Two stocks, one question: should a retirement-focused investor own NVIDIA (NASDAQ:NVDA) or Sherwin-Williams (NYSE:SHW) right now? The setup is genuinely strangeTwo stocks, one question: should a retirement-focused investor own NVIDIA (NASDAQ:NVDA) or Sherwin-Williams (NYSE:SHW) right now? The setup is genuinely strange

NVIDIA Was the Darling Of The AI Boom, Now It’s Cheaper Than The King Of House Paint

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  • NVIDIA (NVDA): P/E 30, 214% earnings growth, $75.2B data center revenue (+92% YoY); Sherwin-Williams (SHW): P/E 34, 47 consecutive dividend increases, 0.91% yield
  • Sherwin-Williams (SHW) better for retirees than NVIDIA (NVDA) due to stable dividend and 1.1 beta providing income stability over capital appreciation
  • Don't wait: the analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just revealed his top 10 AI stocks. See the full list FREE now.

Two stocks, one question: should a retirement-focused investor own NVIDIA (NASDAQ:NVDA) or Sherwin-Williams (NYSE:SHW) right now? The setup is genuinely strange. NVIDIA, the company sitting at the center of the AI capital-spending supercycle, trades at a lower price-to-earnings multiple than the company that sells the paint on your neighbor’s siding. It is a genuine valuation quirk worth dissecting, because the answer for retirees requires looking beyond the headline P/E ratios.

Dimension 1: Valuation, Where the Paradox Lives

On the numbers, NVIDIA is objectively cheaper. Shares trade at a trailing P/E of 30 and a forward P/E of 22, against TTM EPS of $6.53. Sherwin-Williams, by contrast, trades at a trailing P/E of 34 and a forward P/E of 30, on TTM EPS of $10.20. Both trailing and forward, the semiconductor giant is priced below the paint maker.

The compression came despite a rising share price. Shares are up 27.74% over the past year. The multiple compressed because earnings ran faster than the share price. Sherwin-Williams shares, meanwhile, are down 3.56% over the same year, and yet the multiple has not budged much because investors keep paying up for defensive earnings. Winner: NVDA. On pure valuation math, you are paying less per dollar of profit for the faster-growing business.

Dimension 2: Growth Trajectory

The gap here is not close. NVIDIA posted quarterly earnings growth of roughly 214% year over year and revenue growth of roughly 85%, powered by Data Center revenue of $75.246 billion, up 92% YoY. CEO Jensen Huang described it as “the buildout of AI factories, the largest infrastructure expansion in human history.”

Sherwin-Williams grew quarterly earnings 7.5% and revenue 6.8%, and management guided full-year 2026 adjusted EPS to $11.50 to $11.90, a midpoint growth rate of 2.4%. CEO Heidi Petz has repeatedly described the environment as “softer-for-longer”. Winner: NVDA, decisively. This is triple-digit growth against low-single-digit growth. It is not a fair fight.

Dimension 3: Income and Stability

Now the picture inverts. Sherwin-Williams yields 0.91% on a forward annualized dividend of $3.20, and it just extended a streak of 47 consecutive years of dividend increases. Its beta is 1.1, roughly in line with the market. NVIDIA, after raising its quarterly payout from $0.01 to $0.25, yields .50%, with a beta of 2.211, meaning shares tend to swing more than twice as violently as the index. (For income-first readers, our Paycheck Portfolio report on 10 Dividend Kings is a useful companion to this discussion.)

Sherwin-Williams also sells into thousands of small contractors and repaint jobs, a demand base that softens but rarely evaporates. NVIDIA’s fortunes are tied to a hyperscaler capex cycle and $119.0 billion in supply commitments that assume the buildout keeps compounding. Winner: SHW, decisively.

The Verdict

For a retirement-focused investor, Sherwin-Williams probably still wins, but the race is tightening. The paint maker is more expensive per dollar of earnings for a reason: a 47-year dividend increase streak, a beta near the market, and end markets that muddle through recessions rather than crater. Analysts carry a price target of $378.90 on SHW versus a current quote of $330.57, and the income compounds whether AI capex accelerates or not.

NVIDIA is the better business and, remarkably, the cheaper stock on both trailing and forward earnings, with an analyst target of $301.62. But retirees draw income from dividends and from capital they cannot afford to see cut in half, rather than from earnings growth. A beta above 2 and a sub-1% yield disqualify NVIDIA as a core retirement holding, however cheap the multiple looks. Put NVIDIA in a growth sleeve. Put Sherwin-Williams in the anchor position.

Don't wait: the analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just revealed his top 10 AI stocks. See the full list FREE now.

The post NVIDIA Was the Darling Of The AI Boom, Now It’s Cheaper Than The King Of House Paint appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..

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