time. However, the business is expected to grow in absolute terms as AI infrastructure becomes larger and more connectivity heavy.

Broadcom depends heavily on a small group of six core customers, exposing it to significant customer concentration risk. The company also trades at an elevated P/E multiple of over 81.8x, which is higher than its five-year average P/E multiple of 69.3x.

Against this backdrop, history does not say investors are automatically too late to buy Nvidia or Broadcom. It says they should be careful when high growth, high valuation, and high expectations arrive together.

Should you buy stock in Nvidia right now?

Before you buy stock in Nvidia, consider this:

The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the 10 best stocks for investors to buy now… and Nvidia wasn’t one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years.

Consider when Netflix made this list on December 17, 2004... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you’d have $443,191!* Or when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you’d have $1,258,838!*

Now, it’s worth noting Stock Advisor’s total average return is 941% — a market-crushing outperformance compared to 206% for the S&P 500. Don't miss the latest top 10 list, available with Stock Advisor, and join an investing community built by individual investors for individual investors.

See the 10 stocks »

*Stock Advisor returns as of June 8, 2026.

Manali Pradhan, CFA has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Alphabet, Broadcom, Meta Platforms, and Nvidia. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Disclaimer: For information purposes only. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
placeholder
Asian Currencies Steady Near Lows as Yen Hovering Near 160 Triggers Intervention WatchAsian markets stabilized following a sharp selloff, balanced by a fragile Middle East ceasefire and strong U.S. economic data that fueled expectations of prolonged high Federal Reserve interest rates.
Author  Mitrade Team
6 Month 04 Day Thu
Asian markets stabilized following a sharp selloff, balanced by a fragile Middle East ceasefire and strong U.S. economic data that fueled expectations of prolonged high Federal Reserve interest rates.
placeholder
Will the Tech Rally Continue? The Technical Verdict on the NASDAQ 100 Riding a massive 32% post-earnings wave, the Nasdaq-100 is showing its first signs of exhaustion. We break down crucial exit and entry rules for long positions this week.
Author  Mitrade Team
6 Month 05 Day Fri
Riding a massive 32% post-earnings wave, the Nasdaq-100 is showing its first signs of exhaustion. We break down crucial exit and entry rules for long positions this week.
placeholder
US Futures Edge Up Post-Rout Despite Iran-Israel Clash and Hawkish Fed RisksU.S. equity futures stabilized Sunday as tech shares attempted a recovery, though gains were capped by escalating Middle East hostilities and fears of prolonged Federal Reserve monetary tightening.
Author  Mitrade Team
14 hours ago
U.S. equity futures stabilized Sunday as tech shares attempted a recovery, though gains were capped by escalating Middle East hostilities and fears of prolonged Federal Reserve monetary tightening.
placeholder
Iran Missile Strikes Trigger Oil Surge as Middle East Ceasefire CollapsesOil prices jumped over 2% in Asian trade after Iran launched retaliatory missile strikes against Israel, threatening the Strait of Hormuz and erasing hopes for a lasting ceasefire.
Author  Mitrade Team
14 hours ago
Oil prices jumped over 2% in Asian trade after Iran launched retaliatory missile strikes against Israel, threatening the Strait of Hormuz and erasing hopes for a lasting ceasefire.
placeholder
OPEC+ Deepens Production Hikes as Hormuz Bottlenecks Stifle Actual SupplyOPEC+ core members will lift July oil quotas by 188,000 barrels per day, but geopolitical shipping constraints and the UAE’s exit keep actual global crude supplies tight.
Author  Mitrade Team
14 hours ago
OPEC+ core members will lift July oil quotas by 188,000 barrels per day, but geopolitical shipping constraints and the UAE’s exit keep actual global crude supplies tight.
goTop
quote