Chief executive Jensen Huang said sales for some of Nvidia's AI components were "off the charts"
Nvidia earnings top expectations, driven by data center demand
Nvidia reported a third quarter that beat Wall Street on both earnings and revenue. The revenue surprise was driven largely by its data center business. CEO Jensen Huang used the earnings calls to reject talk of an AI bubble.
On the call, Nvidia presented a clean quarter and defended the sustainability of AI demand. Portfolio manager John Belton discussed how Nvidia is unlocking revenue across varied use cases. The message from management was confidence in the company’s core markets.
Analysts call Nvidia earnings an AI validation moment
Wedbush analyst Dan Ives framed the report as a major validation for the AI Revolution. Ives expects Nvidia and CEO Jensen Huang to deliver amid strong demand. He described Huang as the “Godfather of AI” and said Nvidia is foundational to the sector.
Ives pointed to positive supply-chain checks from Asia and robust capex from major tech firms in late October. He believes Wall Street underestimates Nvidia’s long-term upside and expects the company to exceed estimates.
The broader economic ripple: an $8–$10 multiplier, analysts say
Ives estimates that every dollar spent on Nvidia products generates an $8–$10 multiplier across the technology ecosystem. That multiplier underlines how Nvidia’s performance can ripple through suppliers, software vendors, and enterprise buyers.
He also highlighted big-picture capex trends. Ives projects Big Tech capital expenditures alone could surpass $550 billion in 2026. That spending, he argues, will extend demand for Nvidia beyond hyperscalers to enterprise and government buyers globally over the next 12–18 months.
Trade and policy context
Nvidia’s results come amid ongoing trade negotiations tied to China chip restrictions introduced during the previous administration. Analysts noted those geopolitical factors as part of the backdrop but focused on rising demand signals from customers and supply-chain checks.
Market reaction and what it means
For investors and tech firms, the quarter functions as a potential catalyst into year-end. Ives suggested the earnings report could lift broader tech sentiment and validate the scale of AI-driven investment. For Nvidia, the quarter supports the narrative that AI spending is moving from proof of concept to large-scale deployment.
Takeaway
Nvidia earnings were strong and broadly reassuring to bulls. Management pushed back on bubble concerns. Analysts framed the results as a milestone for AI adoption and highlighted a large multiplier effect on the wider tech economy.
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