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06-05

Nvidia gave up its hard-earned Computex gains after sliding 3.62% on Wednesday, pulled down by Broadcom's post-earnings drop and Middle East-driven risk-off sentiment. This macro-shakedown dragged the entire AI chip sector into a temporary broad pullback.

The "No-Cooling" Thesis (The [IDEA] Angle):

Is it time to panic? Far from it. This dip is presenting us with a textbook fundamental mismatch. While macro sentiment pushed the price down, the physical tech industry is screaming the exact opposite. TSMC’s CEO just explicitly reiterated that global AI demand shows "no signs of cooling." Simultaneously, Bank of America (BofA) recalibrated its NVDA outlook upward, keeping the long-term compute narrative completely intact.

My unique view here is that the market is mispricing short-term geopolitical anxiety against long-term operational reality. Computex proved that Nvidia isn't just selling chips anymore; it is building the foundational AI factories of the next decade. Letting go of shares because of an unrelated Broadcom reaction is a distraction from the structural bull case.

My Action Plan & Entry Point:

I am absolutely buying this dip. Instead of waiting for every drop of geopolitical sentiment to clear—which can keep you sidelined forever—I am scaling in right here. The fundamentals are too strong, and tech pullbacks of this quality have historically been brief windows of opportunity before the next leg up.

Over to the Community:

• Are you executing buy orders on NVDA at these discounted levels, or are you holding off until the Middle East and earnings uncertainty settles?

Nvidia's $25B Bond Draws 3x Oversubscription: Bullish Signal or Capex Warning?
Nvidia rose 3.54% as it priced a $25 billion investment-grade bond offering that drew $85 billion in orders — more than 3x oversubscribed — with deal size upsized from an initial ~$20 billion. The longest-dated tranche tightened 25 basis points from initial guidance, with the final spread just 65 basis points over Treasuries, reflecting near-frictionless borrowing costs. Nvidia is leveraging its blue-chip credit to fund the AI arms race at minimal cost. With bond markets lining up to lend, is this further proof of its moat — or a sign of an ever-expanding capex burden?
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