Buy Nvidia Stock: It’s America’s 7th-Largest Company 

It’s been a few days since Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA) announced that it wouldn’t be proceeding with its acquisition to acquire Arm Limited. Instead, its owner, SoftBank Group (OTCMKTS:SFTBY), got to keep the $1.25 billion deposit Nvidia gave it as part of the sale agreement. Surprisingly, NVDA stock has not been affected by the news.

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Perhaps it has something to do with Nvidia passing Meta Platforms (NASDAQ:FB) to become the seventh-largest U.S. company. It sat in 50th place only two years ago, a long way from the top 10.

Now it sits within $59 billion of Berkshire Hathaway (NYSE:BRK.A, NYSE:BRK.B) and sixth place. 

Something tells me it won’t take another two years to move up higher, possibly even catching Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) in the process. 

If you’re holding Nvidia for three to five years, I don’t think $242 is a bad price to pay for one of America’s top innovators. 

Here’s why.

NVDA Stock Is Worth More Than $242

The last time I wrote about Nvidia in late January, I suggested it could be one of 2022’s best bets. So far, I don’t look too bad. NVDA is up 4% in the weeks since. More importantly, it’s moving higher while Meta’s moving lower.

Nvidia reports its Q4 2022 results on Feb. 16 after the markets close. InvestorPlace’s Vandita Jadeja believes it will “crush” its fourth-quarter earnings

Her reasons include the fact the company’s beaten analyst expectations for six consecutive quarters. A seventh appears to be in the cards with estimated top-line revenues of $7.4 billion and bottom-line earnings per share of $1.22. She pulls it all together by stating it has the products and management team to keep delivering the goods. 

I couldn’t agree more. Nvidia does like to underpromise and overdeliver. You would think analysts would figure this out and alter their models, but that’s a subject for another day. 

One could argue that many of the company’s valuation metrics are elevated. For example, it trades at 27.9x sales, considerably higher than its five-year average of 16.6x.  However, its PEG ratio – defined as EPS divided by EPS growth – is 2.85 at the moment, below its five-year average of 3.4. 

Suffice to say, at the very least; I would argue that NVDA stock is fairly valued at the moment. It would likely move to slightly undervalued should it deliver its usual brilliance on Feb. 16. Long-term, I don’t think you should worry about getting your best price. 

What’s important is that you believe in the company’s business strategy and growth plan. I know I do. 

Corrections Are Good for Nvidia

In my January commentary about the company, I suggested that the swoon its share price was experiencing was good for it. Like a balloon primed to explode, the almost 21% decline in less than a month relieved the pressure it was under to perform while trading at a premium valuation. 

As I said in the last section, it’s now fairly valued instead of overpriced. But, as they say, stocks don’t go up in a straight line, even the best ones. 

Currently, Nvidia is generating tremendous free cash flow (FCF). In the trailing 12 months (TTM) ended Oct. 31, 2021, its TTM FCF was $7.16 billion. Based on $24.27 billion in revenue, it has an FCF margin of 29.5%. Two years ago, it was almost 40%. 

Assuming Nvidia hits the analyst estimate of $7.4 billion, it will finish fiscal 2022 with $26.7 billion in revenue. At its current FCF margin of 29.5%, that will translate into FCF of $8.0 billion, 71% higher than in 2021. However, if it hits its 2019 FCF margin of 39% (highly unlikely), that would result in an FCF of $10.4 billion, or 122% higher than 2021.

If we split the difference, fiscal 2022’s FCF would be $9.2 billion with an FCF margin of 34.4% and a yield of 1.4%. That’s not a horrible FCF yield, given it might double its FCF over last year.

The Bottom Line

I believe that Nvidia has moved from the 5oth-largest company to the seventh spot for many excellent reasons, which my colleague mentioned. However, she didn’t say that CEO and founder Jensen Huang is one heck of a CEO. 

I will continue to advise readers to never bet against him. He’s a shareholder’s dream CEO. He stays in the background and gets the job done. 

From where I sit, NVDA stock remains an excellent long-term buy.

On the date of publication, Will Ashworth did not have (either directly or indirectly) any positions in the securities mentioned in this article. The opinions expressed in this article are those of the writer, subject to the InvestorPlace.com Publishing Guidelines.

Will Ashworth has written about investments full-time since 2008. Publications where he’s appeared include InvestorPlace, The Motley Fool Canada, Investopedia, Kiplinger, and several others in both the U.S. and Canada. He particularly enjoys creating model portfolios that stand the test of time. He lives in Halifax, Nova Scotia. 

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