Stock 17-10-2025 21:32 2 Views

Nvidia stock takes a hit: is this the start of a broader tech sell-off?

Nvidia stock (NASDAQ: NVDA) traded in the red on Friday, as a mix of policy worries and broader market risk-off sent investors scrambling for the exits.

In premarket trading, the Nvidia stock was down roughly 2.8% to about $176, and several other chip names, including AMD and Broadcom, showed similar weakness.

A key immediate trigger was renewed concern about US–China technology frictions.

Reporting over the past day has highlighted that Nvidia’s China exposure has shrunk considerably.

Analysts estimate China’s share of revenue has fallen from double digits, and the company is not forecasting China revenue for the current quarter, a dynamic that makes the firm more vulnerable to policy shocks.

That combination, policy headlines plus frothy valuations after a long AI-driven rally, helps explain why a single news wave can translate into a sharper move in high-multiple growth names.

As one industry observer put it in recent coverage, Jensen Huang’s public comments underscore how Nvidia sits between competing geopolitical agendas.

“Jensen Huang’s diplomatic comment about ‘larger agendas’ is CEO-speak for ‘We’re pawns in a digital Cold War,’” said an analyst at Running Point Capital Advisors.

Nvidia stock: Is this the start of a broader unwind?

So far, the evidence is mixed. On one hand, the sell-off on Friday tracked a wider risk-off move in futures and indexes, where investors also reacted to banking and macro jitters, an environment that typically pressures richly priced tech names first.

That pattern supports the headline question: when markets turn cautious, concentrated winners are often the first to be clipped.

On the other hand, fundamental demand for AI infrastructure remains robust.

Recent upbeat results from major industry suppliers and chip foundries underscore continuing investment in AI compute, which argues against a prolonged sector collapse.

Market commentators note that policy risk is acting as a timing and revenue-flow issue rather than an immediate structural collapse of AI demand.

Analysts and strategists offer framing that reporters can use while seeking on-the-record comment from sell-side desks.

A commonly used line from market commentary is:

‘Policy shocks to China sales have turned a long-term tailwind into a near-term headwind,’ is useful to explain why investors are re-pricing risk even as the longer-term AI story persists.

Investors to keep a close eye

Traders will be watching intraday correlation across the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index and major tech names, any new guidance from Nvidia on China exposure, and whether policy headlines escalate or cool.

If declines broaden to sectors beyond semiconductors and persist across sessions, the market may be entering a wider tech rotation.

If they remain isolated and sentiment stabilizes, today’s move will likely be remembered as a policy-driven volatility spike rather than the start of a sustained sell-off.

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