The percentage of our retail client accounts that were profitable in the last, most recent, four quarters was: | Q2-2026 : 29% | Q1-2025: 31% | Q4-2025: 29% | Q3-2025: 40%. Contracts for Difference (CFDs) are complex instruments with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage and may not be suitable for all investors. You should not trade with money you cannot afford to lose. These percentages are for illustrative purposes only and do not indicate future performance.


NVIDIA is a company many are envious of. As of October 2020, the company is the leading designer of graphical processing units (GPU) and other computing chipsets used in both gaming and professional markets. The company operates in three key segments: gaming, mobile devices and automotive electronics. With the changing technological landscape, NVIDIA has a heavy focus in the artificial intelligence space as well. The company is headquartered in Santa Clara, California, USA. It was founded on April 5th, 1993 by Jensen Huang, Chris Malachowsky and Curtis Priem. NVIDIA started simply as a chip designer, but it made its mark in 1997 when it introduced the RIVA series of GPUs for gaming computers.
It then followed up with the GeForce series that would allow for enhanced 3D capabilities, and it managed to edge out its major competitor at the time, 3Dfx Interactive; a company it would later fully acquire. By the turn of the century, NVIDIA was well on top in the GPU space, and a partnership with Microsoft for the development of Xbox chipsets paved the way for future domination. It did not take long for the company to start diversifying into the lower end consumer market, and today the company is also involved in the development of chipsets for mobile devices. NVIDIA went public on January 29th, 1999, listing on the NASDAQ where it trades under the ticker symbol NVDA. The stock falls in the Technology sector, under the Semiconductors industry.
NVIDIA has had 4 stock splits as of October 2020: a 2-for-1 on June 26th 2000; a 2-for-1 on September 17th 2001; a 2-for-1 on April 7th 2006; and a 3-for-2 on September 11th 2007. Adjusted for splits, NVIDIA stock started trading for a little over $1.50 after its IPO. It did not enjoy the tech bubble, but it drifted to highs of just above $10 by mid-2000. The stock then continued trading sideways until September 2007 when it edged higher towards $40 where it faced tough resistance. The stock tumbled again to lows of circa $10 and continued a multiyear sideways trend until 2016. The company received massive fundamental tailwinds as cryptocurrency mining, and artificial intelligence activities gathered steam.
This inspired the stock to highs of circa $290 by October 2018, after which a retracement was triggered that sent the stock to lows of circa $130 by January 2019. The stock has since recovered and has sustained an uptrend that sent it to its all-time high of just above $573 in September 2020. With gaming still delivering the bulk of NVIDIA’s revenues and profits, the 2020 coronavirus pandemic that kept gamers at home was a huge positive fundamental factor. NVIDIA started paying out dividends in 2012 when it paid out $0.08 per share to investors. That has since been bumped to a payout of $0.64 per share in 2020. For investors, the most important metric is that the NVIDIA dividend rate is still around 0.12%, far below the S&P average of 2%, and its industry average of 3.5%. There is still room for much higher dividend payouts for a stock that delivers returns similar to non-dividend paying stocks.
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When you enter into a CFD trade you don’t buy the actual stock itself but instead agree on a contract with the broker to settle the difference in value between the entry and exit price of the Stock based on the price the stock is trading at on the Exchange it is listed. That means when you trade Stocks CFDs with Friedberg Direct you get a flexibility that stock market rules often make very difficult or even impossible for some.