Today marks the six-year anniversary of my initial Nvidia recommendation⦠[The Jolt with Stephen McBride] My next NVDA Stephenâs note: Today marks the six-year anniversary of one of my earliest RiskHedge essays. In my September 13, 2018 writeup titled â[If I Could Only Buy One Stock for the Next 5 Yearsâ¦](â I laid out why Nvidia (NVDA) was my #1 pick. Of course, I couldnât envision the extent at which artificial intelligence (AI) would take off⦠the rise of chatbots like ChatGPT and Claude⦠or the epic rally NVDA would have over the next six years (up 1,500%+ since my 2018 essay, split-adjusted). But it goes to show the power of buying one truly great business profiting from a dominant megatrend. Below, Iâm sharing the essay because it contains important and timeless lessons about finding the next Nvidia-like stock. Make sure to read to the end to see how to access the top stock Iâd recommend buying for the next five years (it reminds me a lot of Nvidia). *** If I Could Only Buy One Stock for the Next 5 Years⦠[[Originally published September 13, 2018](] If I could only buy one stock for the next five years⦠this would be it. If youâve been reading the RiskHedge Report, you know about the disruptive megatrends that are powering stocks to huge gains. Weâve discussed the companies that have shoveled almost $100 billion into developing self-driving cars⦠That the worldâs most powerful companies, including Apple (AAPL), Amazon (AMZN), and Google (GOOG), are pouring billions into artificial intelligence⦠And last week, I explained how video gaming has exploded into a $138 billion monster market. -  What if I told you one company is powering all these megatrends? This company is Nvidia (NVDA). Take a look at its 720% surge since 2016: Now, I know you might be thinking: âStephen, this stock has already had a heck of a run⦠why buy it now?â I understand the concern. But when investing in truly disruptive companies, this way of thinking is often a mistake. From 2009â2013, AMZN stock gained 680%. Most so-called âexpertsâ said the easy money had already been made. In 2013, CNN âreportedâ that âAmazon is one of the most overvalued stocks.â Amazon has soared another 700% since 2013. - NVDA makes high-performance computer chips called graphics processing units (GPUs). NVDA developed the first mass-market GPU in 1999. GPUs use whatâs called âparallel processing,â which allows the chips to perform millions of calculations at the same time. [ShareÂ]( Thatâs different from how other computer chips work. Most computer chips, like the one powering the laptop or phone youâre reading this on, calculate one by one. At first, GPUs were mostly used to create realistic graphics in video games. Remember the blocky Nintendo graphics from the early '90s? The ability of GPUs to process huge amounts of data all at once helped create the movie-like video game graphics you see today. - But it turns out that GPUs are also ideal for âtrainingâ machines to think like humans. In other words, artificial intelligence (AI). Iâm sure youâve seen the Hollywood movies about AI going rogue and attacking humans. In reality, AI isnât that glamorous. It all comes down to processing massive amounts of data. Show a computer millions of pictures of a stop sign, for example, and it will learn to recognize stop signs on its own in the real world. AI is the driving force behind Googleâs self-driving car subsidiary, Waymo. [As we talked about a few weeks ago](, Waymoâs robot cars are cruising around American roads right now. At the core of Waymoâs self-driving car fleet is a centralized âbrain.â It has learned to recognize stop signs, pedestrian crossings, red lights, and all the other obstacles human drivers navigate. - The recipe for AI success is simpleâ¦Â The faster a computer can process data, the faster it can âlearnâ by recognizing patterns in the data. NVDAâs latest chips process 125X faster than traditional computer chips. They can process 125 trillion data points per secondâ¦Â which slashes AI âlearnâ times from 8 days to 8 hours. This is why more than 2,000 companies, including Amazon, Google, and Microsoft, use NVDAâs hardware to âtrainâ their AI programs. Last quarter, the revenue NVDA earned from selling AI chips and hardware jumped 82%. In the last two years, AI-related sales have accounted for over 70% of the surge in NVDAâs revenue. AI sales now make up 24% of its total revenue. - NVDA will earn around $600 million from its automotive business this year. As I mentioned, it supplies self-driving car companies with chips that âtrainâ carsâ brains. It also sells hardware that processes data from the carsâ many cameras and sensors. For example, NVDAâs self-driving supercomputer, named Pegasus, can tackle 320 trillion operations per second. And it does so using one-third the electricity at just one-fifth the cost of its closest competitor. Over 370 companies working on self-driving cars now use NVDAâs products. Auto sales make up just 5% of NVDAâs total revenue today; I see this exploding higher over the next few years as true self-driving cars roll out. I mentioned earlier that $100 billion has been spent on developing self-driving cars so far. With the likes of Google and Apple pouring billions into driverless projects, I see that jumping to $1 trillion over the next 2â3 years. Thanks to its superior technology, I expect NVDA to capture a large chunk of this. - NVDA is considered a âhigh-flyingâ tech companyâ¦Â But please understand, itâs nothing like many of the profitless tech darlings out there. While many high-flying tech stocks get by on stories and hype, NVDA is extremely profitable. It has a net profit margin of 33%. That is, for every $1 in sales, $0.33 becomes pure profit. Thatâs better than Googleâs 21% margin⦠and even Microsoftâs 29%. NVDAâs high margins allow it to continually pour cash into Research & Development (R&D). It reinvests close to 20% of its revenue into R&D every year, which is a key reason why it has blown away its rivals. NVDA is financially sound, too. Itâs sitting on a record $7.95 billion in cash, which is enough to pay off its total debt four times over. - Some may be concerned about NVDAâs price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of 39. Can buying a stock at such a high valuation be risky? Sure. But I believe NVDA deserves its rich valuation. NVDAâs earnings are growing at almost six times the rate of the S&P 500. Yet its P/E ratio is not even double the S&Pâs. I think investing in a company like Ford (F), with a P/E of 5, is far riskier than buying NVDA. I can hear the groans coming from the value investors out there. But the fact is, NVDA is leading the self-driving revolution⦠while [Ford is going to get crushed by it](. Because it is powering todayâs most disruptive trends, I see NVDA doubling over the next two years. Iâm buying it today at $272. To disruptive profits, Stephen McBride
Chief Analyst, RiskHedge *** Stephenâs note: When I first started writing about Nvidia, investors viewed it as a video game chipmaker. But I saw how it was transforming into an AI business⦠and my readers profited while the rest of the world eventually came around to this way of thinking. My new #1 pick for the next five years is a stock that reminds me of Nvidia. Investors mainly view it as an automaker⦠but itâs really an AI and robotics company in disguise. Paid-up readers can access my write-up on this stock [here](. If youâre not a Disruption Investor member and want in on this trade, [go here to upgrade now](. Share Your Thoughts on this Article [Post a Comment]( Keep up with RiskHedge
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