Nvidia stock shows signs of fatigue after 11-day rally

Nvidia stock shows signs of fatigue after 11-day rally
Utkarsh Roshan
16 Apr 2026, 19:01 PM

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NVDA breakout fade

Sell NVDA (or buy NVDA puts) into the post-11-day-rally fatigue: price is stalling just above/around $200 without a decisive close, while the broader tape is slightly risk-off and supplier strength (TSMC/ASML) failed to lift chip stocks—classic “expectations already priced” setup. Thesis: momentum rolls over until NVDA proves sustained acceptance above $200.

Key Risk: NVDA delivers a decisive breakout with follow-through (multiple closes above ~$200 and strong guidance/capex signals), forcing shorts to cover and momentum to re-accelerate.

ASML relative weakness

Sell ASML (or buy ASML puts) versus the AI narrative: despite solid results and raised guidance, ASML keeps sliding and the market is treating strong fundamentals as insufficient—elevated expectations are capping upside. Thesis: the market is de-rating the “AI capex beneficiaries” complex, and ASML’s relative weakness persists longer than NVDA’s.

Key Risk: ASML’s next catalyst (order strength/lead times for EUV/High-NA) surprises to the upside and triggers a sector-wide re-rating, reversing the downtrend.

  • Nvidia dips after record 11-day rally, struggles near $200 level.
  • Strong TSMC results fail to lift chip stocks broadly.
  • Investors await Big Tech capex signals for next breakout.

Shares of Nvidia edged lower on Thursday, showing signs of fatigue after a record-setting rally.

The correction came even as strong earnings from key suppliers underscored continued demand for artificial intelligence chips.

The stock slipped 0.4% to $198.08 after briefly trading higher earlier in the session.

The move comes after Nvidia logged 11 consecutive days of gains—its longest winning streak since at least 1999, according to Dow Jones Market Data.

The rally has lifted the stock from recent lows near $165 and briefly pushed it above the $200 mark on Wednesday, a level it has not consistently held since late last year.

Nvidia’s all-time closing high stands at $207.04, reached on October 29.

Breakout above $200 remains key focus

Despite the recent gains, Nvidia has yet to deliver a decisive breakout above the $200 level, which remains a key psychological and technical threshold for investors.

The stock’s inability to sustain moves above that mark reflects lingering caution, even as Wall Street price targets continue to imply further upside.

Thursday’s decline also aligned with broader market weakness.

The S&P 500 fell 0.1%, while the Nasdaq Composite declined 0.3%.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 68 points, or 0.2%.

Even so, the major indexes remain on track for strong weekly gains, with the S&P 500 up around 3%, the Nasdaq more than 4%, and the Dow about 1%.

Supplier strength fails to lift sector

Earnings from major semiconductor suppliers reinforced the strength of AI-driven demand but failed to provide a sustained boost to chip stocks.

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company reported a 58% jump in first-quarter profit, exceeding expectations and marking its fourth consecutive quarter of record earnings.

“AI-related demand continues to be extremely robust,” CEO CC Wei said during the company’s earnings call.

High-performance computing, which includes AI chips produced for Nvidia, accounted for 61% of TSMC’s revenue in the quarter, up from 55% in the previous period.

Advanced chips manufactured at 7nm and below made up about 74% of revenue, supporting gross margins of 66%.

Despite the strong results, TSMC shares fell about 2% on Thursday.

Mixed signals across chip industry

Elsewhere in the sector, ASML declined further after initially dropping as much as 6.5% on Wednesday.

The stock closed about 2.5% lower in the prior session and fell another 3% on Thursday, despite reporting solid first-quarter results and raising forward guidance.

The muted market reaction to strong earnings from both TSMC and ASML highlights elevated investor expectations for the semiconductor sector, particularly as AI-driven growth becomes more central to valuations.

Recent history reflects similar dynamics. Nvidia’s strong fourth-quarter earnings report last quarter was followed by a 5% decline in its share price, underscoring how high expectations can limit upside reactions.

Awaiting next catalyst

Investors are now turning their attention to upcoming earnings from major technology companies as the next potential catalyst for Nvidia.

Market participants are particularly focused on whether large technology firms will continue to increase capital expenditure on AI infrastructure and whether new models are being trained on Nvidia’s Blackwell architecture.

Such signals would provide greater clarity on demand sustainability and could determine whether Nvidia can break decisively above the $200 level after its historic run.