The Rundown - Why Nvidia’s Grip on China Won’t Last Forever | Gil Luria
Episode Date: August 31, 2025China is becoming the biggest swing factor for Nvidia’s future. Just like Apple before it, Nvidia is facing a shrinking share of the Chinese market as competition from Huawei intensifies and U.S.–...China tensions escalate. Gil Luria, Head of Technology Research at D.A. Davidson, breaks down why CapEx spending on AI is still surging, whether this boom is sustainable, and if the current frenzy has shades of a bubble, or the foundation for something bigger.This video is for informational purposes only and reflects the views of the host and guest, not Public Holdings or its subsidiaries. Mentions of assets are not recommendations. Investing involves risk, including loss. Past performance does not guarantee future results. For full disclosures, visit Public.com/disclosures.
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Welcome back to the rundown interview edition.
In today's episode, we are talking to Gil Loria, the head of tech research at the
Investment Bank, DA Davidson.
Our conversation today was mostly about Nvidia and their earnings.
Gil has been covering Nvidia for a while now, that he just raised the price target of
their stock to $195 following their earnings report this week.
So I asked him why he's bullish on Nvidia, why China is a big wild card for the company,
and if he's worried about a potential AI bubble popping.
It was a great conversation.
I honestly wish it was longer.
So hope you guys enjoy it.
All right, on today's show, we are talking to Gil, Loria.
Gil, thanks for being on the show.
Thanks for having me.
Well, today we got to talk about Nvidia.
It was the story of the week.
Story of the year, honestly.
Their earnings dropped last night.
And stock reaction, not so great.
Drop 3% after hours.
It's recovering a little bit right now.
but the numbers are pretty solid, you know, be done top line, beat on bottom line.
So Gil, tell me, are we cooked or is NVIDIA going to be okay?
NVIDIA is going to be okay.
We're cooked in many other ways.
This isn't one of them, right?
We are, big picture, we are using AI a lot more.
The models have gotten so good and they're so compute intensive because of how
powerful they are that we need more and more compute capacity. And
Nvidia is not the only game in town, but it's the main game in town. And so
your big, the company's building all this capacity out. Microsoft Dash,
Amazon Web Services, Google Cloud are mostly still relying on
Nvidia. And then companies that are building AI capabilities, either because it
helps their internal business or because they're trying to achieve super intelligence.
And let's put meta and Elon Inc.
in top of that list also have insatiable demand for more compute capacity.
And again, as long as Nvidia is the main game in town, they're going to be just fine.
So that's, okay, I see what you're saying.
And that's the bull case right now for Nvidia.
So what was your takeaway on the earnings?
You know, they miss slightly depending on which publication you'll
look at on their data center revenue. It was, it came in at 41.1 billion, still grew 56%. So what was
your takeaway on that slight miss? And is this just a matter of like our expectations are so high
that even like a slight, even like a, even like a slight miss like that can cause a stock to drop?
It's really all about China. China is a lot of noise. And, and then with Nvidia, China is a messy
story to begin with because they have this quirky way of reporting geography where they report
geography by where the invoice came from, which really doesn't help us know where the chips
are going to.
And so we actually believe that at least a quarter of their chips used to go to China and
still a pretty substantial amount of their chips go to China.
Now, either into China to a Chinese company or.
or to a reseller in Southeast Asia that ends up selling into China.
And I wish they were more transparent about it.
They're not.
And this is when it comes back to bite them.
Because not only are they dealing with a dynamic Chinese market
that has internal competition, that they're not allowed to sell the advanced chips into,
but the disputes between the U.S. government and China are making it even more complicated.
So they sold H20s for a while.
That's the degraded hopper chip.
They sold them into China for a while.
It was a really big part of the business.
Then abruptly in April they were told by the government they can't sell them.
And then the government said, well, maybe you can sell them, but we're going to put tracker chips.
And we're going to charge you 15% of the revenue.
And so now they're not even sure they can sell them into China, so they're selling them not into China.
And then the Chinese are saying, what do you mean you're putting tracker chips into the servers?
We don't want any of your chips because you have tracker chips in them.
So, Nvidia is caught in the middle.
It's creating a lot of noise.
That's why their guines with less than expectation.
That will continue to be the source of noise, especially in the short term in Nvidia.
I would draw parallel to Apple, right?
Remember Apple up until five years ago, 20% of the revenue came from China.
And then China got more complicated.
They got into the middle of the trade dispute.
And now it's closer to 10%.
This is the trajectory in Vizon.
They'll keep selling in China, but it'll be less and less over time.
And that's the reaction today in the stock is that guidance was less than expected
because they can't sell into China probably this quarter.
If they do, they said that's an additional $2 to $5 billion.
If that's the case, estimates are fine.
if not, they will have a little bit of a short-term headwind.
Do you see this?
So you see this playing out to where at some point,
it's just going to be an inconsequential amount for their revenue.
Like the Chinese market is essentially going to be shut off from Nvidia
as they just, as they get, you know, pushed out by either the Chinese government
or homegrown players in China like Huawei is a couple others that are trying to, you know,
make chips that rival Nvidia.
