NVIDIA Corporation (NVDA): Why Is Ken Fisher Bullish on This Growth Stock Right Now?

We recently compiled a list of Ken Fisher’s Top 10 Growth Stock Picks with 30+% Revenue Growth. In this article, we are going to take a look at where NVIDIA Corporation (NASDAQ:NVDA) stands against the other growth stocks.

Growth is the holy grail of investing. After all, equities attract investors because they are return driven securities, and securities that deliver growth often produce the strongest returns. Growth, in stock valuation, comes in several flavors. The most commonly analyzed metric is share price growth, which evaluates the percentage change in the share price over a time period.

Other growth valuations come through earnings growth or revenue growth. Among these, earnings is the more commonly evaluated metric as it determines the profitability of a company. These profits are key for growth stocks since the post net income ‘money’ on a firm’s income statement is either paid out in the form of dividends or reinvested in growth if it isn’t accounted for as retained earnings. The market generally prices stocks that are expected to aggressively grow in the future high compared to their earnings in the form of the P/E ratio.

The other ratio for evaluating growth stocks is the price to sales or P/S ratio. And this is where Ken Fisher enters the conversation. Fisher is one of the richest people in the world, with estimates from Forbes Magazine showing that his net worth stood at $11.2 billion as of July 2024. At the heart of Fisher’s riches is his investment fund Fisher Investments. The total value of the fund’s 13F holdings as reflected by its SEC filings for the first quarter of 2024 is $214 billion according to Insider Monkey’s research. This makes Fisher Investments one of the biggest financial firms in the world, and its investment approach as evidenced by some of the biggest stakes in the filings is characterized by investing in high growth technology companies.

Fisher started his firm in 1979 and focused on gaining an early foothold on market participants by sifting out information that was not widely available to investors. On the quantitative front, the P/S ratio was also quite critical to his approach and we’ll get to that in a bit. Over the next two decades, his firm would focus on investing in pure play US equities, global equities, and exUS or foreign equities. The firm would focus its investment products towards high net worth individuals in the 1990s, and from 2000 onwards, it would expand its presence in the UK, Canada, and Germany. Fisher Investments now has 15 offices in 16 countries and more than a hundred thousand clients worldwide as of July 2024.

Shifting gears to focus on the firm’s performance, data from the London Stock Exchange Group (LSEG) shows that data for 76 funds managed by Fisher Investments is available. Within these, the fund that invests for retirement plans has gained 19.18% year to date and 18.77% over the past year. Compared to the benchmark S&P index, the year to date performance is two percentage points higher while the 12 month performance lags the index by three percentage points. Another fund that targets US equities irrespective of capitalization is up by 24% over the past twelve months to lead the benchmark by three percentage points. In daily trailing total returns, this fund has delivered 14.39% over the past six months to lead benchmark US large cap equity returns of 11.36% by three percentage points.

Safe to say, Fisher’s strategies and secret sauce seem to be working. This then leads us to ask, what might they be? Well, in the 70s when Fisher was starting Fisher Investments, he started to focus on evaluating a firm’s market valuation relative to its revenue through the P/S ratio. This culminated in his seminal article in the American Association of Individual Investors. (AAII) in 1984. This paper highlighted Fisher’s conviction of a solid approach to sift out growth stocks, and his research showed that stocks with low price to sales ratios tended to do rather well as they were unpopular and any good news “translates directly into higher stock prices.” He compared the stocks with the lowest 25% price to sales and price to earnings ratio to demonstrate that the seven and nine stocks with the lowest price to sales ratios delivered 64.57% and 56.11% in respective returns while the nine lowest P/E stocks delivered 28.67% in returns. During the same time, the Dow posted a gain of 20.3%.

Since multiples that use growth rates are typically used to value growth stocks, particularly those that are unprofitable, they are quite sensitive to macroeconomic conditions and particularly inflation and high interest rates. Another popular revenue based growth stock valuation metric is the Enterprise Value/Revenue ratio and it is popular for valuing software as a service (SaaS) stocks. After the coronavirus pandemic hit, the Fed rapidly cut interest rates to stimulate the economy and this translated well for EV/Revenue. Before the rate cuts, the median EV/Revenue for publicly traded SaaS stocks was 11 and after the cuts, it soared and nearly doubled to sit at 20 in 2021.

