The Nvidia Story Update

by Kris_Tuttle on October 2, 2009

Nvidia stock has been quite a roller coaster this year since we pub­lished our orig­i­nal research report on Jan­u­ary 29th. At the time we noted that the growth in 1) mobile com­put­ing, 2) visu­al­iza­tion and 3) higher end pro­cess­ing all fed directly into the growth prospects for Nvidia.

Since then we have seen the com­pany con­tin­u­ally expand their mar­ket share in these seg­ments though design wins, prod­uct launches and new offer­ings.  As we noted Intel has yet to show up at the party and when they do they will have the wrong prod­uct.  AMD/ATI has done well and some niche firms like Imag­i­na­tion Tech­nolo­gies (LSE: IMG) are in a very good posi­tion.  How­ever Nvidia remains the com­pany best posi­tioned in these three markets.

Recently the com­pany got closer to Microsoft in sev­eral areas includ­ing the Zune and link­ing resources to allow Nvidia proces­sors to accel­er­ate Microsoft prod­ucts in the same way Nvidia is doing that for other soft­ware providers like Apple and Adobe.  Dur­ing their recent GPU con­fer­ence they unveiled their next gen­er­a­tion GPU which is quite impres­sive.  How­ever there is too much atten­tion paid to the the high-end today and not enough to the mobile and embed­ded spaces which is where the real growth oppor­tu­nity exists.  In a few years peo­ple will ask “What’s a video card?“  Don’t be surprised.

Over the course of the year the stock moved up to our ini­tial intrin­sic value (IV) esti­mate of $15 and we pub­lished an update in early Sep­tem­ber which also “rolled for­ward” our IV to $17 as it is now close to the end of the year.

Recently the stock has been down­graded by JP Mor­gan who cited risks to long-term esti­mates from increased com­pe­ti­tion and poten­tial legal bat­tles with Intel.  On the esti­mate side cur­rent con­sen­sus for rev­enues calls for an increase of 14% YoY to $3.58B. That’s higher than the 9.2% for Intel but more inline with the likes of Qual­comm (13%), Broad­com (16%), Mar­vell (16%) and OmniVi­sion (15%).  What we con­clude from these fig­ures is that Nvidia and also these other com­pa­nies prob­a­bly need a rea­son­able econ­omy next year to exceed their cur­rent esti­mates.  Inven­tory is still quite low and we get some very easy comps the next two quar­ters so the risk to esti­mates will be greater on the back end of the year.

Earn­ings are a bit harder to fig­ure for next year because there is huge lever­age on the gross and oper­at­ing mar­gin lines.  Small improve­ments have a fairly large impact on earn­ings.  Cur­rent con­sen­sus calls for $0.64 on the out-year which is up 3x over a depressed fig­ure for this year.  In our IV model it doesn’t much mat­ter if NVDA reports 35c or 65c next year but obvi­ously it will impact the stock, at least in the short term.  In our view the more volatil­ity for NVDA the bet­ter since by adjust­ing port­fo­lio weight­ings one can cap­ture much greater returns than the sim­ple stock move.  The shares are up 71% YTD but the 30% dip in May gave us a chance to go very over­weight, fur­ther enhanc­ing returns.   With the shares down just over 16% from their recent peak we may not be at a major over­weight yet but we are scal­ing up a bit into weakness.

As we’ve said before the only thing we really don’t like about NVDA is the heavy sell­ing by the CEO and the fact they he has stated that he doesn’t see a big oppor­tu­nity for Nvidia in the enter­prise.  We know he’s wrong on the lat­ter point.  His sell­ing has been reg­u­lar and plan-based but it’s the type of thing that both­ers just a bit.

Our his­tor­i­cal pub­lished research on Nvidia is freely avail­able on our web­site after reg­is­tra­tion is approved.

[Dis­clo­sure: Research 2.0 has a net long posi­tion in both Nvidia and Imag­i­na­tion Tech­nolo­gies at the time of this writing.]

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