Do you see that playing out?
Or do you see maybe something get, I mean, Jensen Huang, very charismatic guy, you know, does he, does he broker a deal where he's allowed to sell his chips back in China?
We don't know.
The short answer is we don't know.
We think that it is an eventuality that the Chinese market will be taken over by Chinese incumbents.
But Jensen Wong may be able to negotiate directly with the president, by the way, a way to continue to sell some chips for some.
And again, let's not forget the advanced chips that they're selling to resellers in
Southeast States are still getting to China.
So they are still selling the China.
They're not supposed to.
People are getting arrested, but it's happening.
Let's face it.
It's happening.
And that can continue for a while longer.
But again, the eventuality, to your point, Huawei is going to sell these chips.
The Chinese government preferred that it's Huawei chips.
close the gap, the performance gap. It's maybe a year's worth of performance gap. So the more
Nvidia is required to sell degraded chips, the less their chips are even better than the Chinese
chips. So, yeah, over time, the Chinese market will go away from Nvidia. The question is how
quickly does it happen in the short term, that's happened gradually? That depends really on the
negotiation between Jensen Wong and the president. Well, there's a lot of demands, supposedly,
here in the U.S., right?
I think Jensen said in the earnings call
that $600 billion in CAPEX AI spending
from the big tech companies over the next couple years,
and he said trillions of dollars by the end of 2030.
Do you really see that playing out,
or the skeptical person would say, well, like, okay,
is it actually going to continue?
Are we going to actually see massive amounts of spending?
Or are we going to have a situation where we get into an earnings call
and Sotina Dadele gets on and says, you know what,
kind of scaling back a little bit.
That causes the domino effect.
I mean, our investors are going to put up with these big tech hyperscalers
spending so much money without any sort of payoff because we haven't seen an ROI just yet.
Yeah.
So I'd say that up until six months ago, we were in the camp that that's inevitable and it could
happen as soon as this year.
Because we were doing the ROI math and we could walk in.
We can walk through the RRMath a little bit more.
And we thought that could happen as early as this year.
Nothing said that.
And remember, Deep Seek was the moment of kind of heat in terms of thinking,
models are going to be as good as they're going to get,
and now they're just going to get smaller and cheaper.
And that was early this year, kind of in that January through April timeframe.
What's actually happened, though, is the models have gotten a lot better.
So if Chad GPT was more of a curiosity and a little bit of a parlor trick up until even six months ago,
if you're using the model now to its fullest capability and more and more people are,
it's actually quite powerful.
And so that's why we still think Microsoft, Amazon, Google's customers will continue to come to them for more capacity.
Now, let's talk about ROI for a second.
And here the analogy is the picks and shovels analogy, right?
Nvidia sells picks and shovels.
Microsoft, Azure, Amazon Web Services, Google Cloud, buy Picks and shovels and rent them out to their customers.
That business is a good business.
It's not great.
The returns there are okay.
Maybe low single-digit returns.
They're positive.
They're not great.
But the growth there is so substantial that Microsoft, Amazon, Google, who have
so much capital that they don't have anything else to do with,
will continue to pursue it.
The question is about the gold diggers themselves, right?
Those companies are coming to Microsoft, Amazon, and Google,
and renting as much capacity as they can get
because they're so eager to defend their business
from the disruption that's coming that they're throwing stuff at the wall.
As long as that's the case, Microsoft Amazon Goal will continue to buy
the picks and shovels and rent them out.
only if we really see that people aren't getting value
and there's no prospect of people getting value from AI,
will we think that that's going to dry up?
And again, we thought that could happen this year,
but based on how good the model they're getting,
we don't think that's happening in the next year or two now.
We think that we are going to be so much more productive
if we use these AI tools.
The phrase that comes to mind
is something an economist named Richard Baldwin said
back in 2023, which is your job isn't going to replace by AI, your job is going to be replaced
by somebody uses AI better than you.
That's where we're out of this point in time.
The tools are so good that people that use them well are going to be so much more productive
that they'll continue to drive that demand.
That's where we're out on this right now.
What do you think about like the sentiment now of this AI bubble, right?
even Sam Altman himself, right?
CEO Open AI, he's talking about it.
There's this meme going around talking about how the, you know,
there's these AI apps that are spending that are like running at negative gross margins.
That money is going to Anthropic.
Anthropics sending that money to Amazon.
Amazon's using that money to buy Nvidia.
It's all like built on this pyramid, but it's all negative gross margins being financed by VC money.
What do you think about that?
I mean, even even this week I saw.
Microsoft CEO, Satya Nadella, he did a Twitter thread talking about his favorite use cases of AI.
And I'm like, that's a negative sign to me.
So, Gil, like, where is what is your head at about this whole narrative of AI level?
A lot of that stuff's valid.
So, you know, who had it in their bingo card that Satya Nadella would turn into a thread boy, right?
I didn't have that in my bingo card.
Yes, that's true.
These are heavily negative gross margin businesses.
Open AI is a hugely negative gross margin business that can't last forever.
And what's interesting there is, you know, people draw the analogy to Uber, right?
