
Investors wondering what NVIDIA’s (NASDAQ: NVDA) AI endgame is should consider Industrial Revolution 4.0 as the answer. Some may say it's already underway, but the reality is that the full potential of the Industrial Revolution 4.0 is yet to be unlocked. NVIDIA, with its full-stack approach to AI, including hardware and software, and cross-application interest, such as robotics and medical discovery, is positioning itself as the source of all things AI-related, not just GPUs. In this scenario, its revenue streams are limited only by the number of businesses it is exposed to, and the number is growing each quarter.
NVIDIA Invests in Full-Stack, Cross-Application AI
Mellanox is arguably the most important acquisition relating to NVIDIA’s AI future. Mellanox enabled the hyperscale application of NVIDIA GPUs and the proliferation of today’s datacenter industry. Since then, the company’s surging cash flow has enabled a series of acquisitions, cementing its ability to manage GPU- and AI-based workflows and train AI models, among other capabilities.
Critical buys include Run:ai (GPU management), Gretel Technology, and Illumex, which complement each other. Gretel Technologies creates high-quality synthetic datasets for LLM training, while Illumex focuses on data refinement and quality. More recent acquisitions are focused on robotics. Skild and Deci AI help train models and build applications that run at the edge, critical for autonomous devices and physical AI.
Partnerships are also critical to NVIDIA’s strategy, as highlighted by the recent deal with Marvell Technology (NASDAQ: MRVL). The two will work together on hyperscale infrastructure using NVLink Fusion. NVLink Fusion enables third-party manufacturers to build custom hardware that connects directly to the NVLink Interconnect system. NVLink Interconnect is the platform enabling the hyperscale deployment of NVIDIA GPUs; the takeaway is that NVIDIA is working hard to cement itself at the center and standard of an ever-expanding AI ecosystem spanning OEM sectors, industries, and verticals.
NVIDIA’s Growth Outlook Continues to Grow
As it stands, the forecasts for NVIDIA’s growth remain robust and continue to rise. The consensus estimates suggest a high-double-digit compound annual revenue growth for at least the next 10 years, with potential for this company to top $1 trillion in annual revenue before the end of the decade. In this scenario, NVIDIA’s stock price is grossly undervalued, trading at less than 22X the current-year earnings forecast and 6X the long-term forecast, suggesting a 50% to over 400% increase in stock price is possible.
Analyst sentiment trends concur with the valuation outlook. Analysts have issued a steady stream of price target increases and upgrades since the AI boom began and show no signs of stopping, as of early Q2 2026. MarketBeat data reflect high market conviction, with 53 analysts tracked, a 96% Buy-side bias toward the Buy rating, and an uptrend in the price target. The analyst price target alone would be sufficient for a fresh all-time high, and trends suggest a move to the high-end of $400 is possible.
Institutions Limit NVIDIA Downside in Q2
Institutional trends suggest downside is limited in 2026. The data shows them owning approximately 25% of the stock and accumulating shares for seven consecutive quarters. Activity ramped to a multi-quarter high in Q1, with a balance of more than $4 bought for each $1 sold, suggesting that any price downtick will be met by buyers.
The technical outlook is suggestive. The market for NVIDIA has consolidated within a range for many quarters, allowing the MACD and stochastic indicators to reset. The setup in April aligns with a supported market and a potential rebound, with stochastic showing a weak Buy signal yet to be confirmed. The likely outcome is that NVIDIA continues to move sideways until its Q1 earnings report is released in late May, or another catalyst emerges.

The biggest risk for NVIDIA this year is Taiwan. Taiwan is central to NVIDIA’s manufacturing process and could experience disruption at any time. NVIDIA is working hard to mitigate the risk, including the onshoring of Blackwell and Rubin production, but will always rely on Taiwan to some degree. Other risks include competition and the potential emergence of AI-disrupting technology.
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The article "NVIDIA Bets Big on Industrial Revolution 4.0: Outlook Swells" first appeared on MarketBeat.