After $430 billion rout, Nvidia shares take a breather

7 months ago 30

Nvidia

shares showed signs of steadying after a $430-billion selloff sent

traders

searching for signals as to where the bottom may be. The

stock

rose as much as 5% on Tuesday, set to snap a three-day

rout

that had pushed it into a technical correction - when a stock drops 10% or more from a recent peak - for the first time since April.
While the rout displayed some concerning signals, analysts are focusing on the stock's longer-term trend.
"This is just how Nvidia trades," an analyst said.
Among Nvidia selloffs of this scale, the stock tends to rebound on the fourth day - which would be today - about 63% of the time, according to Daniel O'Regan, MD of equity trading at Mizuho Securities.

While technical analysis for insight in historic trading patterns isn't precise, it can provide a useful road map for investors.
Nvidia has soared this year amid unrelenting demand for its chips that dominate the market for artificial intelligence computing. The latest leg of the advance saw the stock rise 43% from its May 22 earnings report and stock split announcement to the June 18 peak when it closed with a market value of $3.34 trillion, topping Microsoft. Nvidia is still up 144% this year.


After $430bn rout, Nvidia shares take a breather.

High options activity was often cited as one of the main reasons for the stock's climb: market makers in the contracts had to constantly hedge their positions by trading the stock as it moved higher in what is called a gamma squeeze. That pressure may be easing following the correction.
Buff Dormeier, chief technical analyst at Kingsview Partners, sees short-term support around the $115 level. That's near a key Fibonacci retracement level, a tool used by technical analysts to identify support or resistance lines for stocks and other assets. The 38.2% retracement from the stock's intraday low in April to its record high last week is about 2% below Monday's closing price.
Analysts such as Dormeier believe the long-term uptrend remains intact for Nvidia, but they're keeping an eye on the $100 level.
"For a stock in an uptrend like Nvidia, breaching that first level of support wouldn't be a concern," said Bruce Zaro, chief technical strategist at Granite Wealth Management. A drop below $100, however, would be, he said.
"That may not have long-term implications, but it would signal that you should be patient, especially in a period where the market is likely to be volatile and have a downward bias as we await the election and the Fed weighing in on rates."

Article From: timesofindia.indiatimes.com
Read Entire Article



Note:

We invite you to explore our website, engage with our content, and become part of our community. Thank you for trusting us as your go-to destination for news that matters.

Certain articles, images, or other media on this website may be sourced from external contributors, agencies, or organizations. In such cases, we make every effort to provide proper attribution, acknowledging the original source of the content.

If you believe that your copyrighted work has been used on our site in a way that constitutes copyright infringement, please contact us promptly. We are committed to addressing and rectifying any such instances

To remove this article:
Removal Request