Josh Brown Explains Long-Term Threats to Nvidia (NVDA)

We recently published a list of 10 Stocks on Analysts’ Radar Amid Tariff Turbulence. In this article, we are going to take a look at where NVIDIA Corporation (NASDAQ:NVDA) stands against other stocks on analysts’ radar amid tariff turbulence.

Dan Niles, Niles Investment Management founder, predicted in a CNBC program earlier this month that unlike previous market crashes, the latest market volatility of 2025 could see a quick resolution because it was “self-inflicted.”

“Unlike prior drawdowns that you’ve seen, like the global financial crisis, you’re not going to fix the problem in a day because you’ve accumulated tons of bad mortgages. You’re not going to fix COVID because it’s a global pandemic in a day. You’re not going to fix the tech bubble meltdown because you overinvested for 5 years back in the late 1990s. This you can literally fix overnight if everybody, you know, resettles the tariffs because this is a self-inflicted wound.”

However, this does not mean Niles is bullish on the market in the long term. He still has valuation concerns and reiterated that he entered the year with cash as his biggest holding. Niles said his top five picks do not include any of the Mag. 7 companies, and he would remain cautious on valuations:

Asked about his preferences in the current market environment, the analyst warned investors to steer clear of high valuations and big promises that lie far into the future:

“I would focus on is which companies are generating a lot of cash, which ones tend to pick up market share during recessions. Those are the types of names that you want to be in because if you’re in stuff where, well, you know 10 years from now it’s going to be a big market, you’re going to get absolutely murdered if you get into a recession,” Niles said.

READ ALSO 7 Best Stocks to Buy For Long-Term and 8 Cheap Jim Cramer Stocks to Invest In

For this article, we picked 10 stocks Wall Street analysts have been focusing on. With each stock, we have mentioned its hedge fund sentiment. 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 373.4% since May 2014, beating its benchmark by 218 percentage points (see more details here).

Josh Brown Explains Long-Term Threats to Nvidia (NVDA)

A close-up of a colorful high-end graphics card being plugged in to a gaming computer.

Nvidia Corp (NASDAQ:NVDA)

Number of Hedge Fund Investors: 223

Joshua Brown, the co-founder and CEO of Ritholtz Wealth Management, said in a latest program on CNBC that while he’s long Nvidia Corp (NASDAQ:NVDA), he believes a slowdown in AI chips demand could impact the stock long term. He believes companies have been ordering Nvidia chips with the money they raised from wealth management firms and that chain of investments could break in case demand slows down.

“I’m long. I’m not negative on Nvidia long term. I’m telling you what I think the risk is right now. This is the part people don’t understand. Last summer, a press release went out from Blackstone gloriously announcing this massive infrastructure investment that they were making. And this is where the money comes from. When you hear the breathless reports that CoreWeave has acquired 300,000 GPUs, where the hell do you think they got the money to do that?

They’re getting the money from these huge pots of wealth management capital that’s going into AI infrastructure funds. And Blackstone is not alone. Everybody has one. It’s the hottest product for people in my seat to be selling to their clients. It’s billions and billions of dollars in debt financing so that CoreWeave can buy all this Nvidia product.

That’s great. Here’s the—here’s the rub. If for whatever reason, the demand doesn’t materialize fast enough to please the investors, then all of a sudden there’s less money for the next AI infrastructure fund, and the next one and the next one. And all of a sudden, CoreWeave doesn’t have the capital to buy more GPUs, which is where Nvidia—really at the end of the caboose of that long train I’ve described—that’s where they finally come out and say, turns out we may not have much more demand for the next version after Blackwell, as we thought we did.

Everything’s still great, but it’s a little bit of a dial down. How do you think Wall Street’s going to take that calmly?”

The market will keep punishing Nvidia for not coming up to its gigantic (and sometimes unrealistic) growth expectations. About 50% of the company’s revenue comes from large cloud providers, which are rethinking their plans amid the DeepSeek launch and looking for low-cost chips. Nvidia’s Q1 guidance shows a 9.4% QoQ revenue growth, down from the previous 12% QoQ growth. Its adjusted margin is expected to be down substantially as well to 71%. The market does not like it when Nvidia fails to post a strong quarterly beat. The stock will remain under pressure in the coming quarters when the company will report unimpressive growth.

Nvidia is facing challenges at several levels. Competition is one of them. Major competitors like Apple, Qualcomm, and AMD are vying for TSMC’s 3nm capacity, which could limit Nvidia’s access to these chips. Why? Because Nvidia also uses  TSMC’s 3nm process nodes. Nvidia is also facing direct competition from other giants that are deciding to make their own chips. Amazon, with its Trainium2 AI chips, offer alternatives. Trainium2 chips could provide cost savings and superior computational power, which could shift AI workloads away from Nvidia’s offerings. Apple is reportedly working with Broadcom to develop an AI server processor. Intel is also trying hard to get back into the game with Jaguar Shores GPU, set to be produced on its 18A or 14A node.

Harding Loevner Global Developed Markets Equity Strategy stated the following regarding NVIDIA Corporation (NASDAQ:NVDA) in its Q4 2024 investor letter:

“For the full year, the composite’s underperformance was primarily due to poor stock choices in the US. NVIDIA Corporation (NASDAQ:NVDA), which we sold in the first quarter and repurchased in the fourth quarter, caused almost two-thirds of the strategy’s underperformance. We were hurt by our underweight as NVIDIA’s stock price soared during the first half of the year on the insatiable demand for the company’s graphics processing units (GPUs), which enable generative Al computing.

After ASML’s disappointing outlook led industry valuations to compress, we added a strong company back to the portfolio-NVIDIA.

There were two main reasons we sold NVIDIA last February (after holding the stock for more than five years). First, its biggest customers-data-center behemoths Amazon, Alphabet. Meta Platforms, and Microsoft-have been designing their own custom semiconductor chips, called application-specific integrated circuits (ASICS), that could eventually erode NVIDIA’s dominance. Second, it was unclear to us whether the adoption of Al by large enterprises will be as fast and meaningful as the optimistic views suggested…” (Click here to read the full text)

Overall, NVDA ranks 3rd on our list of stocks on analysts’ radar amid tariff turbulence. While we acknowledge the potential of NVDA, our conviction lies in the belief that under the radar AI stocks hold greater promise for delivering higher returns, and doing so within a shorter timeframe. If you are looking for an AI stock that is more promising than NVDA but that trades at less than 5 times its earnings, check out our report about the cheapest AI stock.

READ NEXT: 20 Best AI Stocks To Buy Now and 30 Best Stocks to Buy Now According to Billionaires.

Disclosure: None. This article is originally published at Insider Monkey.