Tech Stocks Lead Wall Street: Nasdaq Hits New High as Nvidia Market Cap Nears Apple
The Nasdaq Composite hits a fresh record fueled by strong earnings expectations for Nvidia, whose market cap is closing in on Apple. This article analyzes the pull effect of the Big Seven tech giants on the broader market and shifting investor sentiment, offering outlook and risk warnings.
YayaNews contributes financial news and market context through the YayaNews editorial workflow.

Tech Stocks Lead U.S. Stocks: Nasdaq Hits New High, Nvidia Market Cap Nears Apple
Against the backdrop of a surging artificial intelligence (AI) boom, U.S. tech stocks have once again taken center stage this week. The Nasdaq Composite Index set a new all-time record, driven by strong earnings expectations for AI chip giant Nvidia (NVDA), further cementing the tech sector's leadership role in the broader market. Market sentiment swings between optimism and caution, with the performance of the Big Seven tech giants serving as a key indicator for investors gauging the market's direction.
Nvidia Earnings Expectations Ignite Market Enthusiasm
As a core supplier of AI computing infrastructure, market expectations for Nvidia's earnings have reached multi-year highs ahead of its report. According to multiple financial media reports, analysts broadly anticipate Nvidia will once again deliver revenue and profit figures that exceed expectations, primarily driven by explosive growth in its data center business from AI training and inference demand. Buoyed by these expectations, Nvidia's stock price has risen for several consecutive days before its earnings release, with its total market capitalization quietly approaching that of Apple Inc. (AAPL), narrowing the gap to its lowest level in history. This phenomenon is interpreted by the market as: AI hardware demand is reshaping the valuation logic of the tech industry, with investors willing to pay a higher premium for future growth potential.
The Big Seven Tech Giants: The Market's Anchor
Nvidia's strong performance is not an isolated case. The "Big Seven" tech giants, represented by Apple, Microsoft (MSFT), Google parent Alphabet (GOOGL), Amazon (AMZN), Meta (META), Tesla (TSLA), and Nvidia, have consistently acted as the engine of the broader market throughout 2024. According to market data, these seven stocks have accounted for over 50% of the gains in the Nasdaq and S&P 500 indices. Driven by Nvidia's earnings expectations, other AI-related concept stocks have also attracted capital inflows, pushing up the valuation center of the entire tech sector. Market analysts point out that this rally structure, dominated by a few giants, reflects both the concentration advantages of the AI industry and the risk of excessive index reliance on a single sector.
Market Sentiment: Concerns Amid Optimism
Despite the Nasdaq repeatedly hitting new highs, market sentiment is not entirely smooth. On one hand, investors are confident in the speed and scale of AI technology commercialization, believing that the earnings growth of companies like Nvidia is sustainable. On the other hand, the Federal Reserve's monetary policy direction, geopolitical risks, and the excessively high valuations of some tech stocks keep some institutional investors cautious. Some market observers note that the current tech rally is more driven by expectations than by a broad improvement in fundamentals. If Nvidia's earnings fall short of expectations or the Fed signals a hawkish stance, tech stocks could face short-term correction pressure.
Outlook: Can the AI Theme Continue?
Looking ahead, whether tech stocks can continue to lead depends on two key variables: the ability of the AI industry chain to deliver profits and the macro liquidity environment. From an industry perspective, Nvidia's earnings guidance will directly reflect downstream companies' willingness to purchase AI infrastructure. If its data center business maintains strong growth, it will reinforce market confidence in the AI investment cycle. From a macro perspective, the market generally expects the Fed to begin a rate-cutting cycle in the second half of 2024, and a loose monetary environment typically favors growth tech stocks. However, if inflation data fluctuates, delaying rate cut expectations, the high valuations of tech stocks could face correction risks.
Risk Warning
The above content is for reference only and does not constitute investment advice. The stock market involves risks, and investment should be made with caution. The companies and indices mentioned in this article are only for analysis purposes and do not represent any investment recommendations. Investors should make independent investment decisions based on their own risk tolerance.
Disclaimer
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute any investment advice. Financial markets involve risks, and investment should be made with caution. The data and views in this article are as of the time of publication and may change with market conditions.
Start Your Trading Journey
Yayapay offers secure and convenient global asset trading services. Register Now →
Original YayaNews editorial coverage, published for informational purposes.
This article is authored by YayaNews. It is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.
Topics & Symbols
Continue Reading
Related Reading
GameStop sees adj. EBITDA above $600M for FY ending Jan. 2027 (GME:NYSE)
GameStop (GME) jumps on $600M+ EBITDA forecast and eBay (EBAY) acquisition push.

Heatmap Highlights: Tech rotation, defensive surge shape S&P 500 (SP500:)
S&P 500 heatmap shows sharp sector rotation: semiconductors plunge as software and defensive health care lead.

Cineverse reaffirms fiscal 2027 guidance of $115M-$120M revenue and $10M-$20M adjusted EBITDA following IndiCue and Giant acquisitions (NASDAQ:CNVS)
Cineverse (CNVS) Q4 FY2026 earnings call: acquisition impact, AI ad-tech pivot, FY2027 guidance, margins, liquidity and risks.

Wall Street Faces Weekly Pressure: Tech Giants Drag and OpenAI Delay Impact Analysis
Major U.S. stock indexes are at risk of weekly declines, with big tech weakness and OpenAI's hint of a model delay taking center stage. This article analyzes sector rotation, macroeconomic data, and Fed policy expectations affecting U.S. stocks.
