Apple Hits New All-Time High. Here’s Why It Will Top $5 Trillion and Nvidia

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By Rich Duprey Published

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  • Apple hit an all-time high above $321, pushing its market cap to $4.73 trillion and leaving it just $320 billion behind Nvidia.

  • Apple's $100 billion in annual free cash flow funds buybacks and Services growth, making AI chip dominance unnecessary to surpass Nvidia's valuation.

  • Rising memory costs may force iPhone price hikes, but Apple's industry-leading customer loyalty consistently converts higher prices into billions in added revenue.

  • This lithium producer surpassed a $1B private valuation, joining some of America's most powerful startups. Now you can invest in EnergyX alongside global giants like General Motors, but only through July 16. (sponsor)

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Apple Hits New All-Time High. Here’s Why It Will Top $5 Trillion and Nvidia

© PhillDanze / iStock Editorial via Getty Images

The stock market’s biggest winners are changing. For much of the past two years, investors rewarded the companies building AI infrastructure, propelling Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA | NVDA Price Prediction) to become the world’s most valuable company. Now the market is beginning to recognize that the biggest opportunity may lie with the companies that turn AI into products consumers use every day. 

Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) reached a new milestone this morning, climbing to an all-time high above $321 per share and lifting its market capitalization to roughly $4.73 trillion. That leaves it just $320 billion behind Nvidia’s $5.05 trillion valuation. In today’s market, that’s a surprisingly small gap.

Apple Has More Than One Engine Driving Growth

It’s easy to focus on the iPhone, but that’s no longer the whole Apple story.

The tech and consumer electronic gadget giant generated more than $100 billion in trailing-12-month free cash flow. Few companies have that kind of financial firepower. It gives Apple the flexibility to invest aggressively in AI, repurchase billions of dollars of stock, increase its dividend, and still keep one of the strongest balance sheets in corporate America.

The numbers also show Apple becoming less dependent on hardware sales. Services — including the App Store, iCloud, Apple Music, AppleCare, advertising, and financial services — continue producing high-margin recurring revenue from an installed base that now exceeds 2 billion active devices.

Apple Intelligence is also still in its early innings, but deeper AI integration across the iPhone, iPad, Mac, and Vision products creates another reason for customers to upgrade while making the ecosystem even harder to leave.

A green-themed infographic comparing Apple and Nvidia's market valuations with charts showing Apple's growth engines and its 'go-slow' AI strategy.
Forget the chip wars—Apple’s massive cash pile and counter-intuitive AI strategy are putting Nvidia’s crown in serious jeopardy. © 24/7 Wall St.

Pricing Power May Be Apple’s Biggest Advantage

Ironically, one of Apple’s biggest risks could become one of its biggest strengths. Demand for AI servers has created a shortage of advanced DRAM and high-bandwidth memory, shortages that are driving memory prices higher, increasing manufacturing costs for smartphones, PCs, and other electronics. That could force Apple to raise iPhone prices after having just raised them by roughly 20% on select Mac and iPad models.

Ordinarily, that would worry investors. Apple isn’t an ordinary hardware company. Consumer Intelligence Research Partners and Counterpoint Research continue to report industry-leading iPhone loyalty and retention rates. Apple has repeatedly demonstrated that customers will pay more when new devices deliver meaningful improvements. Even modest price increases spread across hundreds of millions of annual iPhone sales can generate billions of dollars in additional revenue.

Meanwhile, Apple’s massive share repurchase program keeps shrinking the number of shares outstanding. As earnings rise and the share count falls, earnings per share receive an extra lift even before new products contribute meaningfully.

Key Takeaway

In short, Apple doesn’t need to outperform Nvidia in AI chips to become more valuable. In fact, its go-slow approach to AI has proved to be a winning formula. Rather, it simply needs to keep doing what it has done for years — expand its ecosystem, deepen customer loyalty, generate enormous free cash flow, and return that cash to shareholders.

Granted, risks remain. Higher memory prices could pressure margins, and AI features still need to prove they can drive a major upgrade cycle. Yet Apple enters those challenges from a position of unusual strength. More than $100 billion in annual free cash flow, over 2 billion active devices, recurring Services revenue, and unmatched pricing power give it multiple paths to growth.

Ultimately, Apple is only about $320 billion away from overtaking Nvidia. For a company that has added trillions of dollars in market value over the past few years, crossing the $5 trillion mark before the end of 2026 no longer feels like a stretch. It feels like the next logical milestone.

Contact [email protected] for any questions or corrections.

Photo of Rich Duprey
About the Author Rich Duprey →

After two decades of patrolling the dark corners of suburbia as a police officer, Rich Duprey hung up his badge and gun to begin writing full time about stocks and investing. For the past 20 years he’s been cruising the markets looking for companies to lock up as long-term holdings in a portfolio while writing extensively on the broad sectors of consumer goods, technology, and industrials. Because his experience isn’t from the typical financial analyst track, Rich is able to break down complex topics into understandable and useful action points for the average investor. His writings have appeared on The Motley Fool, InvestorPlace, Yahoo! Finance, and Money Morning. He has been featured in both U.S. and international publications, including MarketWatch, Financial Times, Forbes, Fast Company, and USA Today.

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