Uber was a hugely negative gross margin business for a while until we all started,
until we only used Uber and then they raised prices.
Open AI is not necessarily in the same boat because we could use Google Gemini.
We could use Anthropic Claude.
So it's not clear or GROC, right?
GROC's in my car now.
All I have to do is press the voice button for a second and I can talk to GROC,
which is totally creepy for another day.
That's true.
Very negative gross margin, right?
I get that.
But again, I use the tool all the time.
Like I was one of the first users of Chad GPT back in December of 2022,
right after he came out, blew my mind, right?
I thought I didn't believe that in my lifetime, I'd see something to pass it at the touring test.
But pretty quickly, I got to a point where, yeah, this is kind of a curiosity.
I don't see how it changes my life.
Every time you use it now, you realize that it's gotten more and more powerful.
And that's, again, I think that's the only thing that matters is that we think about entire professions that are now going to be very different.
I'm not saying that it won't be any paralegals or customer service reps or software coders.
There will be a lot less.
And we in the office are going to be a lot more productive.
All of us, that part of our job is reading and summarizing and synthesizing.
Those things are going to collapse in terms of the time they take.
And as long as that's the case, as long as this can make us more useful, it's worth pursuing.
but I really don't want to gloss over the fact that there's not enough revenue being generated on AI right now.
There's not enough cost savings being generated to justify anywhere near the investment we're making.
So we will have to become more productive in order to continue to justify this.
So that's one part of it.
The other part is there's this whole pursuit of superintelligence.
That's really, that's driving a lot of this, especially if you're a lot of,
thinking about why is Duck buying so many data centers, right? Why is Elon buying so many data centers?
They really believe we are a couple of years away from superintelligence. Superintelligence being
like a model that does everything we do. Not helps us be more productive, but does everything we do.
And they will continue. And both of those, both those guys have very deep pockets. And both of them
are hell-bent on getting to superintelligence first.
they're investing that way. Again, Microsoft, Amazon, Google don't have a better use for their capital.
So they're continuing to invest. So we still have some runway. But again, I'll concede that if this doesn't start making us productive, then at some point, this well drives out because you can only be negative gross margin for so long.
You know, $600 billion in investment just to send each other AI generated emails. I mean, you know, I get the use case, but it's like, you know, how much how much can you spend on that?
But I concede as well that like, yeah, this stuff is really awesome.
The technology is awesome.
Maybe it's all going to be part of everyone's workflow one day.
But again, the investment numbers, the CAPEX numbers are so eye-watering that it just makes
everyone pause.
Investors are cool with it right now because we're just like the vibes are good.
As soon as the vibes turn a little bit sour, that's what makes me nervous is like the soon
as the vibes turn, then how much appetite is everyone going to have to just keep spending
the hundreds and hundreds of billions of dollars?
are these leaderships at these companies.
Even, even, you know, someone like Zuck can probably get away with it because he's the founder
and he owns super majority voting shares.
But others, like, is Andy Jassy going to be okay with spending $300 billion if all of a sudden
Amazon stock is not performing well and investors aren't happy?
So that's what makes me nervous about the whole thing.
Yeah, no, we should absolutely be nervous.
Again, let's, if we are just to go back, not that long, just to January of this year,
when Deep Seek happened.
And then again, we thought, hey, Balthor just got as good as they're going to get.
And now they're going to get cheaper and smaller.
That's all it took to cut Nvidia's price in half, right?
Right.
And to cause, by the way, to your point, Andy, Jesse and Sotian, Adela and Sotomay to reconsider.
They reconsider, but again, they have a front row of view to where the technology is and said,
we're not going to panic.
The technology is great.
It's going to develop.
And again, I can't emphasize enough.
we do not have a better use for the capital.
We can't do M&A.
We're not going to be allowed to.
We're already buying back our stock.
We've plowed as much money back into the business as we need to
without degrading our margins.
This really is the best and highest use of our capital
because we believe, those three guys,
believe that this technology is going to accelerate GDP growth
and generate tremendous returns for the economy.
as long as they believe that, they'll keep doing it.
Investor sentiment is going to have to turn for a lot worse for them to not believe that.
But I agree with you.
Investor sentiment is fickle.
That's why I point back to that January episode.
Right.
We took a trillion dollars off in video's market cap because the vines were bad.
Those guys have a little bit of a longer time frame.
That's an excellent point.
And you make a good point.
These companies have so much money.
They literally don't know what to do with it.
So they're like, ah, we'll just throw it in some Nvidia chips,
and which is why Nvidia has been the biggest beneficiary of that.
Gil, I know you got to run.
Thank you so much for hopping on.
It was a pleasure chatting,
and hopefully we can do this again for next earning season.
Sounds good.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Well, all right, guys, that's the interview for this week.
Let me know in the comments on what you thought about the interview.
And if you have any feedback for me,
you know, I'm trying to get better as an interviewer
because we're going to have a new interview every Sunday.
So keep an eye on your podcast's feed for that.
We got some great guests coming.
up. Thank you guys so much for listening and watching. Shout out to Mike and Connor for all the
help behind the scenes and we'll see you guys back here tomorrow.
