Nvidia stock slips on Tuesday: why are analysts divided over NVDA’s next big catalyst?

Nvidia stock (NASDAQ: NVDA) slipped into the red on Tuesday as Wall Street wrestles with competing views on what will move the company next.

While US President Trump greenlighted H200 chip sales to China, the Justice Department simultaneously announced charges against smugglers moving $160 million worth of Nvidia GPUs.

This collision of policy openings and enforcement risks has left analysts genuinely split, with some pointing to the China decision as a structural catalyst, while others warn that Beijing may still restrict access.

Nvidia stock: What analysts are saying?

The stakes matter deeply for investors trying to separate signal from noise.

Different analyst assumptions produce vastly different investment calls, with price targets ranging from $140 to $352 as of late December.

The bullish camp argues that Trump’s H200 approval, combined with Nvidia’s Blackwell pipeline and sovereign AI demand, unlocks a material growth pillar.

Morgan Stanley, Citigroup, and Barclays recently maintained or raised targets near $250–$275, a 35% to 40% upside from the current levels.

The caution camp highlights that Beijing has already signaled restrictions on H200 access despite Trump’s green light.

Ipek Ozkardeskaya at Swissquote Bank noted that approval means little unless Nvidia also gets clearance for Blackwell or Rubin chips, which remain banned.

Moreover, DOJ’s ‘Operation Gatekeeper,’ which busted a massive smuggling ring moving $160 million in H100 and H200 chips through fake relabeling, is seen as evidence that secondary-market leakage undermines controlled-export logic.

A third group, the valuation skeptics, acknowledges demand strength but argues lofty multiples leave no room for timing slippage.

With consensus revenue projections exceeding $180 billion by FY2026 and FY2027 EPS at $7.46, the Nvidia stock already prices in near-flawless execution.

Three signals will decide Nvidia’s next move

Three concrete signals will resolve the split. First, China implementation details: which customers receive approvals and at what volumes over the next quarter?

If Chinese firms cite Beijing restrictions publicly, that undermines the bull case.

Second, enforcement headlines matter as new DOJ seizures or indictments tied to secondary Nvidia channels would signal supply-chain fragility and secondary-market risk.

Third, Nvidia’s next earnings call and forward guidance on Blackwell supply, Rubin readiness, and software adoption will either validate the structural growth narrative or hint at demand softness.​

Analyst rating changes matter too. Current consensus tilts bullish with 22 strong buys and 15 buys among recent calls, but any significant downgrades would signal shifting conviction.

Until those signals clear, analysts will remain cautious.

Investors should watch China policy implementation, DOJ enforcement actions, and Nvidia’s earnings commentary closely as these will determine whether the stock rebounds or rolls over in early 2026.

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