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Nvidia Prepares for a Post-China Future With Massive AI Upside Potential
Plus, the Magnificent 7 carries the S&P 500. Each week, the Syz investment team takes you through the last seven days in seven charts.
1. Another Strong Quarter for Nvidia
Nvidia’s (NASDAQ:) surprisingly robust first-quarter and its outlook for the second quarter are likely to provide reassurance to investors. However, the financial results were affected by a sudden and stricter export ban to China, which was implemented without a transition period.
This led to an estimated $2.5 billion loss in Q1 sales, a $4.5 billion charge related to inventory, and a reduction of around $8 billion in projected Q2 sales.
However, excluding China, Q1 sales would have beaten consensus by 7–8%, and Q2 sales guidance would have been ~15% ahead, reflecting booming global demand.
Drivers include surging AI chatbot usage, accelerating enterprise AI adoption, and the recent rollback of non-China export restrictions. Nvidia’s management indicated that China may no longer be a viable market, with Q2 guidance reflecting no anticipated AI chip sales to the country—making any future sales there a potential upside surprise.
Although a large impairment charge impacted reported Q1 gross margin and earnings per share, the company’s core profitability is strengthening as Blackwell chip production scales up. Overall, Nvidia is benefitting from even stronger demand momentum, with many prior investor concerns around the sustainability of demand now dissipated.
Following its strong results, the stock rose and now trades at 28 times forward earnings (based on FactSet consensus), a compelling valuation considering Nvidia’s growth trajectory, market dominance, substantial cash reserves ($54 billion), and free cash flow now comparable to Apple’s—all supported by a consistent history of outperforming expectations.
Source: Quartr
2. Mag 7 Stocks Account for More Than Half Of S&P 500 Gains Since April Bottom
Among all 503 stocks in the , the “Magnificent 7” alone have contributed nearly 55% of the total market capitalisation gains since 7 April.
Source: Bloomberg, Tavi Costa
3. Japanese Insurers Unrealised Losses Have Been HUGE
In the first quarter, Japan’s largest insurers recorded unprecedented paper losses of ¥8.5 trillion ($60 billion) on their domestic bond portfolios. Nippon Life alone, the country’s biggest insurer and the sixth largest globally, posted a loss of ¥3.6 trillion ($25 billion).
Source: Bloomberg
4. Microsoft Borrowing Cost Is Now Almost Equivalent Than US Treasuries
The yield spread on Microsoft’s over equivalent US Treasuries has narrowed to just 20 basis points—an all-time low.
This suggests that investors view Microsoft’s (NASDAQ:) credit risk as nearly equivalent to that of the US government, the world’s largest economy.
Source: Global Markets Investors
5. Bitcoin ETFs Pull in $9 Billion
In the past five weeks, US ETFs have seen over $9 billion in inflows, with BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust ETF (NASDAQ:) leading the surge. In contrast, -backed ETFs experienced outflows of more than $2.8 billion during the same timeframe, according to Bloomberg News data.
Source: Bloomberg News
6. China’s Strategic Shift: Gold Up, Treasuries Down
Over the past five years, their holdings of US Treasuries have dropped sharply, from approximately $1.1 trillion to around $760 billion, while their gold reserves have risen significantly, climbing from about 1,850 tons to over 2,200 tons.
Source: Bloomberg, Andrew Wells
7. US Dominance on the Global Stock Market
This is what American exceptionalism looks like: the US is home to 1,873 companies valued at over a billion dollars. Japan ranks a distant second with 404, followed by India with 348.
Source: Visual Capitalist
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