The Real Reason Why This "Magnificent Seven" Stock Has Been the S&P 500's Top Performer in 2023 and 2024

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Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) took the S&P 500 by storm in 2023, gaining 239% to become the best-performing stock in the index that year. The trend has continued in 2024 -- Nvidia is up 80% year to date and is again the best-performing S&P 500 component.

There's certainly a degree to which hype is now driving Nvidia's unstoppable run. But the fundamental reason the stock is soaring is earnings growth. Specifically, growth from its compute and networking segment, led by sales to data centers.

Let's consider why the exponential growth from Nvidia's data center business seemed to come out of nowhere, whether the business has room to run, and some headwinds investors should consider before buying this semiconductor stock.

A person holding a laptop while working in a data center.
Image source: Getty Images.

The backbone of AI

You've probably heard a lot about how Nvidia is powering artificial intelligence (AI) but may be wondering how that actually works in practice.

As the internet has expanded, it has demanded more and more computing power. The rapid transfer of information got so intense, and data security became so vital, that localized data centers were no longer good enough. As a result, centralized data centers -- known as cloud infrastructure -- have been developed to handle massive amounts of data as efficiently and securely as possible.

But AI models demand unprecedented amounts of computational power. Companies cannot develop the AI solutions they want without the processing backbone to run those models. And that processing power is exactly what Nvidia is supplying through its data center business.

Nvidia's red-hot data center business

Nvidia's data center business is the foundation of the investment thesis and the core driver of the stock's recent gains. The company reports its results under two segments. Graphics focuses on sales for gaming, PCs, visualization, software for internet applications, and more. Compute and networking includes sales for data centers, AI for the automotive industry, electric vehicle computing platforms, and more.

It wasn't long ago that graphics was Nvidia's larger segment. But in fiscal 2023 (which ended Jan. 29, 2023), compute and networking overtook graphics on both revenue and operating income. Here's a look at how the dynamic has shifted over the years. The growth will astonish you.

Metric

Fiscal 2020

Fiscal 2021

Fiscal 2022

Fiscal 2023

Fiscal 2024

Compute and networking revenue

$3.28 billion

$6.84 billion

$11.05 billion

$15.07 billion

$47.41 billion

Total revenue

$10.92 billion

$16.68 billion

$26.91 billion

$26.97 billion

$60.92 billion

Compute and networking share of revenue

30%

41%

39.4%

55.9%

77.8%

Compute and networking operating income

$750 million

$2.55 billion

$4.60 billion

$5.08 billion

$32.02 billion

Segment operating income*

$4.02 billion

$7.16 billion

$13.09 billion

$9.64 billion

$37.86 billion

Compute and networking share of segment operating income

18.7%

35.6%

35.1%

52.7%

84.5%

Data source: Nvidia. *Segment operating income is the sum of compute and networking operating income and graphics operating income. Unlike total operating income, segment operating income doesn't reflect expenses such as stock-based compensation, corporate infrastructure, and acquisitions because they're related to the overall business, not the functions of the individual segments. Fiscal 2024 ended Jan. 28.