Key Takeaways
- NVDA shares climbed for seven consecutive trading days ending Thursday, marking its longest rally since November 2023.
- The winning streak delivered an 11.4% gain, though the stock remains approximately 1% lower year-to-date in 2026.
- The rally mirrored a similar seven-session advance in the S&P 500, suggesting limited individual momentum.
- Shares continue trading roughly 14% beneath their 52-week peak, a gap one Wall Street analyst views as opportunity.
- The VanEck Semiconductor ETF (SMH) has surged 19% this year with minimal input from Nvidia’s performance.
Nvidia experienced a modest yet consistent rally throughout the week, climbing for seven consecutive trading sessions through Thursday’s market close — representing its most extended positive streak in more than two years. However, Friday’s trading suggested the rally was concluding.
Pre-market indicators displayed NVDA declining 0.6% to $182.88 as market participants retreated from technology equities before an important consumer price index release. S&P 500 futures likewise exhibited minor weakness.
The week-long advance contributed 11.4% to Nvidia’s valuation. While this appears impressive initially, additional context reveals a different picture.
The broader S&P 500 index similarly registered gains across the identical seven-session timeframe. Therefore, Nvidia‘s performance wasn’t particularly distinctive compared to market-wide trends.
Intel similarly posted seven straight positive closes during this window, delivering approximately 50% returns. Against this benchmark, Nvidia’s 11.4% advance appears relatively conservative.
Notwithstanding the rally, NVDA remains roughly 1% negative for 2026. The shares have traded within a $165 to $195 range for several months, and this recent advance failed to break that established pattern.
Distance From Peak Valuation
Jefferies trading analyst Jeffrey Favuzza observed before Thursday’s session that Nvidia was positioned approximately 14% beneath its 52-week peak. He identified this as among the widest gaps within his coverage of prominent AI-related companies, which encompasses Astera Labs, Broadcom, and Micron Technology.
Favuzza suggested Nvidia might possess “the most upside torque” should market participants shift capital back into AI-focused investments, especially through leveraged exposure.
The semiconductor industry has demonstrated resilience throughout 2026 despite limited contribution from Nvidia. The VanEck Semiconductor ETF (SMH) has advanced 19% year-to-date. DataTrek co-founder Nicholas Colas highlighted that most components within SMH’s top ten positions have delivered double-digit percentage increases.
Strategic Partnerships Continue Expanding
Nvidia has maintained active business development efforts. During March, the chipmaker unveiled a collaboration with Marvell Technology, integrating it with Nvidia’s NVLink Fusion rack-scale infrastructure designed for artificial intelligence data centers. Nvidia simultaneously committed $2 billion to Marvell while announcing joint development initiatives spanning AI networking, optical interconnects, and silicon photonics technologies.
Earlier in March, Nvidia established agreements with Coherent and Lumentum Holdings focused on advanced laser technologies and optical networking solutions, guaranteeing access to future manufacturing capacity.
CoreWeave announced an expanded computing arrangement with Meta on Thursday, incorporating access to Nvidia’s Vera Rubin processor series.
A robust quarterly earnings release and comprehensive GTC conference earlier this year didn’t generate sustained upward momentum for the stock. This historical pattern explains why market observers remain cautious about whether this winning streak signals a meaningful shift or temporary volatility.
