has driven one of the strongest multi-year rallies in global equities on the back of a real, expanding AI infrastructure buildout. After a three-session rebound carried the stock back to $186.03 on declining volume, the price sits directly inside the resistance zone that has capped every recovery attempt since the October all-time high — while a dense event calendar over the next six days adds short-term risk the price action does not yet reflect.

Technical Structure: Price Has Recovered to Where It Has Repeatedly Stalled
Since the October 29 all-time high at $212.19, Nvidia’s daily chart shows a sequence of lower highs. The February recovery failed to reclaim the $195–$200 zone on multiple attempts. The stock spent most of the past four weeks in a $178–$190 range. Wednesday’s close at $186.03 — the third consecutive session of gains — places the stock at the upper boundary of that range, directly inside the zone from which it has previously pulled back.
Two moving average conditions define the current structure. The 50-day SMA at $182.22 sits below the 200-day SMA at $185.41. This configuration indicates the medium-term trend has not recovered its prior upward slope since the October peak. Price closed at $186.03, marginally above the 200-day SMA, but the intraday high on Wednesday reached $187.62 before retreating. The 200-day SMA is acting as a resistance reference in the current session context. Whether the stock can reclaim it on a sustained, volume-confirmed basis is the primary near-term technical test.
The setup is not structurally bearish. The 52-week range spans $86.62 to $212.19, and every prior correction since April 2025 has found buyers. The tactical concern is that the three-session advance arrived at the precise zone where supply has previously re-emerged, without the volume or momentum conditions that would confirm absorption.
Technical Snapshot
|
Metric |
Reading (as of March 11, 2026) |
|
Last Close |
$186.03 |
|
52-Week High |
$212.19 (October 29, 2025) |
|
52-Week Low |
$86.62 (April 4, 2025) |
|
50-Day SMA |
$182.22 — below 200-day SMA |
|
200-Day SMA |
$185.41 — marginally below last close; intraday high rejected at $187.62 |
|
RSI (14-day) |
~59 — recovering from low-40s; not yet in breakout range (65–70) |
|
MACD (12,26,9) |
Positive; histogram narrowing over past three sessions |
|
Recent Volume (Mar 11) |
139 million shares — approx. 30% below average daily volume (~200M) |
|
Average Daily Volume |
~200 million shares |
|
Major Resistance |
$195–$200 |
|
Short-Term Resistance |
$185–$190 (current zone) |
|
Immediate Support |
$182–$185 (50-day SMA at $182.22) |
|
Secondary Support |
$178–$180 |
|
Structural Support |
$170–$172 (February correction base) |
|
Trend Support |
$165 (April 2025 rising trendline) |
|
Next Earnings Date |
May 27, 2026 (Q1 FY2027) |
|
Key Event-Risk Dates |
March 16–19: GTC 2026 | March 17–18: FOMC meeting and SEP update |
FIGURE 1. NVDA — Daily Technical Structure · March 11, 2026

Three-panel daily chart showing price action from the October 29, 2025 all-time high at $212.19 through the March 11, 2026 close at $186.03. Price has retraced into the $185–$190 short-term resistance zone following a three-session rebound. The 50-day SMA ($182.22) remains below the 200-day SMA ($185.41), a bearish moving-average configuration that has persisted since the post-ATH decline. Volume on March 11 registered 139 million shares, approximately 30 percent below the daily average of 200 million, failing to confirm the rebound. RSI (14) recovered to approximately 59 from the low 40s recorded during the February correction but has not entered the 65–70 range associated with confirmed upside momentum. Key resistance remains at $195–$200. Immediate support sits at the 50-day SMA at $182.22.
