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Can 2024's Best-Performing Dow Jones Stock Beat the S&P 500 Again in 2025?

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Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) was added to the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJINDICES: ^DJI) in November 2024. So, technically, it was only in the index for a small portion of the year. But it was still, by far, the best-performing Dow stock in 2024 with a 171.2% return, walloping second-place Walmart‘s 71.9% gain and third-place American Express‘ 58.4%.

Nvidia stock went up a mind-numbing 818.9% between 2023 and 2024, which may lead some investors to question how much further it can run before its valuation gets stretched too thin.

Here’s why the rally in Nvidia stock is somewhat justified, why Nvidia could continue outperforming the market and is worth buying, and some reasons to keep Nvidia on a watchlist for now.

Nvidia followed up a rip-roaring 2023 with another incredible year in 2024 — briefly becoming the most valuable company in the world before Apple reclaimed the title.

Nvidia has defended its commanding lead in the graphics processing unit (GPU) market despite a slew of competition. In December, Nvidia announced that its Blackwell architecture for generative artificial intelligence (AI) was coming to Amazon Web Services. On Jan. 3, Microsoft said it plans to spend $80 billion in its current fiscal year to “build out AI-enabled datacenters to train AI models and deploy AI and cloud-based applications around the world.” On Jan. 7, Amazon said it plans to spend $11 billion in the U.S. state of Georgia alone on AI infrastructure and cloud technologies.

Nvidia could easily beat the market again in 2025 because it continues to innovate, and AI spending is showing no signs of slowing down.

Nvidia rallied to an all-time high on Monday in response to news that Nvidia customer Hon Hai Precision Industry (also known as Foxconn) is seeing massive growth for AI in cloud and networking. The rally could have also been driven by anticipation of Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang giving the keynote address at CES, a major technology conference in Las Vegas. However, Nvidia pulled back 6.2% on Tuesday after Huang’s keynote.

Nvidia will report its fourth-quarter and full-year fiscal 2025 results on Feb. 26. Analyst consensus estimates call for $2.95 in fiscal 2025 earnings per share and $4.43 in fiscal 2026 earnings per share — implying year-over-year growth of 50%. So it’s worth understanding that there are lofty expectations already baked into Nvidia’s forward price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of 50.6.

Nvidia is by no means a cheap stock based on near-term expectations. But it could grow into its valuation over time if it continues innovating and sees sustained product demand.

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