Nvidia shares failed to sustain a rally on Monday despite a series of headline-grabbing announcements at the company’s annual GTC developer conference.
The stock briefly jumped during CEO Jensen Huang’s keynote but later pulled back, ending the session with only modest gains.
Investors initially reacted positively as Nvidia unveiled several major updates. These included the company’s next-generation Vera Rubin AI architecture, new inference chips, and the debut of DLSS 5, an AI-powered graphics technology designed to generate lighting and materials in real time for video games.
Meanwhile, Nvidia also projected a massive $1 trillion opportunity in AI infrastructure revenue through 2027.
The forecast reflects the company’s belief that demand for AI computing will accelerate as businesses deploy AI models at scale.
However, the bullish headlines failed to trigger a sustained market rally.
Announcing NVIDIA DLSS 5, an AI-powered breakthrough in visual fidelity for games, coming this fall.
— NVIDIA GeForce (@NVIDIAGeForce) March 16, 2026
DLSS 5 infuses pixels with photorealistic lighting and materials, bridging the gap between rendering and reality.
Learn More → https://t.co/yHON3nGyxE pic.twitter.com/UvF9G7tlZs
Part of the pullback likely reflected a classic “sell-the-news” reaction. Nvidia shares have already surged over the past two years on the back of the AI boom, meaning many investors had positioned ahead of the conference.
At the same time, analysts note that Nvidia’s trillion-dollar forecast represents long-term potential rather than near-term revenue.
As a result, investors may be waiting for clearer signals on how quickly AI spending will translate into earnings growth.
Jensen Huang just doubled NVIDIA's demand forecast to $1 Trillion through 2027 🤯
— Josh Kale (@JoshKale) March 16, 2026
Then spent two hours explaining why that number is conservative…
Here's everything today from GTC:
– NemoClaw: NVIDIA's open-source enterprise AI agent stack built around OpenClaw. Jensen called… pic.twitter.com/RO67Qnp6C1
Finally, broader market concerns remain. Cloud companies are investing heavily in AI data centers, but questions persist about how sustainable that spending cycle will be.
For now, Nvidia continues to dominate the AI hardware market. Yet Monday’s muted stock reaction shows that even blockbuster announcements may no longer guarantee a major rally.
The post Nvidia Stock Fails to Rally Despite Major AI and Gaming Announcements appeared first on BeInCrypto.
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