Chart Notes
|
Resistance interaction |
After a 5% advance from the February pivot low, price closed at $186.03 — inside the $185–$190 short-term resistance zone and marginally above the 200-day SMA at $185.41. The intraday high on March 11 reached $187.62 before retreating, consistent with supply re-emerging at this level. |
|
Moving average configuration |
The 50-day SMA ($182.22) is below the 200-day SMA ($185.41). This bearish configuration indicates the medium-term trend has not recovered its prior upward slope since the October 2025 peak. Price closed above the 200-day SMA at the end of day but was rejected intraday above it. |
|
Volume divergence |
Volume declined across all three rebound sessions, reaching 139 million shares on March 11 against a daily average of approximately 200 million. A price advance on below-average volume indicates reduced participation, not demand-driven absorption of supply. |
|
RSI reading |
RSI (14) recovered to approximately 59 from the low 40s recorded during the February correction. The 59 reading is in the neutral zone. Readings in the 65–70 range would be required to indicate momentum consistent with a sustained breakout. |
|
Breakout threshold |
A volume-confirmed daily close above $195 is the level that would indicate supply in the $185–$200 range has been absorbed and the near-term setup improves materially. |
|
Downside reference levels |
A daily close below the 50-day SMA at $182 would expose secondary support at $178–$180 and, beyond that, the structural support zone at $170–$172 established during the February correction. |
Price Levels
|
Level / Zone |
Technical Role and Implication |
|
$195–$200 (Major Resistance) |
Cluster of prior swing highs from the February recovery attempt. Multiple closes below this zone establish a pattern of lower highs since October. A volume-confirmed close above $200 would indicate supply has been absorbed and materially change the near-term setup. |
|
$185–$190 (Short-Term Resistance) |
Current consolidation ceiling. The March 11 intraday high of $187.62 tested and retreated from this zone on volume approximately 30% below average. |
|
$185.41 (200-Day SMA) |
Marginally below the March 11 close of $186.03. Intraday rejection at $187.62 confirms this level as a near-term resistance reference. A sustained close well above it on above-average volume would change the moving average context. |
|
$182–$185 (Immediate Support / 50-Day SMA) |
50-day SMA at $182.22 provides the first meaningful floor below current price. The intraday low on March 11 held at $184.45, within this zone. |
|
$178–$180 (Secondary Support) |
February pullback lows. A break below $182 would likely reach this level. Prior selling exhausted here before the current rebound. |
|
$170–$172 (Structural Support) |
The level at which buyers absorbed the February correction. A decline to $172 from the March 11 close represents approximately a 9 percent move. |
|
$165 (Trend Support) |
Rising trendline from the April 2025 lows. Relevant only if structural support at $170–$172 fails to hold. |
Momentum Indicators: Recovery Without Confirmation
The three sessions from February 27 through March 11 produced a 5 percent advance from the pivot low. The analytical concern is not the direction of the move but the conditions accompanying it.
Volume fell across each of the three sessions, reaching 139 million shares on March 11 against a daily average of approximately 200 million. Three consecutive sessions of rising prices on declining, below-average volume indicate that selling pressure temporarily exhausted rather than that new demand entered at conviction levels. Sellers who pause at a support level rather than capitulate are likely to resume supply at the next resistance level — which is the zone the stock reached on March 11.
RSI moved from the low 40s during the February correction to approximately 59 — a meaningful recovery, but not the 65–70 range typically associated with sustained breakouts. MACD turned positive following the February 27 pivot but has shown narrowing histogram bars across all three sessions, indicating the rate of upward price change is decelerating.
Taken together, the three indicators describe a stock that has recovered to the zone where supply is likely to re-emerge, without the momentum or volume conditions that would justify adding exposure.
Positioning Risk
At $4.49 trillion market cap and approximately 7 percent weight in the Nasdaq-100, Nvidia is held across virtually every large-cap institutional portfolio. The scale of that ownership creates a positioning dynamic that amplifies near-term price sensitivity at resistance levels. When a single stock carries this level of concentration across institutional books, reducing exposure at a technical ceiling is a standard risk-management function — one that does not require a change in fundamental view and creates potential supply at exactly the price levels the chart identifies.
