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Prediction: This Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stock Could Become the First $10 Trillion Company

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Prediction: This Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stock Could Become the First $10 Trillion Company

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A $10 trillion valuation will require a ton of growth.Nvidia (NVDA 1.55%) is the only company to reach the $5 trillion valuation threshold, but it has pulled back from that level. Other companies like Apple, Alphabet, and Microsoft are worth around $4 trillion right now. Those are the primary candidates investors should look for when searching for the first company that will be worth $10 trillion. I think there's really only one candidate in this cohort that will be the first $10 trillion company, and it may reach that threshold quicker than many investors realize. Image source: Getty Images. Growth is the only catalyst to drive these companies to a $10 trillion valuation While companies can get inflated valuations to drive their market cap higher, it can only take a stock so far. What's required to reach the $10 trillion threshold is serious growth, and only one of these stocks has it. NVDA Revenue (Quarterly YoY Growth) data by YCharts While Microsoft and Alphabet are putting up impressive growth figures, it's nothing compared to what Nvidia has delivered. Furthermore, Nvidia is expected to keep these elevated growth rates up for some time. As a result, Nvidia is really the only option in this group to reach the $10 trillion valuation point in a short time frame. But what will it require?Advertisement The pace of AI capital expenditures Nvidia's CEO Jensen Huang made some bold predictions regarding the direction of data center capital expenditures over the next few years. By 2030, he expects global data center capital expenditures to reach $3 trillion to $4 trillion, up from $600 billion in 2025. While that may sound outlandish, other projections back up Nvidia. One of Nvidia's biggest rivals is AMD. It expects a $1 trillion compute market by 2030. While those two sound like contradicting projections, they're not. Nvidia's projection includes total data center capital expenditures, while AMD's is just compute. This means that AMD and Nvidia's projections are fairly close to each other, and I think investors should trust them. ExpandNASDAQ: NVDANvidiaToday's Change(-1.55%) $-2.85Current Price$180.93Key Data PointsMarket Cap$4397BDay's Range$176.62 - $181.3252wk Range$86.62 - $212.19Volume4.6MAvg Vol190MGross Margin70.05%Dividend Yield0.02% AMD and Nvidia have more information than the average investor. Nvidia told investors during its third quarter results that it was "sold out" of cloud GPUs. This means that any company wanting to get their hands on Nvidia's graphics processing units (GPUs) must be placing orders years in advance. While I doubt they have orders for 2030, it's likely that orders for 2027 to 2028 are trickling in. If language from its largest clients suggests that this still won't be enough computing power, Nvidia can make this bold projection for the future. Should the 2030 global data center capital expenditures total $3 trillion, Nvidia could generate $1 trillion in revenue. Wall Street analysts estimate that Nvidia's revenue this year will total $213 billion. So, Nvidia would receive about 36% of total spending if its $600 billion estimate this year is correct. If Nvidia can maintain its current 50% profit margin and be valued at 25 times earnings, Nvidia's stock would have a market cap of $12.5 billion. That's well above the $10 billion threshold we've established, which means Nvidia could hit the $10 trillion valuation point sometime in 2029. Obviously, that requires incredible data center capital expenditure growth, and its biggest clients must continue their spending habits. If they do, then I think the $10 trillion mark is attainable. If they don't, then Nvidia could be in trouble, as nearly all of its revenue, $51.2 billion of $57 billion in Q3, comes from data center computing hardware. Personally, I think this spending will continue, but shareholders demanding an immediate return on investments from the AI hypescalers may have different opinions.About the AuthorKeithen Drury is a contributing Motley Fool technology analyst covering AI, semiconductors, cybersecurity, and SaaS stocks. In addition to The Motley Fool, Keithen is a mechanical engineer and has held roles at Honeywell and smaller industrial companies like Brand Hydraulics and Lincoln Industries. He holds a bachelor’s degree in mechanical engineering from Dordt University.TMFTripleOptionRead NextDec 12, 2025 •By Parkev Tatevosian, CFAShould AI Stock Investors Buy Tesla Stock Instead of Nvidia?Dec 12, 2025 •By Jose NajarroOracle Gave Nvidia Investors 15 Billion Reasons to Be BullishDec 12, 2025 •By Harsh ChauhanHere's Why Nvidia Stock Could Double in 2026Dec 12, 2025 •By Adria CiminoIf You Invested $500 in Nvidia 10 Years Ago, Here's How Much You'd Have Now.Dec 11, 2025 •By Adria CiminoWhy Nvidia Might Be the Most Compelling AI Stock for the Next DecadeDec 11, 2025 •By Adam SpataccoWhere Will Nvidia Stock Be in 5 Years?

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