Nvidia at $5.4T larger than India’s market, S&P 500 healthcare, entire economies

May 12, 2026

The extraordinary rise of Nvidia has become more than just a stock market story.

The artificial intelligence chipmaker’s surge beyond a $5 trillion market valuation is now reshaping global equity markets, redefining the dominance of technology companies and exposing how heavily investor capital is gravitating toward AI-linked businesses.

Nvidia shares climbed another 2% on Monday to close at a record $219.44, marking the company’s third record closing high of the year and extending a four-session rally that has added roughly $550 billion in market value.

NVDA stock has now gained 13% during that stretch alone, lifting Nvidia’s valuation to about $5.4 trillion — the highest of any listed company globally.

The rally comes ahead of Nvidia’s highly anticipated earnings report due on May 20, which analysts expect could provide another catalyst for the stock as demand for AI infrastructure continues to accelerate.

The scale of Nvidia’s rise is increasingly being compared not just with companies, but with entire economies and stock markets.

Bigger than India’s stock market

As of May 11, Nvidia’s market capitalisation stood at roughly $5.1 trillion, surpassing the combined value of India’s entire stock market, which was estimated at around $4.9 trillion.

India’s equity market includes more than 5,000 listed companies spanning sectors such as banking, manufacturing, energy, consumer goods, and technology.

Yet Nvidia alone is now valued above all of them combined.

Five years ago, Nvidia’s market value was approximately $370 billion.

Since then, the company has added nearly $4.7 trillion in value, representing a roughly 14-fold increase in just 60 months.

At the same time, India’s market capitalisation has come under pressure after peaking at $5.66 trillion in September 2024.

The decline to current levels represents an erosion of more than $750 billion.

India’s share in global market capitalisation has also slipped below 3% for the first time in four years amid persistent foreign investor outflows, elevated crude oil prices, and continuing geopolitical tensions involving the United States, Iran, and Israel.

As of May 11, India’s share of global market capitalisation stood at 2.996%, compared with a peak of 4.71% in September 2024.

Analysts say global investor flows have increasingly favoured markets perceived to be direct beneficiaries of the AI boom, including the United States, Taiwan, and South Korea.

Christopher Wood has repeatedly described India as a “reverse AI trade” in recent months, arguing that investors have moved capital away from Indian equities in favour of AI-driven markets.

More recently, Ruchir Sharma, chairman of Rockefeller International and founder and chief investment officer of Breakout Capital, told The Indian Express that India appeared to lack a significant AI “play,” making foreign investors increasingly “indifferent” toward Indian stocks.

Indian benchmarks have struggled this year amid heightened volatility.

The Sensex has declined 11% in 2026, while the Nifty has fallen 9%.

Broader market indices have shown greater resilience, with the BSE MidCap 150 index remaining largely flat and the BSE SmallCap 250 posting modest gains.

Larger than the healthcare sector of the S&P 500

Nvidia’s rise also reflects the growing concentration of technology within US markets.

The company is now worth more than the entire healthcare sector of the S&P 500 index, which comprises 59 companies with a combined market value of about $5.2 trillion, Barron’s reported.

The healthcare sector’s weighting in the benchmark index has fallen to a record low of around 8%.

By contrast, the technology sector has reached a record market value exceeding $23 trillion and now accounts for roughly 37% of the S&P 500.

When companies such as Amazon, Alphabet, and Meta Platforms are included, technology-related businesses account for nearly half the benchmark index.

The State Street Technology Select Sector SPDR ETF, which tracks the S&P 500 technology sector, has risen 24% this year, significantly outperforming the broader S&P 500’s 9% gain.

Larger than most economies

The comparisons surrounding Nvidia’s valuation have become increasingly dramatic as the company’s size grows.

Based on nominal GDP projections from the International Monetary Fund, only the United States and China currently produce more economic output annually than Nvidia’s market value.

Germany, Japan, India, and the United Kingdom all sit below the $5 trillion threshold.

“If Nvidia were a country, it would be the world’s third-largest economy,” analysts and commentators have increasingly observed to illustrate the scale of the company’s rise.

Nvidia first crossed the $5 trillion valuation mark during intraday trading in late 2025 before finally securing a close above that threshold on April 24, 2026, as investors returned aggressively to chip stocks ahead of major technology earnings.

It was then that CNBC noted that Nvidia’s market value equates to roughly two Amazons, six JPMorgan Chase companies, 10 Exxon Mobil corporations, or 25 The Walt Disney Company businesses.

Deutsche Bank previously estimated that when Nvidia’s valuation crossed $4 trillion, it already represented around 3.6% of global GDP.

Earnings seen as next catalyst

Despite Nvidia’s massive rally, the stock has underperformed some semiconductor rivals this year.

Nvidia shares are up about 15% so far in 2026, lagging gains in Intel and Advanced Micro Devices, which have benefited from growing investor enthusiasm around AI inference and central processing units.

“The gold-plated investment in AI (Nvidia) is now stagnating, while the second in line are making new highs almost every day,” wrote independent analyst Richard Windsor.

“The market’s attention has also passed from chip supply to electricity supply and CPUs, as these are rapidly becoming a bottleneck,” Richard Windsor added.

Even so, Wall Street remains overwhelmingly bullish ahead of Nvidia’s earnings next week.

Analysts expect first-quarter revenue to rise 78% year-on-year to more than $78.6 billion.

“We expect a strong report … with a meaningful beat and raise,” wrote Ben Reitzes, Melius Research analyst, in a research note.

“[Nvidia] shares trade well below its long-term growth rate and at a stunning 50% discount to shares of AMD, adjusted for the impact of stock options,” Ben Reitzes added.

Ben Reitzes currently holds the highest price target on Wall Street for Nvidia shares at $380.

According to FactSet data, 65 out of 70 analysts covering the stock currently rate it a “Buy.”

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