Nvidia Stock Slaughters Rivals AMD & Intel as the as Blackwell Ultra Racks ‘Lead the Market by Two Generations’
While the stock market fixates on a temporary surge from its competitors, the king of artificial intelligence is quietly building an insurmountable lead. Nvidia (NVDA) is being hailed by top analysts as the undisputed leader of the semiconductor world, even as AMD (AMD) and Intel (INTC) post larger percentage gains this month. Despite trailing the recent CPU hype, experts argue that Nvidia’s massive technological moats make it the only logical top pick for the upcoming earnings season.
Wall Street is beginning to look past the short-term noise of rival stock rallies to see the massive structural advantage that the green team has built.
Oppenheimer analyst Rick Schafer recently issued an interesting defense of the company, giving it an “Outperform” rating with a massive $265 price target. He famously described the company as an “AI castle on a hill” that boasts the best performance-per-watt for both training and inference in the world.
While AMD and Intel have seen their stocks jump 38% and 56% respectively over the last month, Schafer maintains a “Perform” rating on both, suggesting their runs may be overextended. He believes that Nvidia’s upcoming Blackwell Ultra (GB300) NVL racks are the key to its future, as they “lead the market by two generations” and offer a level of power that no one else can currently match.
The next generation of AI infrastructure is about to hit the data center floor, and the specs are enough to make competitors rethink their entire roadmap.
Nvidia’s Blackwell Ultra platform is designed to handle the billion-parameter models of the future with ease. These racks are significantly more efficient, providing a 50x leap in overall AI factory output compared to the previous Hopper generation. The GB300 architecture uses advanced liquid cooling to reduce electricity costs by up to 40%, a critical factor for hyperscalers like Google (GOOGL) and Meta (META) who are struggling with energy constraints.
Nvidia is trading at just 17 times its 2027 earnings forecast, which is actually below the sector average of 20. For investors, this means the world’s most powerful chip company is currently selling at a discount compared to its slower rivals.
The recent surge in AMD and Intel stock is largely driven by excitement over the need for new central processors in AI servers, but analysts warn this may be a distraction.
While Intel recently enjoyed its best nine-day stretch on record, many experts believe the stock moved “too far, too fast” on pure speculation. In addition, while AMD’s Instinct MI355X has gained some traction with cost-conscious buyers, it still lacks the full-stack platform, including NVLink networking and CUDA software, that creates the deep switching costs Nvidia enjoys.
With Nvidia’s Rubin architecture already on the horizon for late 2026, the company’s yearly product cycle is making it nearly impossible for anyone to close the gap.
Turning to Wall Street, analysts have a Strong Buy consensus rating on Nvidia stock (NVDA) based on 41 Buys, one Hold, and one Sell rating assigned in the past three months. Furthermore, the average 12-month NVDA price target of $273.57 per share implies 37.9% upside potential.