Sections a Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) may be flashing a warning despite a new high, as the main indicator suggests that the rally may be more likely.
This technology differs from about stock The recent strong performance saw Nvidia close at a record $208.27 on Friday, marking its first close since October 2025.
The rally briefly pushed its market capitalization over $5 trillion in today’s trading.
However, this increase has raised the stock’s 14-day Relative Strength Index (RSI) to 71.50, pushing it into overbought territory and indicating increased risk of a long-term reversal even as prices continue to rise.

Instead of comparing, a semiconductor the company is worse than 82.26% of its peers on this metric, and the average company is the lowest at 59.265.
Even so, the RSI indicator triggers a warning. The stock has gained nearly 20% in the past month, a pace that usually calls for consolidation as traders take profits and quickly cool.
While overbought stocks don’t necessarily mean they’ll bounce back, they often lead to periods of greater volatility.
Such a difference shows that Nvidia’s profits have gone beyond the main stage, a process that is often associated with temporary fatigue.
Nvidia’s speed profile
Of course, Nvidia’s stock performance has been largely driven by a strong rebound in semiconductor stocks.
This was triggered by a strong financial report from Intel (NASDAQ: The price of INTC shares), which raised sentiment in the chip industry and brought profits to companies such as Advanced Micro Devices (NASDAQ: AMD) and Qualcomm (NASDAQ: The price of QCOM).
At the same time, expectations about artificial intelligence devices and the rise of data centers have strengthened Nvidia’s major role in the AI universe.
Investor Interest has also been supported by expectations of continued growth linked to hyperscaler investments and next-generation AI platforms.
This is based on the Vera Rubin platform, which was unveiled at CES 2026 and expanded at GTC 2026, which introduces AI-rich architectures and promises up to 10x lower costs and higher performance.
Shipments began in early 2026, with the main cloud shipment expected later this year.
CEO Jensen Huang suggests that sales of Blackwell and Vera Rubin chips could reach $1 trillion by 2027, reflecting the growth of AI infrastructure.





