Nvidia just pulled off what analysts are calling one of the biggest quarters in semiconductor history. The stock was already up nearly 20% so far this year before the results came in. And JPMorgan’s Harlan Sur still sees a 25% rise from here.
The reasoning behind that vision is more nuanced than a simple beat-and-rise story, and understanding it requires looking at what Nvidia (NVDA) said, and didn’t say, about what’s coming next.
What JPMorgan changed at Nvidia and the analyst behind the call
JPMorgan analyst Harlan Sur raised his price target on Nvidia to $280 from $265, maintaining an Overweight rating. At Nvidia’s May 21 closing price of $223.47, the new target implies approximately 25% upside.
The increase followed Nvidia’s release of its fiscal 2027 first-quarter results on May 20, which the company described as one of its strongest quarters on record.
Nvidia’s market capitalization now stands at approximately $5.41 trillion. Among the 42 analysts tracked by TipRanks, Nvidia has a Strong Buy consensus with an average 12-month target of $280.31, implying an upside of 24.4%, according to TipRanks.
The three pillars that support JPMorgan’s revised Nvidia thesis
The JPMorgan note identified three specific reasons for the higher target. First, Nvidia management affirmed expectations that sequential revenue growth will continue through the remainder of 2026 and into 2027, supported by hyperscaler data center capex growth of over 70%. That’s not a modest capex figure. This means that the largest cloud infrastructure operators are still in aggressive expansion mode.
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Second, Nvidia management now describes the Blackwell Ultra ramp as the fastest product ramp in the company’s history. Sur noted that, by comparison, management took a more cautious tone on the Vera Rubin architecture timeline, but Blackwell and Rubin’s combined revenue framework of more than $1 billion provides strong visibility into 2027 before even accounting for newer products like the Vera CPU or LPX opportunities.
Third, Nvidia opened a new $200 billion addressable market through its foray into the CPU segment. Management indicated that it expects each of its clients to eventually implement Vera Rubin, a statement that gives the bull case unusual length, according to CNBC.
The China risk that JPMorgan does not rule out
JPMorgan’s constructive appeal does not ignore the risks. China remains what analysts call the elephant in the room. Second-quarter guidance assumes zero computing revenue from China’s data center, and the export ban on H20 chips already caused a $4.5 billion inventory write-down in the previous fiscal year.
Supply commitments of $119 billion create significant demand risk if hyperscaler capital spending slows unexpectedly. There are also reports of a 30% drop in B200 GPU rental prices in some retail markets, and Nvidia insiders, including CFO Colette Kress and Executive Vice President Ajay Puri, have been selling off stock in recent months. Most of those sales reflect pre-programmed 10b5-1 plans rather than fundamental concerns, and the company is executing an $80 billion share buyback to offset the dilution.
Sur’s $280 target absorbs those risks rather than discarding them. The assumption implicit in the target is that hyperscaler capex remains resilient, China remains effectively excluded from the model, and Blackwell and Rubin together meet the trillion-dollar-plus framework that management has outlined.
JPMorgan updated its Nvidia price target after one of the biggest quarters in semiconductor historyMorris/Getty Images
Where JPMorgan stands relative to the broader analyst consensus on Nvidia
JPMorgan is neither the most optimistic nor the most cautious major on Nvidia right now. Citi analyst Atif Malik raised his target to $300 with a Buy rating on the same day. Wolfe Research reiterated Outperform with a target of $275. According to Investing.com, Evercore ISI has a Street-high target that reflects a more aggressive view on the duration of AI growth.
The group of major company targets in the $265 to $300 range reflects both a strong conviction in the AI ​​infrastructure thesis and a shared recognition that China, insider selling, and soft GPU rental prices are real variables to consider. JPMorgan’s $280 sits deliberately in the middle of that range, which in itself says something: This is about maintaining conviction rather than seeking momentum.
Key figures from JPMorgan’s Nvidia note and market context:
New JPMorgan target: $280, raised from $265, overweight remains, analyst Harlan Sur; implies a 25% increase from the close of $223.47 on May 21, according to TipRanks
Hyperscale Investment: Data center capex growth over 70%, supporting sequential revenue growth through 2026 and 2027, Investing.com confirmed
Blackwell and Rubin Framework: $1T+ Combined Revenue Opportunity Provides Visibility into 2027 Ahead of New Product Categories, According to CNBC
China Risk: Q2 guidance assumes zero computing revenue from China data center; The H20 ban caused a $4.5 billion writedown; Supply commitments of $119 billion, according to 247 Wall St.
Nvidia market capitalization: approximately $5.41 trillion as of close May 21; supply 19.83% so far this year; 52-week range from $129.13 to $236.54, TipRanks confirmed
Simultaneous calls: Citi raised to $300 buy; Wolfe Research Tops $275; Evercore ISI maintains its target at the highest level of the street, according to Investing.com
What investors should keep in mind in the coming quarters
The most important variable in Sur’s model is the durability of the hyperscaler’s capex. JPMorgan’s entire thesis is based on the assumption that cloud infrastructure operators will continue to spend at elevated rates through 2027. Any pullback in that spending would immediately pressure the revenue visibility that justifies the current valuation multiple.
The timeline of the Vera Rubin ramp is the second key variable. Management’s cautious tone on Rubin relative to Blackwell Ultra suggests the transition between architectures may be less smooth than the bull case implies. If Rubin fails at the right time, the trillion-dollar-plus revenue framework loses some of its near-term credibility.
For investors, JPMorgan’s $280 target is less of a prediction about where the stock will be in twelve months and more of a statement about where analyst conviction currently lies following one of the strongest quarterly reports in Nvidia’s history.
South is not chasing stocks. He is making a measured call that the AI ​​infrastructure cycle is longer than the market’s near-term price action suggests.
Whether that turns out to be correct depends almost entirely on whether hyperscalers continue to spend and whether Rubin takes advantage of the $200 billion CPU opportunity that Jensen Huang described.
Related: Bank of America resets Nvidia stock price target for 2026
This story was originally published by TheStreet on May 23, 2026, where it first appeared in the Investments section. Add TheStreet as a preferred source by clicking here.