Similarly, the interest rate hikes of 2022 and high inflation that led to tight business budgets didn’t fare well for EV/Revenue. Since high interest rates also make it difficult for firms to finance their business operations, and high inflation leads to rising costs, SaaS firms face twice the impact in the form of lower revenue. This is also translated into their EV/Revenue multiples, as for the last 18 months, the median multiple was 7 which is at a multi year low. The lower multiples are accompanied by dropping growth rates, as while the pre pandemic median revenue growth rate of SaaS companies was 30% and accelerated to 33% during the pandemic, it has since dropped and is hovering around 17%.

So, as growth slows down and multiples struggle, it might be wise to see what the guru of growth Ken Fisher is doing. We’ve done so today so read more below.

Our Methodology

To make our list of Ken Fisher’s top revenue growth stocks, we scanned Fisher Investments’ Q1 2024 SEC filings and ranked the top 160 holdings by their three year annualized revenue growth. Out of these, the top ten Ken Fisher stocks with the highest revenue growth were chosen.

We also mentioned the number of hedge funds that had bought these stocks during the same filing period. 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 (see more details here).

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

NVIDIA Corporation (NASDAQ:NVDA)

Number of Hedge Fund Investors  in Q1 2024: 186

3 Yr Revenue Growth: 54%

Fisher Investments’ Q1 2024 Stake: $8.2 billion

NVIDIA Corporation (NASDAQ:NVDA) is Wall Street’s AI darling, and the love is also shown here in this list as it is Ken Fisher’s second biggest growth stock pick. The firm’s rise to fame is built on its strong competitive advantage through its GPU products and CUDA software. Combined, these two are among the best performing products in the world, and given industry expectations for AI related upgrades, they offer NVIDIA Corporation (NASDAQ:NVDA) a wide moat over peers. At the same time, these are also its biggest risks since businesses like to have a diverse supply chain, and rising geopolitical tensions between the US and China have led to, and might lead to more, significant export embargoes. The former was evident in July 2024 when a media report claimed that OpenAI and Sam Altman were eager to develop their own products to reduce dependence on NVIDIA, with Taiwan’s TSMC also purportedly showing willingness to allocate chip capacity for them.

Baron Funds mentioned NVIDIA Corporation (NASDAQ:NVDA) in its Q1 2024 investor letter. Here is what the firm said:

We are early on the adoption S-curve – most companies are still in the proof of concept stage while very few are ready for production today. Hurdles in implementing AI include data prep, model adaptation and fine-tuning, and embedding of AI into existing workflows. There is a lot of innovation taking place to reducing these hurdles – from tools and infrastructure that help companies build and run AI models more easily, to third-party AI models exposed via Application Programming Interfaces (APIs) that enable companies to use them without building their own models from scratch. NVIDIA’s ecosystem across developers, system integrators, cloud providers and independent software vendors, and internal software innovation are lowering these hurdles as well. For example, one of the most interesting announcements at the GTC conference were NVIDIA Inference Microservices – or NIMs, which are APIs to easily access open-source models (NVIDIA already has dozens of models available) without the need to worry about model optimizations, security, patching, or sending data to third parties. NIMs could ease AI adoption for enterprises while also driving incremental monetization for NVIDIA, priced at $4,500/GPU or at $1/GPU hour if used on the cloud, and increase the stickiness of NVIDIA’s platform.”

Overall NVDA ranks 2nd on our list of Ken Fisher’s top 10 growth stocks picks. You can visit Ken Fisher’s Top 10 Growth Stock Picks with 30+% Revenue Growth to see the other growth stocks that are on hedge funds’ radar. While we acknowledge the potential of NVDA as an investment, our conviction lies in the belief that some 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: Analyst Sees a New $25 Billion “Opportunity” for NVIDIA and Jim Cramer is Recommending These 10 Stocks in June.

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