Nvidia crosses $2 trillion market cap as AI demand and stock price soar -- becomes only fifth company to reach that benchmark

Nvidia RTX 40-Series Super Models and CES 2024
(Image credit: Nvidia)

After months of back-to-back gains in stock value, Nvidia's market capitalization has finally crossed the $2 trillion mark, thanks to the value of the company's stock hitting just over $800 today. This level of market capitalization puts Nvidia on the same level as titans such as Google, Apple, and Microsoft. It also makes Nvidia only the fifth company ever to achieve a market cap of $2 trillion or more.

Market capitalization represents the total value of shares a company has, and since Nvidia's stock price has risen dramatically over the past year, so too has its market cap. A year ago today, Nvidia stock was worth $236.64; at the time of writing, it is worth over $800, representing a gain of over 240 percent. For reference, on average, the S&P500 stock index gains 10% every year, which is considered pretty good in the investing world. 

Demand for Nvidia server GPUs is so extreme that the wait list for Nvidia's H100 is over three months long. But that's down from the 11-month wait time expected back in November when Nvidia was still trying to catch up with orders. While insufficient supply is a problem, it's clearly hurting Nvidia, considering its balance sheet and stock price.

The same stock rally that uplifted Nvidia to $2 trillion in market cap has also made its CEO and founder, Jensen Huang, one of the richest people in the world. Since he's been at Nvidia from its inception, he's had plenty of time to accrue shares in his company that are now extremely valuable. Huang is currently the 21st richest person in the world. According to Bloomberg's Billionaires Index, he could climb to 20th place very soon by overtaking Julia Flesher Koch, who was only worth $100 million more than Huang on Thursday.

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Matthew Connatser

Matthew Connatser is a freelancing writer for Tom's Hardware US. He writes articles about CPUs, GPUs, SSDs, and computers in general.