Where Will Nvidia Stock Be in 3 Years?

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Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) stock has made investors significantly richer in the past three years, turning an investment of $1,000 into more than $4,500 as of this writing. This is thanks to the 354% jump in the company’s shares during this period, on account of its dominant position in the lucrative market for artificial intelligence (AI) chips.

It is worth noting that shares of the chipmaker have handsomely outperformed the Nasdaq Composite‘s (NASDAQINDEX: ^IXIC) gains of 23% in the past three years. Nvidia’s outstanding stock market returns have been powered by the terrific growth in its revenue and earnings, as customers and governments have been lining up to get their hands on its AI chips to train and deploy AI models.

Now that we are at the beginning of 2025, it would be a good time to take a closer look at Nvidia’s prospects for the next three years and see if this high-flying AI stock can continue delivering more upside to investors in the future as well.

The size of Nvidia’s business has grown immensely over the past three years. The company is on track to finish fiscal 2025 (which will end this month) with revenue of $128.6 billion (calculated by adding its fiscal Q4 revenue forecast of $37.5 billion to the $91.1 billion revenue it has generated in the first nine months of the year).

For comparison, Nvidia ended fiscal year 2022 (which coincided with the majority of 2021) with $26.9 billion in revenue. So, the chipmaker’s revenue is on track to increase at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 68% during this three-year period. Investors may be wondering if Nvidia is capable of replicating such stunning revenue growth over the next three years as well.

A 68% CAGR over the next three years would bring Nvidia’s top line to almost $610 billion by the end of fiscal 2028. While that figure may seem extremely ambitious at first, investors should note that Nvidia has a huge addressable market opportunity that could indeed allow it to get closer to that figure. For instance, the company sees a $1 trillion revenue opportunity in the data center market alone.

CEO Jensen Huang points out that “every single data center will have GPUs” in the future to enable accelerated computing, which is done through specialized hardware such as graphics cards that Nvidia sells to perform more work in less time. As a result, accelerated computing enables users to get more done while consuming less energy, which is why it is expected to play a central role in keeping data center power consumption in check in the long run.

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