Nvidia (NVDA) H200 GPU rental prices fell roughly 40% in three weeks, sliding from $7 to about $4 per hour. The repricing is testing the AI scarcity story and tightening near-term risk around NVDA shares.
NVDA closed at $214.25 on May 28 ahead of the latest reading from the Ornn Compute Price Index. Spot softness on older Hopper chips is feeding fresh investor doubt about hyperscaler demand durability.
Older Silicon Weighs on the Nvidia Bull Case
The H200 drop tracks Nvidia’s generational handoff. Blackwell B200 and GB200 chips absorb premium pricing as Hopper supply normalizes across neoclouds, per Ornn.
Older GPU softening fuels narrative risk for shares priced on perpetual scarcity after Nvidia’s record earnings.
“The price to rent an Nvidia H200 just collapsed from $7/hr to $4/hr in three weeks. A -40% drop in the cost of the single most strategic asset in tech,” analyst Thierry Borgeat of Arvy highlighted.
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Analysts Stay Constructive on NVDA
Wall Street has not flinched yet. Wedbush’s Dan Ives kept his Outperform rating and $300 target, citing the AI capex boom. Consensus across 43 analysts sits near $304, implying 43% upside.
The bigger swing factor sits at the customer level. A Financial Times analysis pegged implied 2025 to 2030 AI returns at -9.2% for Microsoft and -28.8% for Meta.
The math is fueling fresh AI bubble fears as hyperscaler free cash flow tightens.
Nvidia delivered $81.6 billion in revenue last quarter on 85% growth.
While the H200 reset will not break that thesis alone, it hands bears a fresh price signal heading into the next earnings cycle.
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