Nvidia’s Q4 FY2026 results confirmed the underlying business is operating at scale: revenue of $68.1 billion, up 73 percent year-over-year, data center revenue of $62.3 billion, and Q1 FY2027 guidance of approximately $78 billion against a consensus of $72.6 billion. The fundamental picture is intact. The positioning concern is independent of it. A strong business and a near-term supply problem at resistance are not mutually exclusive conditions.
Macro Event Risk: Six Days, Three Catalysts
The February consumer price index, released March 11, printed at 2.4 percent year-over-year and 0.3 percent month-over-month, in line with consensus. The number provided no downside surprise, but markets sold off through the session as traders focused on the forward implication: the February CPI covers a period before the Iranian conflict began on February 28. March and April readings will be the first data points to capture the pass-through from oil prices that briefly exceeded $100 before settling near $90. The tame February print is not a signal about conditions after the shock.
The Federal Reserve meets March 17–18. The rate decision carries a 99.3 percent hold probability per CME FedWatch. The analytically significant output is the updated Summary of Economic Projections. A downward revision to 2026 GDP and an upward revision to the unemployment rate forecast — both consistent with the labor market data — would signal the Fed has formally acknowledged the deterioration in the economic backdrop. That kind of projection shift, arriving while Nvidia trades at a price-to-sales multiple above 20, is not straightforwardly constructive for growth equity valuations.
GTC 2026, Nvidia’s annual developer conference, runs March 16–19 in San Jose — the same week as the FOMC meeting. The conference has historically served as a product catalyst. Its ability to drive sustained price appreciation is reduced when the stock is already at a premium to forward estimates and when macro uncertainty cannot be resolved by any product announcement.
Short-Term Scenarios
The three scenarios below identify the price levels at which the current setup changes character. They are not forecasts.
|
Scenario |
Required Trigger |
Expected Price Behavior |
|
Bullish Breakout |
Volume-confirmed daily close above $195, on 200M+ shares. |
Opens the path toward $200, then potentially the $207–$212 ATH zone. GTC 2026 is the most plausible near-term catalyst. A close above $190 without volume confirmation does not constitute a breakout. |
|
Range Consolidation |
Price holds $182–$190 through the FOMC meeting on March 18. |
Most consistent with the current technical configuration. The stock absorbs the rebound and direction waits for the FOMC projections or the April 3 payroll report. This is the default scenario given present conditions. |
|
Short-Term Pullback |
Daily close below $182 (50-day SMA), on above-average volume. |
Initial target $178–$180. If $178 fails, structural support at $170–$172. A move to $172 represents approximately a 9 percent decline from the March 11 close. |
The Tactical Case for Reducing Short-Term Exposure
Nvidia’s fundamental position is not in question. Revenue of $68.1 billion in the most recent quarter, up 73 percent year-over-year, with Q1 FY2027 guidance ahead of consensus, leaves the business thesis intact. The AI infrastructure buildout that drives demand for Nvidia’s data center hardware is a multi-year structural theme.
The tactical argument is specific to price and timing. The stock is trading at resistance. The 50-day SMA sits below the 200-day SMA. A three-session rebound arrived inside the resistance zone on volume approximately 30 percent below average. RSI and MACD are recovering but not confirming a breakout. GTC 2026, the FOMC meeting, and the beginning of the oil shock’s pass-through into March CPI expectations all land in the same five-day window.
For traders managing short-term exposure, the setup favors holding positions at a size that can tolerate volatility through the event risk rather than carrying maximum exposure into it. The resolution levels are precise: a volume-confirmed close above $195 indicates supply has been absorbed and the near-term outlook improves; a close below $182 indicates the rebound has completed and the next test of $178–$180, and potentially $170–$172, is underway. Until one of those levels is reached, the balance of near-term risk favors patience over new long entries.
***
DISCLAIMER This article is for informational and analytical purposes only and does not constitute investment advice or a solicitation to buy or sell any security. Past performance is not indicative of future results.



















































